QuickBooks 2000: The Official Guide

QuickBooks 2000: The Official Guide

QuickBooks 2000: The Official Guide

QuickBooks 2000: The Official Guide

Paperback(2000 ed.)

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Overview

Along with Quicken: The Official Guide, this is a core title in our Quicken Press line. The previous two editions have sold 35,000 units to date. By continuing to work with Intuit on promotional efforts, we plan to spur continuing growth across Quicken Press titles.
-- QuickBooks with over 80% retail market share and more than 2.2 million users is the undisputed leader in accounting software for small businesses. Over 7 out of 10 small businesses who purchase accounting software use either QuickBooks or QuickBooks Pro.
-- Osborne's Quicken Press will cover the significant new features in QuickBooks 2000 which is a much more significant upgrade than QuickBooks 99. This is the most complete, authoritative book available on QuickBooks and QuickBooks Pro. As the Official Guide, it is the only book endorsed by Intuit and has received unanimously positive reviews.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780072123203
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies, The
Publication date: 12/01/2000
Series: QuickBooks: The Official Guide
Edition description: 2000 ed.
Pages: 513
Product dimensions: 7.40(w) x 9.09(h) x 1.17(d)

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1: Using QuickBooks for the First Time

Payroll Feature

if you have employees, QuickBooks wants to know about it, and also wants to know how many. Here are the guidelines for answering that question:

  • An employee is someone you pay for whom you withhold taxes and issue a W-2 form at the end of the year.
  • Subcontractors are not employees.
  • If you write a payroll check and withhold taxes for yourself, you are an employee.
  • If you write checks to yourself but don't withhold taxes, you are not an employee.
If you do have employees, you're asked whether you want to use the payroll feature. Say Yes, if that's the appropriate answer.

See Chapters 8 and 9 to learn everything about doing your own payroll.

Estimating, Invoicing, and Reports Preferences

If you provide estimates and then bill your customers according to a formula that tracks the progress of a job, QuickBooks has some features you may want to use. Answer the questions to match the way you do business. if you bill for time and want to track the amount of time you or your employees spend on each job, an interview question is provided for that, also. See Chapters 18 through 20 for information about using this feature.

You also are given an opportunity to turn on the classes feature, which is a way to combine categories and accounts to create reports that produce an overview. The feature can be useful for tracking types of customers, jobs, or even branch offices. More information about setting up and using classes is found in Chapter 21. if you turn on the classes feature here, you must establish the classes at some point after the interview (or answer No now and turnon the feature when you're ready to set up the classes).

Accounts Payable Preferences

The next section in the interview process is the determination of the method for handling your bills from vendors. You have two choices and both offer advantages and disadvantages:

  • Enter the checks directly.
  • Enter the bills first and then enter the payments later.

If you opt to enter your checks directly, it means that as bills arrive in your office, you put them somewhere (an envelope, a folder, or a shoebox) until you're ready to pay them. Then, you just have to enter the checks in the QuickBooks check register, place the checks in the envelopes, and attach a stamp. The advantage of this method is that it takes less time and less data entry. The disadvantage is that the only way to know how much money you owe at a given moment is to take the bills out of the container and to total them manually. Also, unless you specially mark and store those bills that offer a discount for timely payment, you might inadvertently miss a deadline and lose the discount.

If you decide to enter the bills first and then go through the process of paying them in QuickBooks, you can let the software remind you about due dates and you can get a current accounts payable total from the software. Another consideration when you opt to enter your bills into the software is that your accountant might have to make an adjustment when it's time to figure your taxes. Tracking accounts payable (and accounts receivable, for that matter) is called accrual accounting. If you file on a cash basis instead of an accrual basis, the accrued amount owing is not considered an expense and has to be subtracted from your total expenses. This isn't terribly unusual or difficult, but you should be aware of it. Most small businesses that don't have inventory file on a cash basis.

Reminders Preferences

QuickBooks has a feature which tracks the things you need to do and shows you a To Do list when you start the software. Included in the list are any due dates that exist (as a result of your data entry) in addition to any notes you wrote yourself and asked for a reminder about.

You can continue to let QuickBooks show you the reminder list when you open the software, or opt to display it manually through the menu. Make your decision based on the way you're most comfortable working. (You can always change it later.)

Cash or Accrual Reporting

QuickBooks has a specific interview question about the way you want to keep your books, offering cash or accrual options. Before you make the decision, check with your accountant. The smart way to do that is to ask your accountant to give a full explanation (don't just say "Which way?" and accept a one-word answer).

Here's a quick overview of what's really involved in this decision. (For details that apply specifically to your business, you should have a fuller discussion with your accountant.) in cash-based accounting, an expense doesn't exist until you write the check. Even if you enter the bill into the software and post it to an expense account in the general ledger, it isn' t really an expense until the check is written. The same is true for revenue, meaning income isn't considered to be real until payment is received from your customer. Even though you enter an invoice and post it to a revenue account in the general ledger, it isn't revenue until its paid.

In accrual-based accounting, as soon as you incur an expense (receive a bill from a vendor) or earn income (send an invoice to a customer), it's real.

Because most accounting software is accrual-based, most businesses, especially small businesses, keep accrual books and report to the IRS on a cash basis. Most accounting software is accrual-based because business owners want to know those accrued totals: "How much did I earn (bill customers for)?" and "How much do I owe?"

The Start Date Interview

if today is the first day of your fiscal year (usually January 1) and your accountant has just completed all the accounting stuff for last year, and your numbers are pristine and perfect, you can keep going now. If any other situation exists, you should stop right here, right now, and read the section on selecting a start date in Appendix A. (You might also want to call your accountant.)

The start date you select has an enormous impact on the amount of detail your QuickBooks reports will have. in fact, it has an enormous impact on the accuracy of the numbers QuickBooks reports.

Without repeating all the information in Appendix A, the following is a quick overview of the choices you have:

Choose the start date that represents the first day of your fiscal year and enter every transaction...

Table of Contents

Part I: Getting Started.

Using QuickBooks for the First Time.

Setting Up Your Lists.

Part II: Bookkeeping.

Invoicing.

Receiving Payments.

Tracking Accounts Receivable.

Entering Accounts Payable Bills.

Paying Bills.

Running Payroll.

Government Payroll Reporting.

Configuring and Tracking Inventory.

Making Checkbook Adjustments.

Reconciling Bank Accounts.

Using Budgets.

Using Journal Entries.

Running General Ledger Reports.

Using Online Banking Services.

Year-End Procedures.

Part III: Using Time and Billing.

Using Time Tracking.

Using Timesheets for Payroll and Job Costing.

Using the Onscreen Timer.

Part IV: Managing QuickBooks.

Customizing QuickBooks.

Managing Your QuickBooks Files.

Part V: Appendices.

A: Do This First!

B: Installing QuickBooks.

C: Glossary.

D: Keyboard Shortcuts. E: Getting Help in QuickBooks.

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