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Bookkeeping For Dummies®

Visit www.dummies.com/cheatsheet/bookkeepinguk to view this book's cheat sheet.

Introduction

Bookkeepers manage all the financial data for small businesses. If you subscribe to the idea that information is power (and we do), you can see that the bookkeeper has a tremendous amount of power within a business. Information recorded in the books helps business owners make key decisions involving sales planning and product offerings, as well as manage many other financial aspects of their businesses.

Without the hard work of bookkeepers, businesses wouldn’t have a clue about what’s happening with their financial transactions. Without accurate financial bookkeeping, a business owner can’t know how many sales are being made, how much cash is being collected or how much cash was paid for the products sold to customers during the year. The owner also can’t know how much cash was paid to employees or spent on other business needs throughout the year.

Accurate and complete financial bookkeeping is crucial to any business owner, and also important to those who work with the business, such as investors, financial institutions and employees. People inside (managers, owners and employees) and outside the business (investors, lenders and HM Revenue & Customs – HMRC) depend on the bookkeeper’s accurate recording of financial transactions.

Yes, the bookkeeper’s job is crucial and requires certain skills and talents. Bookkeepers must be detail-orientated, enjoy working with numbers and be meticulous about accurately entering those numbers in the books. They must be vigilant about keeping a paper trail and filing all needed backup information about the financial transactions entered into the books.

About This Book

In this book, we introduce you to the key aspects of bookkeeping and how to set up and use your financial books. We walk you through the basics of bookkeeping, starting with the process of setting up your business’s books and developing:

Then we take you through the process of recording those transactions – sales, purchases and other financial activity. We also talk about how to manage payroll, HMRC reporting and external financial reporting.

We then discuss the procedures at year-end and what bookkeeping tasks need to be done to prepare your year-end accounts. Bookkeeping is a continuous cycle, starting with financial transactions, recording those transactions in ledgers, posting those transactions to the Nominal Ledger, testing your books to be sure that they’re in balance, making any necessary adjustments or corrections to the books to keep them in balance, preparing financial reports to understand how well the business did during the year and finally getting ready to start the process all over again for the next year.

We have added a new chapter in this edition, where we talk about cloud accounting, which is one of the modern ways that small businesses can carry out their bookkeeping online. Take a look at Chapter 18 for more information about this fast-growing industry.

Throughout this book, we introduce ‘Have a Go’ sections, which are practical exercises aimed at helping you understand the bookkeeping principles we discuss. Feel free to draw all over these sections of the book; we want it to be as useful for you as possible.

We also include a number of examples on how to apply the basics of bookkeeping to real-life situations. If you’re primarily reading this book to gain a general knowledge of the subject and don’t need to delve into all the nitty-gritty day-to-day aspects of bookkeeping, you may want to skip over the paragraphs marked with the Example icon. Skipping the examples doesn’t interfere with your grasp of the key aspects of how to keep the books. You’re also free to skip anything in a sidebar (a shaded box) or marked with the Technical Stuff icon; those pieces of text are interesting but not crucial to your understanding of bookkeeping.

Within this book, you may note that some web addresses break across two lines of text. If you’re reading this book in print and want to visit one of these web pages, simply key in the web address exactly as it’s noted in the text, pretending that the line break doesn’t exist. If you’re reading this as an e-book, you’ve got it easy – just click the web address to be taken directly to the web page.

Foolish Assumptions

While writing this book, we made some key assumptions about who you are and why you’ve picked up this book to get a better understanding of bookkeeping. We assume that you’re one of the following:

Icons Used in This Book

For Dummies books use little pictures, called icons, to flag certain chunks of text. The icons in Bookkeeping For Dummies are:

tip Look to this icon for ideas on how to improve your bookkeeping processes and manage your business accounts.

remember This icon marks anything we really, really want you to recall about bookkeeping after you’ve finished reading this book.

warning This icon points out any aspect of bookkeeping that comes with pitfalls or hidden dangers. We also use this icon to mark anything that can get you into trouble with HMRC, your bank, your suppliers, your employees or your investors.

example The Example icon gives real-life specifics on how to do a particular bookkeeping function.

technicalstuff This icon highlights paragraphs that are a bit more technical than the rest of the book. This information can be handy, but you can skip over it without missing anything essential.

