Editor's Note: At The CPA Technology Advisor, we pride ourselves on listening, and listening carefully, to our readers. You've been asking us for some time to help you deal with a client base seemingly determined to use Intuit's QuickBooks product. The overwhelming penetration of the product in small businesses means it's used, in one form or another, almost ubiquitously in accounting offices. In a recent survey of nearly 7,000 AICPA members, including more than 3,000 in the Information Technology Section, QuickBooks ranked behind only tax preparation software as an area of interest. Your message is quite clear. In response, we're proud to introduce Doug Sleeter as a regular columnist. Doug is the country's premier expert on helping accountants deal with their clients in a QuickBooks world.
Unlike many accounting programs, QuickBooks does not have a General Journal. Although the newer versions of the program allow you to see the list of journal entries on a portion of the journal entry screen, I have a suggestion for tracking journal entries that, over the years, has served us and our clients quite well.
Since QuickBooks keeps a register for all balance sheet accounts, you can use a bank account called Journal Entries to keep track of the journal entries you make. It's best to use a bank account, because you may need to use this account on zero dollar forms as described later in this article.
Start by creating a bank account
called 'Journal Entries'
in the Chart of Accounts.
Use the 'Journal Entries'
account on the first line of each
journal entry. Enter only the account
and a memo on the first line, and
leave the debit and credit columns
blank (or zero).
Later, when you need to find or edit a journal entry, it will be very easy to find the entry by viewing the register for the Journal Entries account.
Beware of the Name Column on Journal Entries
Using the Journal Entries account
also helps you to protect the accuracy
of job cost reports. When a multi-line
journal entry has a name entered
on the top line, and not entered
on a subsequent line, the name on
the top line is applied to each
line with a blank name column (i.e.,
when the name field on a line is
left blank). In the example shown
in Figure 3, Academy Computer uses
a journal entry to enter summary
Year-to-Date amounts as part of
a mid-year setup. They are also
using customer names so that job
cost reports will be complete and
accurate. However, because Bob Mason's
name is on the top line, and since
some expense lines do not have a
customer name (Cost of Goods Sold,
Payroll Expenses and Office Supplies),
QuickBooks allocates those lines
to his job on job cost reports.
So in this case, Bob Mason's
job will show $8,000 in Cost of
Goods Sold, even though you didn't
enter his name on the Cost of Goods
Sold line.
To make sure you never run into this problem, use the 'Journal Entries' account on the first line of every journal entry. Enter the memo in the first line, but don't enter any name or amounts. This way, you avoid the problem, and your job cost reports will remain accurate.
Use Zero-Dollar Checks as Journal Entries
Occasionally, it is necessary to
make an adjustment in QuickBooks
that affects one or more items.
For example, quite often I recommend
against using inventory tracking
in QuickBooks for one reason or
another. So to handle the transactions
when the client has inventory (i.e.,
when you use the periodic adjustment
method to adjust the balance in
the inventory asset account), I
suggest that all purchase transactions
use two-sided 'non-inventory
part' items that point to
Cost of Goods Sold (or purchases).
Then, at the end of the period,
to adjust the balance sheet for
financial statements, yet still
provide for accurate Item Profitability
reporting, we use a zero-dollar
check to make an adjustment that
debits Inventory and credits Cost
of Goods Sold (or purchases).
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