How Can Accounting Software Reduce the Impact Of Coronavirus For Small Businesses?
During tax season, many business owners provide me their tax data in
various ways: boxes of receipts, clumps of expenses stapled together
with adding machine tape totaling each type of expense, or a listing of
income and expenses in a spreadsheet format. When the information is fed
to me by these means, I often wonder what expenses may have fallen
through the cracks. I often have to ask after some deductions that
appear to be missing such as bank charges and credit card interest.
But
when a client sends over a computerized accounting file that has been
kept up to date and includes cash and credit card purchases, I’m fairly
confident that every eligible deduction will be included on the tax
return.
Read More : 5 Tips - How to Tax Filing 2020?
I encourage all serious business owners to keep their
books on computerized accounting software. Aside from completeness of
data, there are other good reasons to track your business’s financial
transactions using accounting software:
1. Bank reconciliation made simple.
You don’t miss deductions
when you reconcile your bank account on computerized software. The
account won’t balance if you don’t post the bank charges or the missing
receipt for that debit card transaction at the office supply store.
2. Easy input.
If
you don’t like keyboarding in your transactions, most banks will allow
for a direct download of your bank account data. With a few keystrokes,
you can enter an entire month’s worth of transactions. Tracking credit
cards used in the business can be simple and you will remember to post
the finance charges. Reconciling the credit card balance in the same way
you reconcile the bank balance to the statement will ensure that all
transactions are accounted for.
3. Formalized financial statements.
A
computerized accounting software program can provide profit and loss
statements and balance sheets that are necessary to evaluate your
business’ progress. If you are seeking accounting outsourcing for your business, you
must present investors with financial statements.
4. History of the business.
There is nothing more educational and satisfying then bringing down a
comparative income statement to compare your current year activity with
prior year(s). A spreadsheet program can give you this as well, but the
data entry is clumsy and more prone to inaccuracies. Speaking of
spreadsheets, you can always dump your data from the software to your
spreadsheet program in the event you want to play with the numbers and
do projections.
5. Customer history and aging.
Using a
software’s invoicing feature allows you to track your customers’
purchasing history and payment habits. Aging reports can be generated to
facilitate collection efforts. In fact, you can note collection
attempts in a special “Notes” box on the customer profile screen.
6. Vendor history and aging.
Rather
than simply cutting checks when bills are due, you can use the accounts payable system to track bills as they arrive and plan for cash flow.
Using software will also provide you with reports for each vendor. It
makes it easy to locate prior payments and invoices.
7. Audit-proof the books.
Whenever
I’ve dealt with IRS auditors and the agent sees that the books have
been kept on a formalized accounting software, especially by a
professional bookkeeping services, the audit tends to be short. The agent
will run a cursory review of the bank statements and if things line up
with the software, he or she may take a sampling of expenses to audit,
rather going line by line.
Resource : https://www.foxbusiness.com/features/7-reasons-your-small-business-should-use-accounting-software
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