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Bookkeeping and Accounting Basics « prev
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Your posting schedule depends on your sales numbers. Generally speaking, the more sales you do, the more often you should post to your ledger. A retail store, for instance, that does hundreds of sales amounting to thousands of dollars every day should post daily. With that volume of sales, it's important to see what's happening every day and not to fall behind with the paperwork. To do this, the busy retailer should use a cash register that totals and posts the day's sales to a computerized bookkeeping system at the push of a button.
A slower business, however, or one with just a few large transactions per month, such as a small website design shop, dog-sitting service, or swimming pool repair company, would probably be fine if it posted weekly or even monthly.
If possible, use accounting software. You can purchase an accounting software program that will generate its own ledgers as you enter your information (and then automatically generate the necessary financial reports from the same information). All but the tiniest new business are well advised to use an accounting software package to help keep their books. Micro-businesses can get by with personal finance software such as Quicken.
Step Three: Creating Basic Financial Reports
 | Should I report expense reimbursements as income? |  | Financial reports are important because they bring together several key pieces of financial information about your business. Think of it this way: while your income ledger may tell you that your business brought in a lot of money during the year, you won't know if you turned a profit without measuring your income against your total expenses. And even comparing your monthly totals of income and expenses won't tell you whether your credit customers are paying fast enough to keep adequate cash flowing through your business to pay your bills on time.
That's why you need financial reports: to combine data from your ledgers and sculpt it into a shape that shows you the big picture of your business. The key reports you need to create regularly are a cash flow analysis, a profit and loss forecast, and a balance sheet. (Both QuickBooks and Quicken Home and Business, as well as other accounting software, can provide these regular reports.)
If you are ready to start your own business, get all the information you need, including tips on accounting and bookkeeping with Nolo's Quicken® Legal Business Pro -- a complete business library on your desktop, featuring five Nolo business books, over 140 forms and a dozen 'how to' checklists.
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