Digging for Dirt in MYOB – Part 1

Posted by Lynley on Jan 26 2010 with 0 Comments

One of the time consuming activities of MYOB consulting is digging for dirt and uncovering entries which have gone astray in clients data files.

This article is one of a series. It will direct you to five places to find your own ‘dirt’ (& clean it up rather than sweep under the mat!).

Follow the five checks below and let us know how you get on..

Check 1

On the “fascinating” subject of bank reconciliations, have you been doing reconciliations on every single bank, savings and credit card and loan account? Do you have an un-deposited funds account with a balance of thousands when it should be zero? Do you have PAYE payable with a debit balance when it should be credit. Check!

Check 2

Go to your bank reconciliation and look at all entries that are more than 6 weeks older than your last bank rec. date.

These are called stale transactions. Investigate each one and sort it out. Are there duplicate entries? Are they genuinely un-presented by your supplier, is the cheque lying in your drawer, is it an accountants end-of-year adjustment, did you pocket the cash or what? Find the culprit, delete or reverse where required.

Check 3

Check post-dated transactions by previewing the Transaction Journal (All) from today’s date to 31/12/2012. Are there any transactions which are future dated (I have found entries dated 20 years in the future!) Find them, re-date them watching for unclaimed GST and/or an income tax deduction.

Check 4

Payments made prior to the invoice date.

Go to Reports, Account, Exceptions, Prepaid Transactions report. Run for your current financial year say 1/4/09 – 31/3/10.

If you have any on the list (likely) then these have payment dates before the invoice date. Shouldn’t happen and ugly if the entry is over year-end usually 31 March. Kick the habit or if you really do have payments before order then start putting your payments against sales orders as opposed to invoices.

Check 5

Debtor and Creditor balances:

Run the Receivables, Ageing Detail report and check each amount is still unpaid. It is easy to confuse ‘Receive Money’ instead of ‘Receive Payments’. On the other side run the Payables, Ageing Detail and check each amount is still unpaid. The likely scenario is to use ‘Spend Money’ and not ‘Pay Bills’.

Filed Under: MYOB, MYOB accounting FAQ's

Debits and Credits

Posted by Lynley on Dec 21 2009 with 0 Comments

Some of you have taken formal accounting courses and know the debit/credit rules backward, forward & inside out. But the bulk of you have “fell into” a bookkeeping role when your real profession was a butcher, baker or a candlestick maker.

Quite simply there are 5 account types and each one can go up or down as follows.

Account Type      To increase this account       To decrease this account

Asset                                                                  Debit                                        Credit

Liability                                                              Credit                                       Debit

Equity                                                                 Credit                                       Debit

Income                                                               Debit                                        Credit

Expenses                                                            Debit                                        Credit

Or use the cheats guide to debits and credits

D E A D   C L I C

This acronym stands for Debit Expenses, Assets and Drawings, and Credit Liabilities, Income and Capital.

You apply this DEAD CLIC rule if an account goes up in value. If an account goes down value, you apply the opposite. In other words, if an expense increases in value, then you debit the account (because the DEAD CLIC rule says to Debit Expenses). If an expense decreases in value, then you credit the account.

Remember also that every transaction affects two accounts, one is a debit, the other a credit. This is why we call it double entry (not single entry) bookkeeping.

Do you need to know this stuff? Well not if you use MYOB software. Does it help to know – most certainly it does even if it means just having a better understanding of what your accountant is preaching on about.

Filed Under: MYOB

Tax Calendar – 2010

Posted by Lynley on Dec 17 2009 with 0 Comments

Been stung with a late payment fee because you’ve forgotton to make IRD payments?

Use IRD software to create a personalised calendar of tax deadlines for your own business. Copy the following link into your browser to start the due date calculator. In MYOB software, set up recurring entries (with due date reminders) to prompt you to make payments.

www.ird.govt.nz/calculators/tool-name/tools-t/calculator-due-dates.html

Tax Calendar 2010 - sample

Tax Calendar 2010 - sample

Changes in payment date

Due date falling on weekend or public holiday – all tax types

If a due date falls on a weekend or public holiday, the date moves to the next working day. Your return or payment will also be treated as being on time if it’s postmarked on the next working day.

Legislation changes

From the start of the 2009 income tax year (1 April 2008 for most people) GST return filing and payment dates, where they are not already, will be aligned to the income tax balance date. Provisional tax payments will also be due on the same day as the GST payment for that period.

For example, if your balance date is March and you pay GST two monthly, your first instalment of provisional tax will be due 28 August with your July GST return and payment.

Filed Under: MYOB, MYOB accounting FAQ's

9 reasons to attend an MYOB seminar..

Posted by Lynley on Oct 5 2009 with 1 Comments

For a lot of people spending whole days out of the office on training courses simply isn’t an option – they’re far too busy running their business! But this doesn’t take away the need for training or up-skilling.stop-watch

They only take half a day & focus on critical issues using demonstrations, slides, real examples and discussion. Attendees can take away what they learn and immediately apply it to their own business+ bring their own questions. Seminars are delivered by some of NZ’s most experienced and qualified MYOB’ practitioners who themselves are small business owners. Generally there are less than 8 participants.

9 reasons to attend?

  1. Keep up to date with best-practice techniques using MYOB software
  2. Prepared and delivered by experienced MYOB Certified Consultants
  3. Discounts on upgrades on new software
  4. Prepared and delivered by experienced MYOB Certified Consultants
  5. Practical presentations with demos and discussion
  6. Free one-on-one follow up consultation available
  7. Centrally located (Newmarket) with free parking
  8. Morning sessions (only 3 hours)
  9. Low cost
  10. Fun!

Upcoming October Sessions

#adp01

Filed Under: MYOB