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QuickBooks Online For Dummies
QuickBooks Online For Dummies
QuickBooks Online For Dummies
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QuickBooks Online For Dummies

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Learn the world’s most popular cloud accounting platform

QuickBooks Online For Dummies, 2024 Edition, helps you benefit from fast and easy mobile accounting. This beginner-friendly guide covers the key features of QuickBooks Online, including selecting the subscription version that’s right for you and your business -- Simple Start, Plus, or Advanced. From there, you’ll find everything you need to get started creating invoices and credit memos, recording and paying bills, setting up inventory items, processing payroll and preparing payroll tax returns, balancing accounts, and beyond. You’ll discover how to access your accounts from any device, anywhere—and how to keep your data safe and backed up. For a world on the go, QuickBooks Online makes it easy to keep solid books and be prepared at tax time. With the clear how-tos in this book, you’ll be up and running in no time.

  • Get started with QuickBooks Online and set up your accounts
  • Manage customers, inventory, purchases, payroll, and billing—from anywhere
  • Generate financial reports and simplify your taxes
  • Discover new features and tips in the latest version of the cloud software

For small business owners, managers, and employees responsible for business accounting, QuickBooks Online For Dummies helps you make the most of the go-to platform for fluid accounting access.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherWiley
Release dateOct 12, 2023
ISBN9781394206537
QuickBooks Online For Dummies

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    QuickBooks Online For Dummies - David H. Ringstrom

    Introduction

    Welcome to QuickBooks Online! If you’re new to QuickBooks, my goal in this book is to help you get up and running quickly and then carry out tasks in the most efficient way possible. QuickBooks Online is known as cloud-based accounting software, whereas QuickBooks Desktop is typically installed locally on your computer. I only discuss QuickBooks Online in this book, so if you need help with QuickBooks Desktop, please refer to Stephen L. Nelson’s QuickBooks All-in-One For Dummies 2024 (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.).

    Tip QuickBooks Online has good intentions and is designed in a way that tries to take the pain out of accounting, but it sometimes falls short. I do my best to anticipate those areas for you and offer explanations, but if you have a question that this book doesn’t answer, please feel free to email me at ask@davidringstrom.com.

    Some of the tasks in QuickBooks are easy. For instance, you jump-start entering transactions in QuickBooks by emailing receipts to a unique address for your company. You can automate other tasks after you complete an initial setup process, such as downloading activity from your bank accounts and credit cards into your accounting records. Other tasks, such as entering journal entries, may appear to be difficult, particularly if you don’t have much of an accounting background, but I guide you through just about everything you may want to do inside QuickBooks (and sometimes outside of QuickBooks with Microsoft Excel).

    About This Book

    In the past, QuickBooks Online was a fairly static platform, with new features being rolled out incrementally. Now, we seem to be in uncharted waters. As I wrote this book, I noticed that QuickBooks Online features would sometimes appear and then disappear, only to reappear again, all without notice. My editors and I have done our best to describe what has in some cases been a moving target.

    Warning Because updates occur so frequently in QuickBooks, by the time this book is published, some features and screens may have changed. (On second thought, make that will have changed.)

    Then there’s the matter of the six subscription levels:

    Self-Employed ($20/month, $240/year): This is best suited to users who are operating a side business. This book has some feature overlap, but I don’t cover QuickBooks Online Self-Employed specifically.

    Simple Start ($30/month, $360/year): This most basic business version of QuickBooks has the lowest monthly cost, includes 57 reports, and allows one business and two accountant users.

    Essentials ($55/month, $660/year): This version is a step up in price and functionality. The biggest differences are the ability to enter bills to be paid later, time tracking, three business and two accountant users, and unlimited reports only users who can access up to 85 reports.

    Plus ($90/month, $1,080/year): This version represents another step up in price but also a much greater depth of functionality, including inventory, budgeting, project tracking, customizable access for up to five business and two accountant users, and unlimited reports only users who can access up to 124 reports.

    Advanced ($200/month, $2,400/year): This high-end version of QuickBooks offers built-in business analytics with Microsoft Excel, employee expense tracking, customizable user roles for up to 25 business users, unlimited reports only users, a custom report writer, workflow automation, and data restoration.

    Tip Opting for an annual subscription, instead of monthly, reduces your subscription fees by 10%.

