Book Image

Implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009

By : David Roys, Vjekoslav Babić
Book Image

Implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009

By: David Roys, Vjekoslav Babić

Overview of this book

<p>Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 is the latest release of the NAV application (formerly known as Navision) from the Microsoft Dynamics family of products that brings a 3-tiered architecture, web services enablement, and many more exciting features, to the well established Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) solution.<br /><br />Although Dynamics NAV is carefully designed for ease of use, attaining measurable business gains requires an understanding of business, finance, analysis and design techniques, programming skills, and the ability to manage complex projects coupled with an expert knowledge of the product itself.<br /><br />This book distils hard won experience into an easy to follow guide to implementing the full power of Dynamics NAV in your business. It won't just tell you how to do it; it will show you how to do it. It will help you to become a better consultant or developer by providing practical examples and expert advice.<br /><br />From an introduction to the new RoleTailored user interface to a series of practical web services programming tutorials, you will gain a deep understanding of what NAV 2009 has to offer compared to previous versions. With a strong emphasis on practical examples, we take you through the implementation process and provide guidance on configuring the Chart of Accounts and Dimensions for financial analysis, how to use the Rapid Implementation Toolkit (RIM) to reduce implementation effort and an overview of the Sure Step implementation methodology. You will learn how to take a business problem through to a working solution using industry standard techniques such as use-case modelling and object-role modelling. We will teach you how to design and develop NAV objects including the new Page object and the Client Reporting Services report layouts.</p>
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

A programmer's guide to accounting


It's rare that you'll do anything in Dynamics NAV that doesn't require some knowledge of accounting and finance. If, like me, you're from a technical background, some of the accounting terms and practices you've encountered may seem strange and illogical. This section will guide you through the financial jungle and give you the confidence you need to configure like a pro. If you're a programmer, you may mistakenly think a chapter on accounting and configuration doesn't apply to you. A good programmer tests their work by using the application; to use the application, you will need to be able to configure it and understand it. You'll need to get some understanding of finance, just enough to be dangerous. Let's start by looking at the chart of accounts—I'll try to make it as painless as possible.

The hippo's bottom

If Dynamics NAV were a hippopotamus then the chart of accounts would be its bottom; no matter what you feed into it, the chart of accounts is where...