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Don't forget about your vendor and client agings.
The totals on A/P and A/R agings should match the same balances on your Balance
Sheet. If not, someone has made a bad entry in either the checkbook or in client
payments (use the G/L Auditor to audit the numbers). Skipping this step can mean
hours of extra work in the long run. "We hadn't been balancing our agings to
our Balance Sheet for almost two years," says Peggy Johnson, president of AdFarm.
Once they realized how necessary this step was, they went back through the process
for each month. "It was a huge undertaking," she says. "Now we do it every month."
Put your computer to work
For those JEs that you need to make each month
(e.g., prepaids, amortization, depreciation, etc.), set up the
entries as recurring G/L entries. You'll save time, since Clients & Profits
will automatically add them for you each month. Recurring entries
show up on proof lists and post to the period for which they
are scheduled. You should see these entries in the totals on
the Balance Sheet.
Rather than manually reconciling your bank account,
let Clients & Profits do the work (you'll find the bank reconciliation
in checkbook's check tools.) Just choose the bank account to reconcile
then enter the statement ending balance. Clients & Profits lists
the account's outstanding items that need to be cleared. Just click
the check box to clear amounts, then save -- it's that easy!
Keep the cash coming
Cash flow is crucial to running a successful
agencies. Keep cash coming in by invoicing often and following
up on collections. There's several invoicing options to easily
bill before a job starts, part way through, or when the work
is completed -- whichever way (or combination of ways) works
best to keep cash flowing in.
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Also, make a routine
of reviewing your client aging weekly to be sure someone is keeping
up with collections. "I work on collections daily," says Caitilin
Ashley, owner of Ashley & Associates. "I make calls right from
the Client Aging report," she says, making short work of the task,
since client contact information and receivables print right on
the report. (Here's a good tip: Give your collections effort some
weight by including payment terms and late fees in your client
contracts.)
Cover your bases
Print hard copies of the Detailed G/L report
and other financial statements each month, then organize them
in binders. If you're ever audited by the IRS, you'll need those
hard copies. If you ever have a computer disaster, you've always
got those hard copies.
Safeguard your data by making a daily back up of the
database. A good backup plan includes at least one week's worth of back
ups (two are better), with an extra copy stored out of the office. "Our
off-site service picks up our daily backup, which includes our C&P
database and everything on our network," says Beth Flinn, senior accountant
for The Townsend Agency. "With as much work as we do in a day -- let
alone a week -- we are serious about backing up." Also, make sure that
back ups are restored periodically so you know that they can be opened
and accessed. Be sure that more than one person knows how to make and
restore back ups, too.
"Before using Clients & Profits, we knew we were
missing crucial financial information," Caitilin says. "C&P has
had our whole effort from day one -- and it shows in the vital feedback
we get from it. I really don't want to remember what it was like before
we started using C&P." Following these best accounting procedures
will help you do things better, faster, and more profitably. And who
doesn't want that?
Mindy
Williams is a senior member of the Clients & Profits
Helpdesk. She teaches the new-user training classes and
edits the quarterly newsletters. |