Beyond the Book

If you fancy finding out a bit more about the world of bookkeeping, you can read some of our online articles, which you can find at www.dummies.com/extras/bookkeepinguk.

We offer you a few hints and tips on how to become more organised in your bookkeeping role. We also give you the lowdown on accruals and prepayments, and provide some examples of the types of situations in which you need to use them. In addition, we show you how your Balance Sheet can help you understand more about the financial health of your business. We bring the bookkeeping world up to date by talking about cloud accounting and what questions you need to ask yourself before making the decision about which online accounting software to use. Finally, we also look at ten different ways to improve your credit control. Effective credit control means that you’re bringing cash into the business in an efficient manner, and because cash is so important for a business, you might find this article an interesting read.

You might also want to check our Cheat Sheet online (at www.dummies.com/cheatsheet/bookkeepinguk), where we look at all manner of bookkeeping tips and techniques, from key steps to the bookkeeping process, tips for controlling the business cash, when to use debits and credits, as well as some important ratios that might be useful when analysing the Balance Sheet of a company.

Where to Go from Here

You’re now ready to enter the world of bookkeeping, and Bookkeeping For Dummies is set up so that you can start anywhere you like!

If you need the basics or are a little rusty and want to refresh your knowledge of bookkeeping, start with Part I. However, if you already know bookkeeping basics, are familiar with the key terminology and know how to set up a Chart of Accounts, consider diving in at Part II.

If you’ve set up your books already and feel comfortable with the basics of bookkeeping, you may want to start with Part III and how to enter various transactions. On the other hand, if your priority is using the financial information you’ve already collected, check out the financial reporting options in Part IV. Have fun!

