Details

QuickBooks 2011 For Dummies


QuickBooks 2011 For Dummies


18. Aufl.

von: Stephen L. Nelson

18,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 24.09.2010
ISBN/EAN: 9780470946046
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 416

DRM-geschütztes eBook, Sie benötigen z.B. Adobe Digital Editions und eine Adobe ID zum Lesen.

Beschreibungen

<b>Bestselling author Stephen Nelson returns with big help for small businesses</b> <p>Offering expert advice, bestselling author Stephen Nelson returns with updated coverage of the latest revisions and enhancements to the leading small business accounting software package: QuickBooks. After a quick review of bookkeeping basics, you’ll discover how QuickBooks can help you build the perfect budget, process payroll, simplify your tax return prep work, create invoices, manage inventory, generate income statements, balance accounts, and much more.</p> <ul> <li>Veteran author Stephen Nelson updates his perennial bestseller and offers you easy-to-understand coverage of the newest release of QuickBooks</li> <li>Encourages you to take control of managing your own business accounting and financial management tasks so you can avoid having to hire expensive outside help</li> <li>Provides expert advice for building the perfect budget, processing payroll, creating invoices, managing inventory, tracking job costs, generating income statements, balancing accounts, creating financial reports, and more</li> </ul> <p><i>QuickBooks 2011 For Dummies</i> helps you handle your financial management tasks more effectively so that you can effectively manage your business!</p>
<p>Introduction 1</p> <p>About QuickBooks 1</p> <p>About This Book 2</p> <p>What You Can Safely Ignore 2</p> <p>What You Should Not Ignore (Unless You’re a Masochist) 3</p> <p>Three Foolish Assumptions 4</p> <p>How This Book Is Organized 4</p> <p>Part I: Quickly into QuickBooks 4</p> <p>Part II: Daily Entry Tasks 5</p> <p>Part III: Stuff You Do from Time to Time 5</p> <p>Part IV: Housekeeping Chores 5</p> <p>Part V: The Part of Tens 5</p> <p>Part VI: Appendixes 6</p> <p>Conventions Used in This Book 6</p> <p><b>Part I: Quickly into QuickBooks 7</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 1: QuickBooks: The Heart of Your Business 9</b></p> <p>Why QuickBooks? 9</p> <p>Why you need an accounting system 10</p> <p>What QuickBooks does 10</p> <p>What Explains QuickBooks’ Popularity? 12</p> <p>What’s Next, Dude? 13</p> <p>How to Succeed with QuickBooks 14</p> <p>Budget wisely, Grasshopper 14</p> <p>Don’t focus on features 15</p> <p>Outsource payroll 16</p> <p>Get professional help 17</p> <p>Use both the profit and loss statement and the balance sheet 17</p> <p><b>Chapter 2: Answering Mr. Wizard 19</b></p> <p>Getting Ready for the Big Interview 19</p> <p>The big decision 20</p> <p>The trial balance of the century 21</p> <p>The mother of all scavenger hunts 24</p> <p>Doing the EasyStep Interview 25</p> <p>Tip 1: Get to know the interview protocol 27</p> <p>Tip 2: Take your time 28</p> <p>Tip 3: Get industry-specific advice 28</p> <p>Tip 4: Accept the suggested filename and location 29</p> <p>Tip 5: Go with the suggested Chart of Accounts 30</p> <p>Tip 6: Consider tracking all your expenses with your checkbook 30</p> <p>Tip 7: Add accounts you need 31</p> <p>The Rest of the Story 32</p> <p>Should You Get Your Accountant’s Help? 33</p> <p><b>Chapter 3: Populating QuickBooks Lists 35</b></p> <p>The Magic and Mystery of Items 35</p> <p>Adding items you might include on invoices 37</p> <p>Creating other wacky items for invoices 45</p> <p>Editing items 47</p> <p>Adding Employees to Your Employee List 48</p> <p>Customers Are Your Business 50</p> <p>It’s