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Accounting System:
Simple Bookkeeping for Small Business |
Accounting System: Selling Transactions
Daily sales
in your
accounting system
Your
small-business accounting system needs to keep a record of each sale
completed. This can take one of several different forms, depending upon
your type of business and the number of daily sales. For Example:
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If you are selling
a service, or selling to a business that will pay later, you would
probably use an invoice.
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A low-volume
business might use a sales slip. These often can be purchased in
booklet form.
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A high-volume
business might use a cash register.
In each of these
cases, you need two copies, one for the customer, and the other for your
own accounting system records. If you use a cash register, get one that
can print the second copy.
In some cases you
may not give the customers a receipt such as at fairs and flea markets.
In this situation your accounting system would require a list of daily
sales in a "cash" book, which can be purchased at stationery stores. If
you are selling low cost, high-volume items, you may be basing your
total sales on the daily cash receipts without a record of individual
sales.
There are several
styles of each of these sales forms available. Visit a stationery store
to pick the one that suits you and your specific accounting system. To
appear professional, you may also want to have them printed with your
company name. You should also have them sequentially numbered. When you
fill out a sales form, record the sales tax separately. Then add the
tax to the base price to get the total sales price.
At the end of the
day.
An
adequate accounting system recognizes the need to total the day's sales
and tax receipts on a daily basis. Enter the total in a monthly
income ledger. Again, these are available in several forms at
stationery stores. You can frequently summarize a month's worth of
daily sales on one sheet.
At the end of the
month:
Add the totals for sales and taxes for the month into the income
ledger.
Accounting system:
Business Purchases/Expenses
Daily:
Keep copies of invoices for all business purchases. If it is an
inexpensive purchase, you may want to pay for it with "petty cash". But
you still need to keep a record of the purchase.
At the end of the
day:
Record the details of each purchase made that day in the
expenditure ledger (from a stationery store). For tax purposes, you
will have to separate the different types of expenditures in your
small-business accounting system. The ledger forms that you purchase
should help you to make this separation on a routine basis as the
expenses are entered.
At the end of each
month:
Add up monthly totals and enter them into the expenditure ledger.
Your accounting
system should collect the information related to sales or revenue and
the related expenses, to determine the amount of money you make. This
calculation will be reviewed on the web page for the “Profit and Loss
Statement.
Information from Start
Your Own Business for $1,000 or Less
Web page by Paul
Susic MA Licensed Psychologist CEO/President Susic
Psychological Consulting P.C.
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