Appendix

Glossary

accrual accounting:
An accounting method in which transactions are recorded when they actually occur, even if cash hasn’t changed hands. Income is recorded when earned (not when the business is actually paid for the products or services), and expenses are counted when goods or services are received, even if the business hasn’t yet been paid for the goods or services. Most businesses use this accounting method. See also cash-based accounting.
accumulated fund:
A form of capital account or retained earnings for a not-for-profit organisation. It shows all the surpluses the organisation has ever made.
amortisation:
An accounting method used to show the using-up of an intangible asset by writing off a portion of the asset’s value each year.
assets:
Everything the business owns, such as cash, buildings, vehicles, furniture and any other item used to run the business and help it generate money in the future.
averaging:
An accounting method used to value stock by calculating an average cost per unit sold.
bad debts expense:
A categorisation used to write off customer accounts with outstanding payments that the business determines can never be collected.
Balance Sheet:
A snapshot of a business’s financial picture at a point in time (usually the year-end) that shows all assets and liabilities. It also shows who has invested in the business and how the investments were used.
capital:
A term used to describe the owner’s equity. In the case of a limited company, it is the nominal value of the shares issued. In the case of a sole trader, it records the owner’s investment in the business.
Capital accounts:
Used to track the value of assets owned by the business owners or shareholders after accounting for liabilities.
cash-based accounting:
An accounting method based on actual cash flow. Expenses are recorded only when the business actually pays out cash for the goods or services, and income is recorded only when the business collects cash from the customer. See also accrual accounting.
Chart of Accounts:
A list of all the Nominal accounts used by a business to analyse its income, expenses, assets and liabilities.
corporation tax:
A tax paid by limited companies on their earnings.
Cost of Goods Sold:
The full cost of those goods and services sold in any period. This usually includes stock, direct labour and any other direct costs.
credits:
Accounting entries that increase Liability or Income accounts and decrease Asset or Expense accounts. Credits always appear on the right-hand side of an accounting entry.
current assets:
All items the business owns that are expected to be used in the next 12 months, including items, such as cash, that can be easily liquidated. Other examples include cash equivalents, Trade Debtors, stock, marketable securities and prepaid expenses.
current liabilities:
All financial obligations the business owes that are due in less than 12 months, such as Trade Creditors (money due to suppliers, contractors and consultants) and Credit Cards Payable (payments due on credit cards).
debits:
Accounting entries that increase Asset or Expense accounts and decrease Liability and Income accounts. Debits always appear on the left-hand side of an accounting entry.
depreciation:
An accounting method used to account for the reduction of the value of an asset over time. Depreciation is taken over a set number of years to show that an asset is being used up and its value is diminishing.
expenses:
All costs of operating a business.
First In, First Out (FIFO):
An accounting method used to value stock that assumes the first items put on the shelf are the first items sold.
fixed asset:
An asset with an expected life greater than 12 months, which will in general be in permanent use by the business. Land and buildings, motor vehicles and plant and equipment are all examples of fixed assets.
gross profit:
The difference between sales and cost of goods sold. Often described as the key measure of business performance, it measures the margin made on each sale.
income:
Money earned by a business from its trading activities; synonyms are sales and revenue.
Income and Expenditure account:
A version of the Profit and Loss statement for not-for-profit organisations used to find the amount of surplus or deficit during a period.
income tax:
A tax paid by individuals and partnerships on all their earnings, including earnings from direct employment and self-employment.
intangible asset:
Anything the business owns that has value but can’t be touched, such as licences, patents, trademarks and brand names.
interest:
Income earned from money invested in money markets, such as bank deposits.
Last In, First Out (LIFO):
An accounting method used to value stock that assumes the last items put on the shelf are the first items sold.
liabilities:
All debts the business owes, such as Trade Creditors and Mortgages Payable.
long-term assets:
All things a business owns that are expected to be due in more than 12 months, such as buildings, factories, vehicles and furniture.
long-term liabilities:
All debts a business owes that it expects to repay in more than 12 months. Examples are mortgages and long-term loans.
Lower of Cost or Market Valuation (LCM):
An accounting method used to value stock based on whichever is lower: the actual cost of the stock or its current market value.
net profit:
The bottom line after all costs, expenses, interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation are accounted for. Net profit reflects how much money the business makes.
Nominal Journal entries:
Any entries made to correct or adjust balances in the Nominal Ledger accounts.
Nominal Ledger:
A summary of all historical transactions that occurred since the business first opened its doors. This ledger is the summary of a business’s financial information.
operating cash flow:
The cash that a business’s operations generate to produce and sell its products.
operating expenses:
Expenses that a business incurs in order to continue its operations, such as advertising, equipment rental, premises rental, insurance, legal and accounting fees, entertainment, salaries, office expenses, repairs and maintenance, travel, utilities, vehicles, and just about anything else that goes into operating a business and isn’t directly involved in selling a business’s products.
operating profit:
A measure of a business’s earning power from its ongoing operations.
periodic stock method:
Tracking stock that a business has on hand by doing a physical count of stock on a periodic basis, whether daily, monthly, yearly, or any other time period that meets a business’s needs.
perpetual stock method:
Tracking stock that a business has on hand by adjusting the stock counts after each transaction. A computerised stock control system is needed to manage stock using this method.
petty cash:
All cash kept on hand at business locations for incidental expenses.
point of sale:
The location where customers pay for products or services they want to buy, such as a register or service counter.
profit:
All the earnings of a business after all business expenses.
Profit and Loss statement:
A statement for-profit organisations use to find the amount of profit or loss during a period. It shows such key measures as Sales, Gross Profit and Net Profit.
Receipts and Payments account:
A summary of the cash book/journals of a not-for-profit organisation.
Retained Earnings account:
An account used to show net profits left in the business from accounting period to accounting period and reinvested in the business for future growth.
short-term liabilities:
Those assets not kept permanently within the business and expected to change within 12 months. Examples are stock, debtors and prepayments.
specific identification:
An accounting method used to value stock based on the actual items sold and their individual costs.
tangible assets:
Any items the business owns that can be held in one’s hand or touched, such as cash, stock or vehicles.
Trade Creditors:
An account used to record money due to suppliers, contractors and consultants for products or services purchased by the business. Sometimes known as Accounts Payable.
Trade Debtors:
An account used to record income not yet received on products sold or services provided to customers that is to be collected at a later date. Sometimes known as Accounts Receivable.
Value Added Tax (VAT):
A tax charged on most business transactions made in the UK and the Isle of Man. VAT is also charged on goods and some services imported from certain places outside the European Community (EC), as well as on some goods and services coming into the UK from other EC countries. VAT applies to all business types – sole traders, partnerships, limited companies, charities and so on.