Just a Job 54</p> <p>Adding Vendors to Your Vendor List 58</p> <p>The Other Lists 62</p> <p>The Fixed Asset list62</p> <p>The Price Level list 63</p> <p>The Sales Tax Code list 63</p> <p>The Class list 64</p> <p>The Other Names list.64</p> <p>The Sales Rep list 65</p> <p>Customer, Vendor, and Job Types list 65</p> <p>The Terms list 66</p> <p>The Customer Message list 66</p> <p>The Payment Method list 66</p> <p>The Ship Via list 66</p> <p>The Vehicle list.67</p> <p>The Memorized Transaction list 67</p> <p>The Reminders list 67</p> <p>Organizing Lists 67</p> <p>Printing Lists 68</p> <p>Exporting List Items to Your Word Processor 68</p> <p>Dealing with the Chart of Accounts List 69</p> <p>Describing customer balances 69</p> <p>Describing vendor balances 70</p> <p>Camouflaging some accounting goofiness 70</p> <p>Supplying the missing numbers 75</p> <p>Checking your work one more time 76</p> <p><b>Part II: Daily Entry Tasks 79</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 4: Creating Invoices and Credit Memos 81</b></p> <p>Making Sure That You’re Ready to Invoice Customers 81</p> <p>Preparing an Invoice 82</p> <p>Fixing Invoice Mistakes 88</p> <p>If the invoice is still displayed onscreen.89</p> <p>If the invoice isn’t displayed onscreen 89</p> <p>Deleting an invoice 89</p> <p>Preparing a Credit Memo 90</p> <p>Fixing Credit Memo Mistakes 94</p> <p>History Lessons 94</p> <p>Printing Invoices and Credit Memos 95</p> <p>Loading the forms into the printer 95</p> <p>Setting up the invoice printer 96</p> <p>Printing invoices and credit memos as you create them 98</p> <p>Printing invoices in a batch 99</p> <p>Printing credit memos in a batch 102</p> <p>Sending Invoices and Credit Memos via E-Mail 102</p> <p>Customizing Your Invoices and Credit Memos 103</p> <p><b>Chapter 5: Reeling In the Dough 107</b></p> <p>Recording a Sales Receipt 108</p> <p>Printing a Sales Receipt 112</p> <p>Special Tips for Retailers 114</p> <p>Correcting Sales Receipt Mistakes 115</p> <p>Recording Customer Payments 116</p> <p>Correcting Mistakes in Customer Payments Entries 120</p> <p>Making Bank Deposits 121</p> <p>Improving Your Cash Inflow 124</p> <p>Tracking what your customers owe 124</p> <p>Assessing finance charges 126</p> <p>Dealing with deposits 128</p> <p><b>Chapter 6: Paying the Bills 131</b></p> <p>Pay Now or Pay Later? 131</p> <p>Recording Your Bills by Writing Checks 132</p> <p>The slow way to write checks 132</p> <p>The fast way to write checks 138</p> <p>Recording Your Bills the Accounts Payable Way 140</p> <p>Recording your bills 140</p> <p>Entering your bills the fast way 144</p> <p>Deleting a bill 146</p> <p>Remind me to pay that bill, will you? 147</p> <p>Paying Your Bills 148</p> <p>Tracking Vehicle Mileage 152</p> <p>Paying Sales Tax 153</p> <p>A Quick Word on the Vendor Center Window 154</p> <p><b>Chapter 7: Inventory Magic 155</b></p> <p>Setting Up Inventory Items 155</p> <p>When You Buy Stuff 156</p> <p>Recording items that you pay for upfront 157</p> <p>Recording items that don’t come with a bill 157</p> <p>Paying for items when you get the bill 159</p> <p>Recording items and paying the bill all at once 160</p> <p>When You Sell Stuff 161</p> <p>How Purchase Orders Work 162</p> <p>Customizing a purchase order form 162</p> <p>Filling out a purchase order 163</p> <p>Checking up on purchase orders 165</p> <p>Receiving purchase order items 165</p> <p>Assembling a Product 166</p> <p>Identifying the components 167</p> <p>Building the assembly 167</p> <p>Time for a Reality Check 168</p> <p>Dealing with Multiple Inventory Locations 170</p> <p>Manually keep separate inventory-by-location counts 170</p> <p>Use different item numbers for different locations 