Book Image

Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 Application Design

By : Marije Brummel
Book Image

Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 Application Design

By: Marije Brummel

Overview of this book

Dynamics NAV 2009 is an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software product from Microsoft that can be used for variety of business needs. It is part of the Microsoft Dynamics family, and intended to assist with finance, manufacturing, Customer Relationship Management, supply chains, analytics, and electronic commerce for small and medium-sized enterprises. This book is a focused tutorial on Microsoft Dynamics NAV application development, so you can develop complete applications and not just application outlines. It will show NAV developers how to create different kinds of applications. Different kinds of application are vital in different industries like fashion, automobile, retail, books (education), and other industries. It starts off by introducing the supply chain that you will be using throughout the book. You will implement the Microsoft Dynamics NAV ERP suite and learn how it is set up and customized for various industries. You will be able to customize Dynamics NAV to suit the different aspects of a business such as Financial Management, Relationship Management, Production, Jobs, Trade, Storage, Logistics, and so on. The book will take you through these Microsoft-designed application features and show you how to customize and extend them safely. Thus, you will be able to create a structure of your own in Microsoft Dynamics NAV.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
Preface
11
Thank you for buying Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 Application Design

Getting started

Before we start creating any new jobs, we should have a look at the data and posting model of the Microsoft Dynamics NAV Jobs module.

The starting point is the Job table, which has Job Tasks and Job Planning Lines we can use for budgeting and planning. Each job can have its own prices.

The Job Planning Lines get invoiced through the standard Microsoft Dynamics NAV Sales functionality which then creates Job Ledger Entries.

How many jobs

The first step is setting up a new job. There can be different angles on setting up jobs. This depends on how we want to work with the system. The minimum requirement is to have at least one job per Bill-to Customer. This enables us to do the invoicing. Some companies use jobs this way to use it as a pre-invoice engine.

Another angle can be to set up new jobs nicely for each project we do for the customer. In our case this starts with the basic Dynamics NAV implementation. When this is finished we close the job. If...