Part I

Basic Bookkeeping: Why You Need It

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webextra Find more about bookkeeping and other topics for free at www.dummies.com.

In this part …

check.png Discover why bookkeeping is so important, and get started with the task of setting up your books.

check.png Become familiar with bookkeeping jargon, such as ledger, journal, posting, debit and credit.

check.png Find out about the all-important Chart of Accounts and how you can set this up to customise your business accounts.

check.png Look at different business types and understand why it’s important to set up the correct one.

Chapter 1

So You Want to Do the Books

In This Chapter

arrow Introducing bookkeeping and its basic purpose

arrow Maintaining a paper trail

arrow Managing daily business finances

arrow Making sure that everything’s accurate

Many small business owners, while they enjoy working in their chosen field using the skills they know and love, don’t always like to perform ‘bookkeeping’ duties. Most company owners prefer to employ the skills of a qualified bookkeeper. Some may, perhaps, prefer to give their bagfuls of receipts to their accountant and simply hope that a useful set of accounts comes out of the end of the accounting sausage machine!

In this chapter, we help to demystify the role of a bookkeeper. It may be that you’re just starting off in business and, as a result, can’t afford the services of a bookkeeper just yet! Think of this chapter as a checklist of jobs that need to be done.

Delving into Bookkeeping Basics

Like most businesspeople, you probably have great ideas for running your own business and just want to get started. You don’t want to be distracted by the small stuff, like keeping detailed records of every penny you spend; you just want to build a business with which you can make lots of money.

Well, slow down there – you’re not in a race! If you don’t carefully plan your bookkeeping system and figure out exactly how and what financial details you want to track, you’ve absolutely no way to measure the success (or failure, unfortunately) of your business efforts.

Bookkeeping, when done properly, gives you an excellent measure of how well you’re doing and also provides lots of information throughout the year. This information allows you to test the financial success of your business strategies and make any necessary course corrections early in the year to ensure that you reach your year-end profit goals.

Looking at basic accounting methods

You can’t keep books unless you know how to go about doing so. The two basic accounting methods are cash-based accounting and accrual accounting. The key difference between the two methods is the point at which you record sales and purchases in your books:

  • If you choose cash-based accounting, you only record transactions when cash changes hands.
  • If you use accrual accounting, you record a transaction on its completion, even if cash doesn’t change hands.

For example, suppose that your business buys products to sell from a supplier but doesn’t actually pay for those products for 30 days. If you’re using cash-based accounting, you don’t record the purchase until you actually lay out the cash to the supplier. If you’re using accrual accounting, you record the purchase when you receive the products, and you also record the future debt in an account called Trade Creditors.

remember There are specific criteria for who can use cash-based accounting. For example, if you’re a sole trader or partnership and your turnover is expected to be below £82,000, you’re able to use cash-based accounting and submit your self-assessment returns on that basis. However, if you’re a limited company or run a limited liability partnership, you won’t be able to operate the cash-based scheme and will need to use accrual based methods. For more detailed criteria, see www.gov.uk and type ‘cash basis’ in the search box.

We talk about the pros and cons of each type of accounting method in Chapter 2.

