There is a major difference between sophisticated
accounting software used by larger businesses for financial control
purposes than is required for small business where a simple bookkeeping
spreadsheet is sufficient.
An accountant needs to not only ensure the financial records are
accurate but also retrieve any part of the accounting records to answer
accounting questions on the accounts, provide a legal basis for the
transactions and report the financial statements at regular periodic
intervals.
Accounting is a term that embodies a whole raft of financial activities
while bookkeeping is specifically literally the keeping of books of
account. For non limited companies that do not need to produce a
balance sheet then a simple income and expenditure account can be
produced much simpler using single entry bookkeeping principles.
Less financial control is often required from small business accounting
software as the bookkeeper is often the owner manager who already has
an intimate knowledge of each transaction. Books are still required for
tax purposes and a solid requirement of preparing a set of financial
books for tax purposes is that each entry is supported by third party
evidence.
The prime accounting documents providing back up are sales and purchase
invoices or receipts and bank statments. Financial transactions where
no receipt exists can still be entered in the business books although
all transactions not carrying third party evidence could subsequently
be disallowed for tax purposes and certainly would be if the amounts
entered indicated unusual income or expenditure.
Producing an income and expenditure statement using single entry
bookkeeping is little more than making two lists of financial
transactions. Those lists being one of sales income received from sales
invoices or receipts issued to customers and the other of purchase
expenditure being from purchase invoices received from suppliers.
To record sales income it would not normally be sufficient to simply
add up the total of the invoices as such a summation does not leave an
audit trail of the items which have been included. A written list of
sales invoices does provide an audit trail.
Sales accounting for a small business accounting purposes can be either
a manual list of the sales invoices or by using a spreadsheet package a
list can be made on a bookkeeping spreadsheet. Basic formulae canh be
used to add up totals in a bookkeeping spreadsheet.
The essential information to enter for a sales invoice would be the
date of the sale, name of the customer, sales invoice number if
applicable and optional a brief description of the item sold. In the
next column would be the total sales invoice amount. Additional columns
might be required to account for taxes on sales such as vat in the uk
or sales taxes.
A further small complication might be if at the discretion of the small
business owner additional information was required from the bookkeeping
records to indicate the totals of the different types of products and
services then additional columns could be incorporated to enter the net
sales figures in these columns.
There it is then, a simple list of sales invoices to satisfy the sales
accounting requirements for a small business where a balance sheet is
not required.
On the expenditure side of the business the bookkeeping can also be a
simple list of the purchase invoices and receipts showing the amount
spent. The list should also produce an audit trail by showing the date
of the purchase invoice, name of the supplier, purchase invoice for
identification purposes and the total amount spent.
Usually tax returns are the main purpose of producing small business
accounts and invariably some analysis is required to show what the
expenses have been spent on. The small business owner can insert
additional standard columns to the bookkeeping spreadsheet.
The expenditure analysis columns do not need to be a different column
for each type of expenditure. It is better to set up and group the
analysis columns in general headings which can accommodate all the
expenses.
These bookkeeping analysis columns would include stock, other direct
costs, premises costs, general administrative costs, transport and
delivery costs, repairs and maintenance, travelling and hotel costs,
motor costs, bank and legal costs and other expenses. It is better not
to enter too many items under a general heading of other expenses as
this is more likely to be investigated as the type of expense has not
been precisely identified.
One important column to also include is for asset purchases as fixed
assets usually have different tax rules applying to the claim of the
expense against tax and should be separated from other expenditure.
Having set up two bookkeeping spreadsheets the task is then to produce
the income and expenditure account by collecting the totals of each of
the analysis columns. The sales total is the sales turnover from which
is deducted the totals of each of the expenditure classification totals
with the result being the net profit and loss of the business.
Where stock is bought and sold a further adjustment may be required to
account for the difference between opening and closing stock. This is
done by taking a physical stock check and valuing the stock at the
start and end of the financial period.
On the income and expenditure account adjust the stock purchases figure
by adding the value of the opening stock and deducting the value of the
closing stock. The result is not the stock purchases total as shown in
the bookkeeping spreadsheets but the cost of the goods which have been
sold to produce the sales turnover being reported.
Simple bookkeeping for a small business accounting purposes can be two
lists of sales and purchases supported with sales invoices and
purchases invoices.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/finance-articles/for-small-business-
accounts-read-bookkeeping-spreadsheets-316577.html
About the Author
Terry Cartwright, accountant at DIY Accounting
designs UK Accounting Software on excel spreadsheets providing complete
Small
Business Accounting Software solutions with single and double
entry Bookkeeping
Software for both limited companies and self employed business
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