    Accountant (free for members of the QuickBooks Pro Advisor program, which is also free): This version of QuickBooks offers one free Advanced subscription for accountants and bookkeepers to manage their own books. It also offers practice management features and allows seamless access to clients’ QuickBooks companies.

    As you can see, much of QuickBooks’ best features are stratified into the higher price points. Accordingly, for this edition of the book I’ve gone with a choose your adventure approach for organizing the material. Every QuickBooks Online user will benefit from reading Part 1 of this book, which is where I cover all the core functionality that’s available in QuickBooks versions from Simple Start through Advanced. Whether you keep reading is predicated upon your current subscription level or curiosity of what you would gain by opting for a higher subscription level.

    Here’s how the book is broken down:

    Part 1, Core Functionality, describes the core functionality available to all QuickBooks users.

    Part 2, QuickBooks Online Essentials Features, covers additional features that upgrading to an Essentials subscription adds, such as accounts payable functions, recurring transactions, user access, and additional reports.

    Part 3, QuickBooks Online Plus Features, describes capabilities that a Plus subscription adds, including inventory management, purchase orders, tracking profitability by project, and creating budgets.

    Part 4, QuickBooks Online Advanced Features, covers the additional features that an Advanced subscription provides, such as enhanced reporting features, including multi-company consolidations, analyzing your data in Excel with Spreadsheet Sync, customizing access by role, automating workflows, and backing up and restoring your company data.

    Part 5, QuickBooks Online Accountant Features, walks through accountant-specific features, such as practice management tools. It also shows how to perform advanced data analysis in Microsoft Excel.

    Part 6, Microsoft Excel Analysis, discusses ways that you can analyze your data in Microsoft Excel, including automating repetitive analysis with Power Query.

    Part 7, The Part of Tens, covers ten common journal entries and ten shortcuts for the Chrome browser to help you optimize your use of QuickBooks.

    Before diving in, I have to get a few technical conventions out of the way:

    Text that you’re meant to type as it appears in the book is bold. The exception is when you’re working through a list of steps. Because each step is bold, the text to type is not bold.

    Web addresses and programming code appear in monofont. If you're reading a digital version of this book on a device connected to the internet, note that you can tap or click a web address to visit that website, like this: www.dummies.com.

    Everyone can use QuickBooks Online in a web browser or a mobile app. Intuit recommends Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, or Safari version 12 or higher on your desktop computer. Mobile devices need to be running iOS 11.1 or higher or Android Nougat 7.1.1 or higher. Advanced and Accountant subscribers can download and install a desktop app that offers functionality unavailable within a web browser.

    When I discuss a command to choose, I separate the elements of the sequence with a command arrow that looks like this: ⇒. For example, when you see Sales ⇒ Invoices, that command means that you should click Sales in the left bar and then click Invoices in the drop-down menu that appears.

    Foolish Assumptions

    I had to assume some things about you to write this book, so here are the educated guesses I made:

    You know that you need to manage a set of accounting records for one or more businesses, and you might even have some sort of setup in place already. I did not assume that you know how to do all those things on a computer.

    You may want to analyze some of your accounting data outside QuickBooks, which is why I include chapters on using Microsoft Excel. Some of that information translates to Google Sheets as well.

    You have a personal computer running Windows 10 or 11 (I wrote this book in Windows 10) or a Mac running macOS 10.11 or later.

    You have a copy of Microsoft Excel on your computer, or you plan to use Google Sheets at https://sheets.google.com.

    Icons Used in This Book

    Throughout the book, I use icons to draw your attention to various concepts that I want to make sure that you don’t skip over in the main part of the text. Sometimes I share information to help you save time; in other cases, the goal is to keep your accounting records safe.

    Tip This icon points out time-saving tricks or quirks that you may encounter in QuickBooks.

    Remember This icon points out tricky aspects of QuickBooks that you should keep in mind.

    Warning This product can burn your eyes. Oh, sorry. Wrong type of warning! Your eyes are safe in this book. But do pay careful attention to warnings that you encounter so that you can avoid problems that could wreak havoc in your accounting records or more often simply cause you frustration.

    Technical Stuff At some points, I may include some geeky stuff about QuickBooks, your web browser, or your computer. You can safely skip over the technical stuff if that’s not your cup of tea.