Understanding assets, capital and liabilities

Every business has three key financial parts that must be kept in balance: assets, capital and liabilities. Of course, for some of you these may be alien concepts, so maybe a quick accounting primer is in order.

example We use buying a house with a mortgage as an example. The house you’re buying is an asset, that is, something of value that you own. In the first year of the mortgage you don’t own all of it but, by the end of the mortgage period (typically 25 years), you will. The mortgage is a liability, or a debt that you owe. As the years roll on and you reduce the mortgage (liability), your capital or ownership of the asset increases. That’s it in a nutshell.

  • Assets include everything the business owns, such as cash, stock, buildings, equipment and vehicles.
  • Capital includes the claims that owners have on the assets based on their portion of ownership in the business.
  • Liabilities include everything the business owes to others, such as supplier bills, credit card balances and bank loans.

remember The formula for keeping your books in balance involves these three elements:

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Another way of explaining this is to say that all of the company’s resources (assets) have been provided by either creditors (liabilities) or the owners (equity/capital) of the business. Because this equation is so important, we talk a lot about how to keep your books in balance throughout this book. You can find an initial introduction to this concept in Chapter 2.

The preceding equation can also be restated as follows:

images

Some people may prefer this new equation as it looks a little more like the vertical Balance Sheet format that we discuss in Chapter 14. The vertical Balance Sheet shows all the Assets minus the Liabilities at the top of the Balance Sheet followed by the Capital at the bottom of the Balance Sheet.

Introducing debits and credits

To keep the books, you need to revise your thinking about two common financial terms: debits and credits. Most non-bookkeepers and non-accountants think of debits as subtractions from their bank accounts. The opposite is true with credits – people usually see credits as additions to their accounts, in most cases in the form of refunds or corrections in favour of the account holders.

Well, forget all you think that you know about debits and credits. Debits and credits are totally different animals in the world of bookkeeping. Because keeping the books involves a method called double-entry bookkeeping, you have to make at least two entries – a debit and a credit – into your bookkeeping system for every transaction. Whether that debit or credit adds to or subtracts from an account depends solely upon the type of account.

We know all this debit, credit and double-entry stuff sounds confusing, but we promise that this system is going to become much clearer as you work through this book. We start explaining this important concept in Chapter 2.

Charting your bookkeeping course

You can’t just enter transactions in the books willy-nilly. You need to know exactly where those transactions fit into the larger bookkeeping system. To know where everything goes, you use your Chart of Accounts, which is essentially a list of all the accounts that your business has and the types of transactions that go into each one. (We talk more about the Chart of Accounts in Chapter 3.)

Discovering different business types

Before you start up in business, you’re wise to sit down and have a think about the structure of your business.

For example, if you’re a window cleaner, and only ever see yourself doing your own rounds and not working with anyone else, then sole trader status would be more than adequate. However, if you’re planning to be much bigger and take on staff, then you need to read Chapter 5 to see how you should structure your business and what sort of advice you may need.

Planning and controlling your activities

Many businesses just start up and trade from day to day, without any real planning or control of the activities they undertake. Often, businesspeople become so busy that they’re fire-fighting continually and lack any real direction. We like using checklists, as they help to organise your bookkeeping activities in a methodical and orderly manner. This level of organisation means that you can pick up and put down the accounts from day to day or even week to week. You can always start from where you left off, quickly and easily, by simply adopting some of the hints and tips contained within Chapter 6.

Instituting internal controls

Every business owner needs to be concerned with keeping tight controls on business cash and how that cash is used. One way to institute this control is by placing internal restrictions on who can enter information into your books and who has the necessary access to use that information.

You also need to control carefully who has the ability to accept cash receipts and spend your business’s cash. Separating duties appropriately helps you to protect your business’s assets from error, theft and fraud. We talk more about controlling your cash and protecting your financial records in Chapter 6.

Defining and Maintaining a Ledger

You may get confused by terms such as books, ledgers, journals and accounts. Most of these words evolved from traditional bookkeeping methods, where accounts were handwritten in huge leather-bound ledgers. These looked like books, hence the name bookkeeping – simply, keeping financial records in the books!

