Six tips to help keep your business on sound financial footing. 1.
Use
the
right accounting system. Most businesses use either cash-based or
accrual-based
accounting. If you use the cash method, you count income when you
receive it
and expenses when you pay them. Under the accrual method, you count
income and
expenses when they happen, not when you actually receive or pay them. 2. Maintain daily records. This is one of the most basic rules: If you don't keep accurate daily records, you don't have an accurate way to track the financial condition of your business. Different people use different record-keeping systems; what matters is that you have one and use it every day. Once you have a good system set up, accurate record keeping will take just a few minutes a day. 3. Handle and review checks carefully. It's easy to be on autopilot when you're writing checks and tossing canceled ones into a filing cabinet without reviewing them. Remember: Those checks are as good as cash. And if something goes wrong, you — not the bank — will be on the hook. 4. Get a bank statement with a month-end cutoff. This is another basic tip that can reap big rewards. Synchronizing your bank statement with other monthly records will make it much easier to reconcile your statement and track expenses. 5. Leave an audit trail. Your record keeping will be much more effective if you have a system that allows you to quickly and easily retrace your company's financial activities. This means keeping your invoices and checks in numeric order, not skipping check or invoice numbers, and keeping separate bank accounts for your business and personal funds. If you can't go back a year and reconstruct your company's finances, you probably aren't leaving an effective audit trail. 6. Use a computer. Computer bookkeeping software is absolutely essential for all but the smallest businesses. These applications make it easy to track income and expenses, prepare tax documents, summarize your company's financial activities.
Andrew Traynor CPA (andy@pritaxes.com) Jose Martinez (jose@pritaxes.com) |
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