    Beyond the Book

    In addition to the book content, this product comes with a free, access-anywhere Cheat Sheet that lists keyboard shortcuts and toolbar buttons. The Cheat Sheet also covers how to use the multicurrency feature, convert a company from QuickBooks Desktop or Sage 50 to QuickBooks Online, and enter payroll history. To get this Cheat Sheet, go to www.dummies.com and search for QuickBooks Online For Dummies Cheat Sheet.

    Tip You can keep the learning going with the most up-to-date information and tutorials from School of Bookkeeping (https://schoolofbookkeeping.com/). The folks there (one of whom is the technical editor of this book) have broken down every version of QuickBooks Online, QuickBooks services (Payments and Payroll), and other tasks into bite-sized lessons that you can watch and get back to business. Use promo code QBO4DUMMIES to save 20 percent on any membership. If you’re looking for video-based Excel training, please visit my site at www.professionalsexcel.com. The same QBO4DUMMIES promo code enables you to save 20 percent on any individual videos or subscriptions here as well.

    Where to Go from Here

    Part 1 and Parts 6 and 7 cover material that relates to all versions of QuickBooks Online. Continue on with Part 2 if you have an Essentials, Plus, or Advanced subscription to discover additional functionality available to you. Plus and Advanced subscribers will want to read Part 3 about even more features that are available, and Part 4 covers tasks and features that can only be completed in the Advanced version. Part 5 covers the Accountant version of QuickBooks, and Part 6 is aimed squarely at anyone who wants to do some number crunching in Excel. The book closes out with Part 7, where I break down common journal entry transactions and offer suggestions on ways to streamline repetitive Google Chrome tasks.

    Remember It can be confusing any time a software platform uses the same term, such as accountant, in multiple contexts. For example, all QuickBooks companies offer an Accountant View, which reconfigures the sidebar menu at the left but doesn’t add features to QuickBooks. This is separate from inviting your accountant or bookkeeper to oversee your books. This is also separate from the QuickBooks Online Accountant subscription that your accountant or bookkeeper probably uses to manage your books and their own.

    Part 1

    Core Functionality

    IN THIS PART …

    Tailor QuickBooks online to your company.

    Track sales, estimates, and customer payments.

    Write checks, record expenses, and pay down credit cards.

    Process payroll and make payments to contractors.

    Record bank deposits and reconcile bank accounts.

    Review reporting options.

    Implement automation.

    Chapter 1

    Getting Started with QuickBooks

    IN THIS CHAPTER

    Bullet Comparing QuickBooks Online and QuickBooks Desktop

    Bullet Pricing for subscriptions, payroll, and other add-ons

    Bullet Exploring features by subscription level and reviewing usage limits

    Bullet Customizing QuickBooks menu and account listing

    Welcome to QuickBooks Online! In this book, you’ll discover all the ins and outs of your accounting platform so that you can handle your clients’ or your own accounting records (colloquially referred to as books) more effectively. I’ve organized this book by subscription level so you can easily determine what’s possible in any version, from Simple Start, Essentials, and Plus through the Advanced subscription levels and even the Accountant version.

    I start this chapter by going over some differences between QuickBooks Online and QuickBooks Desktop and then give you a sense of the annual costs to expect for QuickBooks Online. To wrap up, I discuss reviewing your chart of accounts to ensure that you can categorize your assets, liabilities, equity, revenue, and expenses correctly.

    QuickBooks Online vs. QuickBooks Desktop

    QuickBooks Online is a cloud-based accounting software for computers and mobile devices. The software and your data are housed securely in remote data centers and accessed over the internet. QuickBooks Desktop is a traditional accounting software installed locally, alongside your data, on your office computer. Both the online and desktop version are subscription based, but working in the cloud with QuickBooks Online enables you to work wherever you have internet access so that you can communicate easily with others and collaborate in real time. Your data is backed up automatically, which can help you avoid disasters such as fire or flood that can take out both your workspace and your locally housed accounting records. Intuit has embarked on a slow-motion discontinuation of QuickBooks Desktop, so eventually QuickBooks Online will be the only QuickBooks option.