170</p> <p>Upgrade to QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions 171</p> <p>The Lazy Person’s Approach to Inventory 171</p> <p>How periodic inventory systems twork in QuickBooks 172</p> <p>The good and bad of a periodic inventory 173</p> <p><b>Chapter 8: Keeping Your Checkbook 175</b></p> <p>Writing Checks 175</p> <p>Writing checks from the Write Checks window 175</p> <p>Writing checks from the Checking register 177</p> <p>Changing a check that you’ve written 179</p> <p>Packing more checks into the register 179</p> <p>Depositing Money into a Checking Account 181</p> <p>Recording simple deposits 181</p> <p>Depositing income from customers 182</p> <p>Transferring Money between Accounts 184</p> <p>Setting up a second bank account 185</p> <p>About the other half of the transfer 186</p> <p>Changing a transfer that you’ve already entered 186</p> <p>Working with Multiple Currencies 188</p> <p>To Delete or to Void? 188</p> <p>Handling NSF Checks from Customers 189</p> <p>The Big Register Phenomenon 190</p> <p>Moving through a big register 190</p> <p>Finding that darn transaction.191</p> <p><b>Chapter 9: Paying with Plastic 193</b></p> <p>Tracking Business Credit Cards 193</p> <p>Setting up a credit card account 194</p> <p>Selecting a credit card account so that you can use it 195</p> <p>Entering Credit Card Transactions 196</p> <p>Recording a credit card charge 197</p> <p>Changing charges that you’ve already entered 199</p> <p>Reconciling Your Credit Card Statement and Paying the Bill 200</p> <p>So What about Debit Cards? 201</p> <p>So What about Customer Credit Cards? 201</p> <p>Part III: Stuff You Do from Time to Time 203</p> <p><b>Chapter 10: Printing Checks 205</b></p> <p>Getting the Printer Ready 205</p> <p>Printing a Check 208</p> <p>A few words about printing checks 209</p> <p>Printing a check as you write it 209</p> <p>Printing checks by the bushel 211</p> <p>What if I make a mistake?213</p> <p>Oh where, oh where do unprinted checks go? 214</p> <p>Printing a Checking Register 214</p> <p><b>Chapter 11: Payroll 217</b></p> <p>Getting Ready to Do Payroll without Help from QuickBooks 217</p> <p>Doing Taxes the Right Way 218</p> <p>Getting an employer ID number 218</p> <p>Having employees do their part 218</p> <p>Getting Ready to Do Payroll with QuickBooks 219</p> <p>Paying Your Employees 220</p> <p>Paying Payroll Liabilities 222</p> <p>Paying tax liabilities if you use the full-meal-deal Payroll service 222</p> <p>Paying tax liabilities if you don’t use the full-meal-deal Payroll service 223</p> <p>Paying other nontax liabilities 224</p> <p>Preparing Quarterly Payroll Tax Returns 224</p> <p>Using the QuickBooks full-meal-deal Payroll service 224</p> <p>Using the other QuickBooks Payroll services 225</p> <p>Filing Annual Returns and Wage Statements 225</p> <p>Using the QuickBooks full-meal-deal Payroll service 226</p> <p>Using the QuickBooks economy Payroll services 226</p> <p>The State Wants Some Money, Too 226</p> <p><b>Chapter 12: Building the Perfect Budget 229</b></p> <p>Is This a Game You Want to Play? 229</p> <p>All Joking Aside: Some Basic Budgeting Tips 230</p> <p>A Budgeting Secret You Won’t Learn in College 231</p> <p>Setting Up a Secret Plan 232</p> <p>Adjusting a Secret Plan 235</p> <p>Forecasting Profits and Losses 235</p> <p>Projecting Cash Flows 235</p> <p>Using the Business Planner Tools 236</p> <p><b>Chapter 13: Online with QuickBooks 237</b></p> <p>Doing the Electronic Banking Thing 237</p> <p>So what’s the commotion about? 