Book Image

Professional Tips and Workarounds for QuickBooks Online

By : Ashley Beetson
Book Image

Professional Tips and Workarounds for QuickBooks Online

By: Ashley Beetson

Overview of this book

Accountants and bookkeepers can sometimes face challenges while coming up with solutions to help their clients. QuickBooks Online, a popular cloud accounting software, comes with a wide range of tools that can take time to learn. This book will show you how to properly combine the tools available in QuickBooks to get the most out of this software. Complete with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts and practical examples, the book will begin by helping you understand how to create opening balances for a new company. You'll then discover essential bookkeeping and accountancy tips and tricks, and find guidance to help make QuickBooks as easy to use as possible. As you advance, you'll explore different scenarios in which QuickBooks Online can be used for various business types. This will help you understand that not every business is the same, but using the wide range of functionalities QuickBooks Online offers, you can customize solutions to really make it work for you. By the end of this QuickBooks book, you'll have gained deep insights into how you can use QuickBooks Online to work for different business types, and you'll have a complete checklist of the different things you should be doing when you start reviewing accounts ahead of tax season.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1 – General Tips and Shortcuts
4
Section 2 – Adapting QuickBooks Online to Suit Different Business Types
10
Section 3 – Reviewing and Reporting Data in QuickBooks Online

Products and services – Raw materials

Raw materials are essentially the different items required to build a finished product. A furniture company that builds desks could require wood, metal, nuts, bolts, and screws. These items will be required in order to manufacture the finished product.

A company may not manufacture fully from scratch, but simply purchase the component parts and assemblies only. The accounting entries are pretty much the same for either business model, or often it is a combination of the two.

Raw materials need to be created as stock items. As shown in the following screenshot, three chart of account categories are associated with a stock item. These are Stock asset account, Income account, and Expense account.

Figure 3.1 – Inventory/stock item accounts

The Stock asset account is affected when the goods are purchased. For example, the balance sheet entries could be debit stock and credit creditors.

If a customer invoice...