Check out my website (which includes a blog) at www.jeannefranche.com
Wednesday, 15 August 2012
Saturday, 11 August 2012
Quickbooks Tip: How To Record Deposits (Using Undeposited Funds)
You may already be doing this, but there are a few different reasons why you should be using the Record Deposits feature function in Quickbooks.
# 1 - It will make your bank reconciliations so much easier to do - because the amount of the deposit on your bank statement will match the amount of the deposit in Quickbooks.
#2 - It's a double-check that the bank has not made any errors on the deposit.
#3 - Your bank balance will not be overstated if you record undeposited cheques at the end of the month, but don't make it to the bank before the beginning of the next month.
So - if you haven't used this feature before, here is a quick step by step tutorial on how to record your deposits in Quickbooks!
1. Enter your deposits the usual way, but select "Undeposited Funds" as your "Deposit to" account.
2. When all deposits are entered, and you have deposited the funds at the bank (you have a deposit slip), you can now "Record Deposits".
Home Screen - Click on Record Deposits Icon in the Banking Field OR Go to Banking > Make Deposits.
Check off each transaction that makes up part of the deposit.
3. Choose the account and date of the deposit - make sure that it matches the bank receipt.
Click "Save and Close" - and you're done!
Has this post helped you? Do you have any other great tips you would like to share? I'd love to hear from you in the comments section below!
Labels:
bank reconciliation,
deposit,
quickbooks,
tips,
undeposited funds
Tuesday, 7 August 2012
Quickbooks Tip: Using Credit Card Charges
I've had to take a little break from blogging, because I was busy studying for, and becoming, a Certified Quickbooks ProAdvisor! I've recently discovered that there is a demand for personalized, one-on-one Quickbooks training - and I've decided to specialize my business.
What better way to start than to share useful tidbits about Quickbooks to you? The first tip that I will share involves using the credit card charges function!
Banking / Enter Credit Card Charges
Select the Credit Card You Are Paying With / In "Purchased From" Field Choose the Vendor You are Paying (Do not forget to use the date on the receipt, not the statement date)
When you receive the statement:
Banking / Reconcile
Choose the credit card you are reconciling / Enter the statement balance / Enter any applicable credit card charges / Reconcile the Account as You Would a Bank Statement
Once you have reconciled the credit card, you will have the option to pay the invoice now - or set it up as a payable.
Then you're finished! When you are in the Vendor Summary - you will see your credit card payments and cheque payments, all in the same place!
Did this help you? Want to know more? Do you have a specific Quickbooks item you need help with? Please leave your comments below! Thanks for visiting!
What better way to start than to share useful tidbits about Quickbooks to you? The first tip that I will share involves using the credit card charges function!
Credit Card Charges Function in Quickbooks
Many of you may be doing this already, but in case you are not (treating your credit card issuer as a regular vendor in Quickbooks) this really is a great tool! The best part about it is - you will have access to much more information (see in one place the bills you have paid with cheque or visa), and find specific credit card charges quicker!Step 1: Set up your credit card as an account, and select "credit card" as the type
Lists / Chart of Accounts / Edit / New Account / Select Type "Credit Card" / Account Name as the Name of the Card (i.e. Scotiabank Visa)
Step 2: Enter Credit Card Charges, One by One
Banking / Enter Credit Card Charges
Select the Credit Card You Are Paying With / In "Purchased From" Field Choose the Vendor You are Paying (Do not forget to use the date on the receipt, not the statement date)
Step 3: Reconcile the Credit Card Statement
When you receive the statement:
Banking / Reconcile
Choose the credit card you are reconciling / Enter the statement balance / Enter any applicable credit card charges / Reconcile the Account as You Would a Bank Statement
Step 4: Pay the credit card statement or set it up as a payable
Once you have reconciled the credit card, you will have the option to pay the invoice now - or set it up as a payable.
Then you're finished! When you are in the Vendor Summary - you will see your credit card payments and cheque payments, all in the same place!