237</p> <p>A thousand reasons not to bank online 238</p> <p>Making sense of online banking 240</p> <p>Signing up for the service 241</p> <p>Making an online payment 241</p> <p>Transferring money electronically 243</p> <p>Changing instructions 244</p> <p>Transmitting instructions 244</p> <p>Message in a bottle 245</p> <p>A Quick Review of the Other Online Opportunities 247</p> <p>Part IV: Housekeeping Chores 249</p> <p><b>Chapter 14: The Balancing Act 251</b></p> <p>Balancing a Bank Account 251</p> <p>Giving QuickBooks information from the bank statement 251</p> <p>Marking cleared checks and deposits 253</p> <p>Eleven Things to Do If Your Non-Online Account Doesn’t Balance 257</p> <p><b>Chapter 15: Reporting on the State of Affairs 261</b></p> <p>What Kinds of Reports Are There, Anyway? 261</p> <p>Creating and Printing a Report 264</p> <p>Visiting the report dog-and-pony show 267</p> <p>Editing and rearranging reports 267</p> <p>Reports Made to Order 270</p> <p>Processing Multiple Reports 272</p> <p>Last but Not Least: The QuickReport 272</p> <p><b>Chapter 16: Job Estimating, Billing, and Tracking 275</b></p> <p>Turning On Job Costing 275</p> <p>Setting Up a Job 276</p> <p>Creating a Job Estimate 276</p> <p>Revising an Estimate 279</p> <p>Turning an Estimate into an Invoice 280</p> <p>Comparing Estimated Item Amounts with Actual Item Amounts 281</p> <p>Charging for Actual Time and Costs 282</p> <p>Tracking Job Costs 283</p> <p><b>Chapter 17: File Management Tips 285</b></p> <p>Backing Up Is (Not That) Hard to Do 285</p> <p>Backing up the quick-and-dirty way 286</p> <p>Getting back the QuickBooks data you backed up 291</p> <p>Accountant’s Copy 293</p> <p>Working with Portable Files 294</p> <p>Using an Audit Trail 294</p> <p>Using a Closing Password 295</p> <p><b>Chapter 18: Fixed Assets and Vehicle Lists 297</b></p> <p>What Is Fixed Assets Accounting? 297</p> <p>Fixed Assets Accounting in QuickBooks 299</p> <p>Setting Up a Fixed Asset List 299</p> <p>Adding items to the Fixed Asset list 299</p> <p>Adding fixed asset items on-the-fly 302</p> <p>Editing items on the Fixed Asset list 303</p> <p>Tracking Vehicle Mileage 304</p> <p>Identifying your vehicles.304</p> <p>Recording vehicle miles 306</p> <p>Using the vehicle reports 307</p> <p>Updating vehicle mileage rates 307</p> <p>Part V: The Part of Tens 309</p> <p><b>Chapter 19: (Almost) Ten Tips for Business Owners 311</b></p> <p>Sign All Your Own Checks 311</p> <p>Don’t Sign a Check the Wrong Way 312</p> <p>Review Canceled Checks Before Your Bookkeeper Does 312</p> <p>Choose a Bookkeeper Who Is Familiar with Computers and Knows How to Do Payroll 313</p> <p>Regularly Review Your Financial Statements 313</p> <p>Choose an Appropriate Accounting System 314</p> <p>If QuickBooks Doesn’t Work for Your Business 314</p> <p>Keep Things Simple 315</p> <p><b>Chapter 20: Tips for Handling (Almost) Ten Tricky Situations 317</b></p> <p>Selling an Asset 318</p> <p>Selling a Depreciable Asset 318</p> <p>Owner’s Equity in a Sole Proprietorship 319</p> <p>Owner’s Equity in a Partnership 320</p> <p>Owner’s Equity in a Corporation 320</p> <p>Multiple-State Accounting 321</p> <p>Getting a Loan 322</p> <p>Repaying a Loan 322</p> <p><b>Chapter 21: (Almost) Ten Secret Business Formulas 325</b></p> <p>The First “Most Expensive Money You Can Borrow” Formula 326</p> <p>The Second “Most Expensive Money You Can Borrow” Formula 328</p> <p>The “How Do I Break Even?” Formula 328</p> <p>The “You Can Grow Too Fast” Formula 331</p> <p>How net worth relates to growth 331</p> <p>How to calculate sustainable growth 332</p> <p>The First “What Happens If    ?” Formula 333</p> <p>The Second “What Happens If    ?” Formula 335</p> <p>The Economic Order Quantity (Isaac Newton) Formula 337</p> <p>The Rule of 72 338</p> <p>Part VI: Appendixes 341</p> <p><b>Appendix A: Installing QuickBooks in Ten Easy Steps 343</b></p> <p><b>Appendix B: If Numbers Are Your Friends 347</b></p> <p>Keying In on Profit 347</p> <p>Let me introduce you to the new you 347</p> <p>The first day in business 348</p> <p>Look at your cash flow first 348</p> <p>Depreciation is an accounting gimmick 349</p> <p>Accrual-basis accounting is cool 350</p> <p>Now you know how to measure profits 351</p> <p>Some financial brain food 352</p> <p>In the Old Days, Things Were Different 353</p> <p>What Does an Italian Monk Have to Do with Anything? 