The books are also known as journals or ledgers (we told you it was a bit confusing!). You’d normally have one book for your sales, one for purchases and then a general one used for everything (often known as the General Ledger, although in the UK it’s more commonly known as the Nominal Ledger). Sometimes, businesses would also keep a separate cashbook, which would record cash received and cash paid.

Nowadays, most people use computers to do their accounts (anything to make our busy lives easier). The most simplistic set of accounts can be done on a spreadsheet, although we don’t recommend it as mistakes can easily be made and you’ll struggle to find an efficient way to make sure that the books balance.

tip In this book we demonstrate the use of ledgers using Sage 50 Accounts. However, it’s worth pointing out at this stage that, if your budget is low and you’re a micro business (for example, a one-man band), you can buy many other computer packages that will enable you to provide accurate accounts, including online accounting services, some of which we cover in Chapter 18 (where we discuss cloud accounting). For example, Sage has developed an online service called Sage One that is simple and easy to use. Refer to Sage One For Dummies by yours truly to find out more.

remember Most computerised accounting systems use the term ledger, so you usually find the following:

The pinnacle of your bookkeeping system is the Nominal Ledger. In this ledger, you keep a summary of all your accounts and the financial activities that took place involving those accounts throughout the year.

The sum of each Nominal Ledger account can be used to develop your financial reports on a monthly, quarterly or annual basis. You can also use these account summaries to develop internal reports that help you to make key business decisions. We talk more about developing Profit and Loss Reports and Balance Sheets in Chapter 3, when we introduce the Chart of Accounts.

We explain more about developing and maintaining the Nominal Ledger in Chapter 4. We also discuss the importance of journals and talk about the accounts commonly journalised in Chapter 4.

Using Bookkeeping Tools to Manage Daily Finances

After you set up your business’s books and put in place your internal controls, you’re ready to use the systems you’ve established to manage the day-to-day operations of your business. A well-designed bookkeeping system quickly makes the job of managing your business’s finances much easier.

Tracking sales

Everyone wants to know how well sales are doing. If you keep your books up-to-date and accurate, you can easily get those numbers on a daily basis. You can also watch sales trends as often as you think necessary: daily, weekly or monthly.

Use the information collected by your bookkeeping system to monitor sales, review discounts offered to customers and track the return of products. All three elements are critical to monitoring the sales success of your products.

tip If you find that you need to offer discounts more frequently in order to increase sales, you may need to review your pricing, and you definitely need to conduct market research to determine the cause of this sales weakness. The cause may be the new activities of an aggressive competitor, or simply a slowdown in your particular market. Either way, you need to understand the problem and work out how to maintain your profit objectives in spite of any obstacles.

When sales tracking reveals an increase in the number of your products being returned, you need to find the reason for the increase. Perhaps the quality of the product you’re selling is declining, and you need to find a new supplier. Whatever the reason, an increased number of product returns is usually a sign of a problem that needs to be researched and corrected.

We talk more about how to use the bookkeeping system for tracking sales, discounts and returns in Chapter 7.

Keeping stock

If your business keeps stock on hand or in warehouses, tracking the costs of the products you plan to sell is critical for managing your profit potential. When you see stock costs escalating, you may need to adjust your own prices in order to maintain your profit margin. You certainly don’t want to wait until the end of the year to find out how much your stock cost you.

You also must keep a careful watch on how much stock you have on hand and how much was sold. Stock can get damaged, discarded or stolen, meaning that your physical stock counts may differ from the counts you have in your books. Do a physical count periodically – at least monthly for most businesses and possibly daily for active retail stores.

In addition to watching for signs of theft or poor handling of stock, make sure that you’ve enough stock on hand to satisfy your customers’ needs. We explain how to use your bookkeeping system to manage stock in Chapter 8.

remember If you run a service-based business, you can count yourself lucky as stock isn’t as significant a cost in your business. You’re predominantly selling time and using stocks of materials as a part of your service. However, you can’t ignore your material costs, so the same lessons on stock control apply to you.