Did this help you? Want to know more? Do you have a specific Quickbooks item you need help with? Please leave your comments below! Thanks for visiting!
Tuesday, 24 July 2012
Excel Tips: Find and Delete Rows, Go to Special
Yes – another Excel post! Today
I was formatting income statements in Simply Accounting (the
departmental income vs. budget ), (in Excel) – and in the process of doing so - I learned some neat Excel tools.
Although I used these to format an income statement, you can use these in a variety of applications! Enjoy!
Tool # 1 – Find & Select, Delete Rows
Problem: Rows with unnecessary data mixed together with the rest of your data.
B Office Supplies
C Not Assigned to Departments $xxx
D Department # 1 $xxx
E Other Departments $xxx
Solution:
1. Press “Ctrl” + “F”
2. Type the word(s) you are looking for and click “Find All”(in the example above, I typed "Not Assigned to Departments")
3. Select all of the search results by pressing “Ctrl” + “A”
4. From the Home Tab click “Delete”then “Delete Sheet Rows”
Delete is on the Home Tab |
Tool # 2 – Find & Select Blank Rows, Delete Rows
Problem: Unnecessary blank rows in between your data
B Office Supplies
D Department # 1 $xxx
E
F Telephone Expense $xxx
Solution:
1. Select the column in question
2. From the Home Tab, go to “Find & Select”
3. Select “Go to Special”
4. Select “Blanks”
5. Click OK
6. From
the Home Tab, click on “Delete”, then “Delete Sheet Rows” (or simply
press “delete” on your keyboard if you want to keep the row but clear
the cell).
Find & Select, On the Home Tab - Look for the Binoculars |
Tool # 3 – Find & Select and Hide Rows
Problem: Rows that contain data, formulas, etc. that must be kept in the spreadsheet because they are part of other equations - but you want them hidden
1. Select the column in question
2. From the Home Tab, go to “Find & Select”
3. Select “Go to Special”
4. Select “Formulas” (As you can see, you have a number of options to select here)
5. Click OK
6. Press "Ctrl" + "9" (Hide)
And there you have it! I'm always interested in learning new Excel tips & tricks - if you have any you would like to share!
Labels:
budget,
department,
excel,
income statement,
simply accounting
Tuesday, 17 July 2012
Excel Tip: How to Merge and De-Merge Information
Written by: Jeanne Franche
As a bookkeeper, I use Excel on a daily basis. It is an enormous time-saver, and a very useful tool. Therefore, I get very excited when I learn new tricks to get more use out of the program - and here I will share two recent tricks that I have learned with you.
You want to Subtotal this information, but the Subtotal tool in Excel will only total one column or the other (Flavours or Types). You want to know how many units of "Tomato Juice" you sell, and also how many "Tomato Sandwiches" you sell. The solution is to "concatenate" the two columns together, and then you can use the Sort and Subtotal tools (Covered in a future blog post).
How?
Decide which column you want the new Concatenated data to be in. I chose Column C. Click "Insert a Function", search for "Concatenate".
In "Text 1" choose the first data cell you want to Concatenate. In "Text 2", you can enter a separator (recommended) such as a dash (-), though it is not necessary. In "Text 3", chose the second data cell you want to Concatenate. Example below:
Click "OK" and then your cell C will have the new, concatenated data (Orange-Juice).
A tip to anyone using Microsoft Small Business Financials: This is a handy tool to use for exported Smart List account reports, to Concatenate accounts and projects that are displayed in separate columns.
Row A
John Doe, 123 Somewhere Street, Wherever, Ontario, P04 3Z5
This is frustrating, because you want to sort all of your clients based on city, or province, or by last name - but everything is together in the same cell! How do you separate it?
First - you must select your column or cell, go to "Data", and then "Text to Columns".
Step 1: You will have the option between fixed width or delimited. I chose "delimited" because my data is separated by commas. Fixed width will give you greater control over where to separate your data (i.e. You can have "Somewhere" and "Street" separated), but for simplicity - I've chosen delimited.