356</p> <p>And now for the blow-by-blow 357</p> <p>Blow-by-blow, Part II 360</p> <p>How does QuickBooks help? 362</p> <p>Two Dark Shadows in the World of Accounting 363</p> <p>The first dark shadow 363</p> <p>The second dark shadow 364</p> <p>The Danger of Shell Games 365</p> <p><b>Appendix C: Sharing QuickBooks Files 367</b></p> <p>Sharing a QuickBooks File on a Network 367</p> <p>User permissions 368</p> <p>Record locking 369</p> <p>Installing QuickBooks for Network Use 370</p> <p>Setting Up User Permissions 371</p> <p>Specifying Multi-User Mode 374</p> <p>Working in Multi-User Mode 374</p> <p>Index 375</p>
<p><b>Stephen L. Nelson, MBA, CPA</b> provides accounting, business advisory, tax planning, and tax preparation services to small businesses. He belongs to the American Institute of CPAs and holds an MBA in finance and a master's in taxation. His 100-plus books have sold more than four million copies.
<p><b><i>Learn to:</i></b> <ul> <b><li>Organize financial information for your business</b></li> <b><li>Build a budget, pay bills, process payroll, and track expenses</b></li> <b><li>Balance accounts, manage inventory, and estimate job costs</b></li> <b><li>Prepare for tax time</b></li> </ul> <p><b>Take control of your finances — and your business — with QuickBooks</b> <p>To succeed in small business, you need great ideas, an entrepreneurial spirit, and competitive products or services. Oh, and one other thing: a good accounting system like QuickBooks. <i>QuickBooks 2011 For Dummies</i> shows you how to use this popular business finance program to gain a clear view of your finances and keep your business in the black. <ul> <b><i><li>Starting out right — discover what you need to do to be ready for QuickBooks, then install and set up the software</i></b></li> <b><i><li>Satisfy the IRS — use QuickBooks to maintain your accounting records to comply with tax laws</i></b></li> <b><i><li>Get right to business — quickly learn to enter data, create invoices, and record and print sales receipts</i></b></li> <b><i><li>Count your beans — keep track of your checkbook, credit card accounts, inventory, payroll, and budgets, all in one place</i></b></li> <b><i><li>See what's what — get a company snapshot that tells who needs to get paid, who owes money, and what needs to get done</i></b></li> <b><i><li>Stay on track — produce common financial reports and track every dollar coming in and going out</i></b></li> <b><i><li>The taxman cometh — Organize your data and simplify tax preparation</i></b></li> <b><i><li>Go online — securely download bank and credit card transactions directly into QuickBooks</i></b></li> </ul> <p><b>Open the book and find:</b> <ul> <b><li>First steps to setting up QuickBooks</b></li> <b><li>Secrets to building a solid budget</b></li> <b><li>How to track accounts receivable and payable</b></li> <b><li>What you need to estimate jobs and track costs</b></li> <b><li>Steps for keeping track of inventory as you purchase and sell items</b></li> <b><li>Ways to handle payroll and withholding</b></li> <b><li>What to do</b> <b><i>before</i></b><b> tax time</b></li> <b><li>Advice on whether to use accrual-basis accounting or cash-basis accounting</b></li> </ul>

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