Accounts Made Easy
| Published: 16th June 2008 15:26 |
Accounts Made Easy Introduction Overview A proper accounting system is not a luxury that small businesses can do without, it is a necessity that they cannot afford to be without. What
This guide This guide has been written for the managers and owners of small businesses. For simplicity the examples given are based on the accounts of a small limited company. However the principles illustrated apply equally well for sole traders. | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Accountancy is easy..... when you know how! Introduction
Who is interested?
But most of all, you should be interested in your own accounts. Who are accountants?
A definition of accountancy But don't worry, as we will explain over the next few pages, it's actually really rather simple!
Financial accounts
Sole traders and partnerships must also produce financial accounts - although they do not need to be sent to Companies House and there are not so many rules governing how they must be set out and what they must contain. Management accounts There are no rules that say what management accounts must look like - it is up to each business to decide what format will best help it to understand what is going on, control the business and make better decisions Management accounts often predict the future as well as keep track of the past i.e. they usually include forecasts of what is going to happen tomorrow as well as recording what happened yesterday. In contrast, financial accounts only ever record what has already happened in the past. Your books | |||||||||||||||||||||
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What are accounts? Introduction So accounts are, in a sense, your business dashboard. The two key instruments on your car's dashboard are probably the speedometer and mileometer. These are equivalent to the two key elements in any set of accounts: the profit and loss account and the balance sheet. Speedometer Speedometer = Profit & Loss Account In a car the speedometer shows you how fast you are going and how quickly you are getting to where you want to go. This is equivalent to the profit and loss account, which shows how fast your business is accumulating profits. Both the speedometer and the profit and loss account only make sense when viewed over a period of time:
Milometer Milometer = Balance sheet The balance sheet, on the other hand, is like the milometer. A milometer records how far the car has travelled and is often used as an important factor in deciding how much a car is worth In the same way, your balance sheet measures how far your business has travelled. It is a snapshot of where the business has got to and gives some indication of how much it might be worth (but like the milometer it tells us little or nothing about how, or how quickly, it has got to where it is). Double entry In fact, the dashboard on your car, and your accounts are both examples of double entry at work:
In both cases only one thing happens (either you travel a mile or your earn a pound). But in both cases there are two effects - the mile changes both the speedo and the milometer - the pound changes the profit and loss account and the balance sheet. There are two effects (or "entries"), and so for hundreds of years accountants have referred to it as double-entry. That is really all there is to it. Basic principles The accruals principle - Your accounts should reflect things when they arise or are earned - which is not necessarily the same as when you actually pay or are paid for them. For example, your accountant will include an April sales invoice in your April accounts, even if your customer doesn't pay you until August. Revenue v capital payments - Some of the things you spend money on will not be regarded by your accountant (or the taxman) as reducing your profits. For example, the money you pay to buy a new car or pay off a loan. Accounting conventions say that payments like these shouldn't appear in the profit and loss account - instead their effect is confined to the balance sheet. The key distinction here is between capital expenditure and revenue payments:
Your accounts | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Your profit and loss account | |||||||||||||||||||||
Sales | Made by your business - even if not yet paid for | ||||||||||||||||||||
Less | Less | ||||||||||||||||||||
Costs | Revenue expenditure - costs of goods and services used to generate, supply and support those sales - even if not yet paid for | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Profit | How much your business has really made | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Your balance sheet | |||||||||||||||||||||
Balance sheets are always presented in two halves. The top half shows the company's net assets i.e.
The bottom half shows where these net assets have come from i.e.
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Bookkeeping basics Introduction Cash Book Sales invoice file Purchase invoice file Expense claims Other books Some slightly larger businesses who do not use the VAT cash accounting method also find it helpful to use a number of other types of books such as a:
Whilst such books do undoubtedly have their place in a more sophisticated business and accounting environment, they are often not necessary for many smaller businesses, and the cost of the additional training necessary to master their double-entry bookkeeping foundation often far outweighs their additional benefit. Of course, we would be delighted to advise on the most cost-effective and suitable accounting system for the needs of your business. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Information provided by Burgis & Bullock http://www.burgisbullock.com/
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