Step 2: Select "Other" and enter the character that separates your text - in our case it's a comma. You will see a preview of what your selection will do.
Step 3: This screen will allow you to choose the format of each column. In this example, I clicked Finish - but this can be useful if you have numerical values that you want to sum, or dates that you want to sort.
And Voila! Now you're free to filter and sort based on whatever you wish, or simply reorder the columns (put last name in column A, first name in column B for example). Now your data is much easier to manipulate!
And that's it!
Thank you for reading my blog - I would love to hear your feedback in the comments section below!
As a bookkeeper, I use Excel on a daily basis. It is an enormous time-saver, and a very useful tool. Therefore, I get very excited when I learn new tricks to get more use out of the program - and here I will share two recent tricks that I have learned with you.
The Concatenate Function
Let's say you run a little restaurant, and you have an Excel sheet to track which drinks and foods are the most popular in your store. You have flavour in Column A, and Type in Column B.You want to Subtotal this information, but the Subtotal tool in Excel will only total one column or the other (Flavours or Types). You want to know how many units of "Tomato Juice" you sell, and also how many "Tomato Sandwiches" you sell. The solution is to "concatenate" the two columns together, and then you can use the Sort and Subtotal tools (Covered in a future blog post).
How?
Decide which column you want the new Concatenated data to be in. I chose Column C. Click "Insert a Function", search for "Concatenate".
In "Text 1" choose the first data cell you want to Concatenate. In "Text 2", you can enter a separator (recommended) such as a dash (-), though it is not necessary. In "Text 3", chose the second data cell you want to Concatenate. Example below:
Click "OK" and then your cell C will have the new, concatenated data (Orange-Juice).
Application
I typically use this function paired with sort and subtotal (which I will cover in future blog posts). You can use this for virtually anything (such as, in the example above - tracking sales) to more specific uses.A tip to anyone using Microsoft Small Business Financials: This is a handy tool to use for exported Smart List account reports, to Concatenate accounts and projects that are displayed in separate columns.
How to "Un-Concatenate"
Let's say you export some information from your accounting program (or CRM software) and the information is all together in one cell. One example I can think of is client names and addresses.Row A
John Doe, 123 Somewhere Street, Wherever, Ontario, P04 3Z5
This is frustrating, because you want to sort all of your clients based on city, or province, or by last name - but everything is together in the same cell! How do you separate it?
First - you must select your column or cell, go to "Data", and then "Text to Columns".
Step 1: You will have the option between fixed width or delimited. I chose "delimited" because my data is separated by commas. Fixed width will give you greater control over where to separate your data (i.e. You can have "Somewhere" and "Street" separated), but for simplicity - I've chosen delimited.
Step 2: Select "Other" and enter the character that separates your text - in our case it's a comma. You will see a preview of what your selection will do.
Step 3: This screen will allow you to choose the format of each column. In this example, I clicked Finish - but this can be useful if you have numerical values that you want to sum, or dates that you want to sort.
And Voila! Now you're free to filter and sort based on whatever you wish, or simply reorder the columns (put last name in column A, first name in column B for example). Now your data is much easier to manipulate!
And that's it!
Thank you for reading my blog - I would love to hear your feedback in the comments section below!
Monday, 9 July 2012
Self-Employed DIYers - Why Should You Hire a Bookkeeper?
Written By: Jeanne Franche
You're self-employed and successful, congratulations! You wear multiple-hats: manager, salesman, marketer, tradesman. But who handles your books?
If your answer is either "myself" or "my spouse" you may save hard-earned dollars, effort and time if you hire a bookkeeper.
Many self-employed professionals try to save money by doing the finances themselves, or getting a spouse to do them. But you need to ask yourself, how much is your time worth? How much is your spouse's time worth? If you or your spouse's occupation is something other than bookkeeping - it's likely that your time would be better spent on other tasks, such as drumming up more business.
