QuickBooks 2021 All-in-One For Dummies
eBook - ePub
Available until 25 Aug |Learn more

QuickBooks 2021 All-in-One For Dummies

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Available until 25 Aug |Learn more

QuickBooks 2021 All-in-One For Dummies

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About This Book

Do the numbers in double-quick time with this trusted QuickBooks bestseller!

Running your own business can be cool, but some of the financial side—accounting and payroll, for instance—is not always so cool! That's why millions of small business owners around the world bank on QuickBooks to easily manage accounting and financial tasks and save big-time on shelling out for an expensive professional. QuickBooks 2021 All-in-One For Dummies contains eight information-rich mini-books that account for all your financial line-item asks, showing you step-by-step how to plan your perfect budget, simplify tax returns, manage inventory, create invoices, track costs, generate reports, and accurately check off every other accounting and financial-management task that comes across your desk!

  • Get the most out of QuickBooks 2021
  • Sharpen up on the basics with an accounting primer
  • Craft a world-class business plan
  • Process taxes and payroll in double-quick time

Written by expert CPA and small business advisor Stephen L. Nelson, QuickBooks All-in-One 2021 For Dummies is the best-selling blue-chip go-to that will save you time and money—and willallow you to enjoy the fruits of your labors!

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Information

Publisher
For Dummies
Year
2020
ISBN
9781119676782
Edition
1
Book 1

An Accounting Primer

Contents at a Glance

  1. Chapter 1: Principles of Accounting
    1. The Purpose of Accounting
    2. Reviewing the Common Financial Statements
    3. The Philosophy of Accounting
    4. A Few Words about Tax Accounting
  2. Chapter 2: Double-Entry Bookkeeping
    1. The Fiddle-Faddle Method of Accounting
    2. How Double-Entry Bookkeeping Works
    3. Almost a Real-Life Example
    4. A Few Words about How QuickBooks Works
  3. Chapter 3: Special Accounting Problems
    1. Working with Accounts Receivable
    2. Recording Accounts Payable Transactions
    3. Inventory Accounting
    4. Accounting for Fixed Assets
    5. Recognizing Liabilities
    6. Closing Out Revenue and Expense Accounts
    7. One More Thing …
Chapter 1

Principles of Accounting

IN THIS CHAPTER
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Figuring out the purpose of accounting
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Taking a look at common financial statements
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Understanding the philosophy of accounting
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Discovering income tax accounting and reporting
Any discussion of how to use QuickBooks to better manage your business begins with a discussion of the basics of accounting. For this reason, in this chapter and the next two, I attempt to provide the same information that you’d receive in an introductory college accounting course. I tailor the entire discussion, of course, to QuickBooks and the small-business environment. What you’ll read about here and in the next two chapters of this book pretty much describes how accounting works in a small-business setting when you’re using QuickBooks.
If you’ve had some experience with accounting, if you know how to read an income statement and balance sheet, or if you know how to construct a journal entry, you don’t need to read this chapter or the next. But if you’re new to accounting and business bookkeeping, take the time to read this chapter carefully. I start the chapter by giving you a high-level overview of the purpose of accounting. Then I review the common financial statements that any accounting system worth its salt produces. I also discuss some of the important principles of accounting and the philosophy of accounting. Finally, I talk a little bit about income tax law and tax accounting.

The Purpose of Accounting

In the movie Creator, Peter O’Toole plays an eccentric professor. At one point, O’Toole’s character attempts to talk a young student into working as an unpaid research assistant. When the student protests, noting that he needs 15 credit hours, O’Toole creates a special 15-credit independent-study course named “Introduction to the Big Picture.” In the next section, I describe the “big picture” of accounting. At its core, accounting makes perfect, logical sense.

The big picture

The most important thing to understand about accounting is that it provides financial information to stakeholders. Stakeholders are the people who do business with or interact with a firm; they include managers, employees, investors, banks, vendors, government authorities, and agencies that may tax a firm. Stakeholders and their information requirements deserve a bit more discussion. Why? Because the information needs of these stakeholders determine what an accounting system must do.

Managers, investors, and entrepreneurs

The first category of stakeholders includes the firm’s managers, investors, and entrepreneurs. This group needs financial information to determine whether a business is making money. This group also wants any information that gives insight into whether a business is growing or contracting and how healthy or sick it is. To fulfill its obligations and duties, this group often needs detailed information. A manager or entrepreneur may want to know which customers are particularly profitable — or unprofitable. An active investor may want to know which product lines are growing or contracting.
A related set of information requirements concerns asset and liability record keeping. An asset is something that the firm owns, such as cash, inventory, or equipment. A liability is some debt or obligation that the firm owes, such as bank loans and accounts payable.
Obviously, someone at a firm — perhaps a manager, bookkeeper, or accountant — needs to have very detailed records of the amount of cash that the firm has in its bank accounts, the inventory that the firm has in its warehouse or on its shelves, and the equipment that the firm owns and uses in its operations.
If you look over the preceding two or three paragraphs, nothing I’ve said is particularly surprising. It makes sense, right? Someone who works in a business, manages a business, or actively invests in a business needs good general information about the financial affairs of the firm and, in many cases, very detailed information ab...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Table of Contents
  4. Introduction
  5. Book 1: An Accounting Primer
  6. Book 2: Getting Ready to Use QuickBooks
  7. Book 3: Bookkeeping Chores
  8. Book 4: Accounting Chores
  9. Book 5: Financial Management
  10. Book 6: Business Plans
  11. Book 7: Care and Maintenance
  12. Book 8: Appendixes
  13. Index
  14. About the Author
  15. Connect with Dummies
  16. End User License Agreement