The going rate for a professional bookkeeper may seem steep to some, but it's important to weigh out the benefits. For small companies, hiring a professional bookkeeper may be less expensive than having a full-time staff doing the books, if you factor in the costs of wages, benefits, vacation pay and downtime when business is slow. Many bookkeepers will charge by the hour, so if there is only a few hours of work a month - that is all that you pay for! Also - a professional bookkeeper will have experience (which is the advantage of working for multiple clients), and will therefore be able to do the job much faster than a non-bookkeeper would.
An added plus? It will also save you money and headache when, at year-end your books are done and ready for the accountant at tax time (as opposed to a shoebox full of receipts).
A professional bookkeeper can tell you - with monthly financial statements, how your company is doing - instead of waiting until year-end to find out if you turned a profit. Knowing how your company is doing month-to-month will help you make financial decisions that will directly impact your company, you will see your cash flow, control your expenses and cash outflow, and have more control over overspending. You can even have your income statement compare against a yearly budget or with previous year comparisons.
There is a vast range of accounting program products out on the market, ranging from user-friendly to extremely sophisticated. Find a professional bookkeeper who will know how to navigate the program of your choosing - and if you are tech savvy, could show you how to pull reports yourself! Imagine having years of your financial data at your fingertips, readily accessible within minutes.
Now that you're convinced that you need a bookkeeper, how do you find one? Word of mouth is a good place to start - check with your accountants, fellow business associates, etc. - if they've had experience with a really good bookkeeper.
Do not hire a bookkeeper based on price alone - your risk is that you'll get what you pay for. Do your research: check references, experience and, after year-end, check with your accountants.
Do you have any other reasons why DIYers should hire a bookkeeper, please post in the comments section below!
You're self-employed and successful, congratulations! You wear multiple-hats: manager, salesman, marketer, tradesman. But who handles your books?
If your answer is either "myself" or "my spouse" you may save hard-earned dollars, effort and time if you hire a bookkeeper.
Are You a DIY (Do It Yourself) Bookkeeper?
Many self-employed professionals try to save money by doing the finances themselves, or getting a spouse to do them. But you need to ask yourself, how much is your time worth? How much is your spouse's time worth? If you or your spouse's occupation is something other than bookkeeping - it's likely that your time would be better spent on other tasks, such as drumming up more business.
Cost of a Bookkeeper
The going rate for a professional bookkeeper may seem steep to some, but it's important to weigh out the benefits. For small companies, hiring a professional bookkeeper may be less expensive than having a full-time staff doing the books, if you factor in the costs of wages, benefits, vacation pay and downtime when business is slow. Many bookkeepers will charge by the hour, so if there is only a few hours of work a month - that is all that you pay for! Also - a professional bookkeeper will have experience (which is the advantage of working for multiple clients), and will therefore be able to do the job much faster than a non-bookkeeper would.
An added plus? It will also save you money and headache when, at year-end your books are done and ready for the accountant at tax time (as opposed to a shoebox full of receipts).
How Is Your Business Doing?
A professional bookkeeper can tell you - with monthly financial statements, how your company is doing - instead of waiting until year-end to find out if you turned a profit. Knowing how your company is doing month-to-month will help you make financial decisions that will directly impact your company, you will see your cash flow, control your expenses and cash outflow, and have more control over overspending. You can even have your income statement compare against a yearly budget or with previous year comparisons.
Accounting Programs
There is a vast range of accounting program products out on the market, ranging from user-friendly to extremely sophisticated. Find a professional bookkeeper who will know how to navigate the program of your choosing - and if you are tech savvy, could show you how to pull reports yourself! Imagine having years of your financial data at your fingertips, readily accessible within minutes.
How to Find a Bookkeeper?
Now that you're convinced that you need a bookkeeper, how do you find one? Word of mouth is a good place to start - check with your accountants, fellow business associates, etc. - if they've had experience with a really good bookkeeper.
Do not hire a bookkeeper based on price alone - your risk is that you'll get what you pay for. Do your research: check references, experience and, after year-end, check with your accountants.
Do you have any other reasons why DIYers should hire a bookkeeper, please post in the comments section below!
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