    Remember Some folks see the anywhere, anytime aspect of the cloud as a potential disadvantage because it makes information too readily available — and therefore a target for hackers. Rest assured that Intuit, the maker of QuickBooks, stores your data on servers using bank-level security that creates encrypted backups of your data automatically.

    With QuickBooks Online, your accountant or bookkeeper also has access from anywhere. The Accountant version empowers accountants and bookkeepers to quickly toggle between multiple clients’ accounting records and keep up with deadlines and tasks using a centralized communication hub. Conversely, QuickBooks Desktop requires you to send an electronic Accountant’s Copy to your accountant and specify a dividing date, before which you can’t make changes until your accountant returns the Accountant’s Copy to you. QuickBooks Desktop also requires you to install periodic software updates, which are a thing of the past with QuickBooks Online.

    Most modern computers should easily exceed the minimum requirements for QuickBooks Online, but you can get the nitty-gritty computer specification details here: https://intuit.me/3yEaSJL.

    Tip My technical editor extraordinaire, Dan DeLong, has created a free QuickBooks Chooser chatbot that can help you choose the right version of QuickBooks Online based on your specific business needs. Check it out at https://chat.schoolofbookkeeping.com/QBChooser.

    Considering QuickBooks Pricing

    You can cancel QuickBooks subscriptions at any time, although the service is billed in monthly or annual increments with no refunds or prorations. You can no longer create new transactions once your subscription expires, but you can view your accounting records and run reports for up to one year. As you will see in the next three sections, your drive-out price for using QuickBooks may mushroom far beyond the base subscription price. You’ve likely experienced how the base price of a car is far from what the bottom-line price ends up being. Similarly, depending upon your needs, you may end up paying more than you expected for QuickBooks Online. In Chapter 7, I discuss apps that you can install, which also often come with additional subscription fees.

    Remember QuickBooks Online subscriptions and the various add-ons are priced on a per-company basis. If you maintain the books for two or more entities, you have to pay for two or more subscriptions plus fees for ancillary add-ons.

    QuickBooks Online base pricing

    As shown in Table 1-1, QuickBooks Online is available in six different versions and price points. The Self-Employed and Simple Start versions are best suited to fledging businesses, whereas QuickBooks Online Accountant is a free portal that accountants and bookkeepers can use to support their clients. You can get more details and start a QuickBooks Online subscription at https://quickbooks.intuit.com/pricing/ or start using QuickBooks Online Accountant at https://quickbooks.intuit.com/accountants/products-solutions/accounting/online.

    TABLE 1-1 QuickBooks Online Subscription Pricing per Company

    PROADVISOR DISCOUNT

    Accounting professionals can arrange an ongoing 30 percent discount on QuickBooks Online (excluding QuickBooks Self-Employed), QuickBooks Payroll, and QuickBooks Time in exchange for being billed directly by Intuit. Accountants can pass all or part of the savings on to their clients if they want. Alternatively, accountants who prefer that their clients pay for QuickBooks directly can arrange a 30 percent discount for 12 months for charges billed directly to their clients. I discuss the ProAdvisor Discount in more detail in Chapter 17.

    Tip QuickBooks allows you to choose either a 50 percent discount for the first three months of your subscription or a free 30-day trial. You may also be offered a 70% discount for the first three months during the 30-day trial. Take the deal immediately if you plan to move forward with QuickBooks because it’s unlikely to be offered again during your trial period.

    Remember You must cancel your subscription if you opt for the discount and decide QuickBooks isn’t right for you. Conversely, the 30-day trial simply expires, and no further action is required on your part.

    Remember A QuickBooks company is a set of accounting records for a single business entity. Each QuickBooks company entails separate subscription fees, and you need to establish a QuickBooks company for each company you own or maintain accounting records for.

    Payroll and time tracking pricing

    You will incur additional subscription costs if you need to process payroll or enable employees to track their time. As shown in Table 1-2, QuickBooks offers three different payroll options. I’ve calculated the associated costs for a hypothetical team of five employees to give you a frame of reference. The Premium and Elite plans offer time tracking, which you can also purchase on an à la carte basis.

    TABLE 1-2 QuickBooks Payroll Subscription Pricing for Five Employees

    Tip You can test-drive the QuickBooks payroll service for free for up to 30 days.

    All QuickBooks Payroll plans include the following features:

    Paying employees with printed checks or by direct deposit

    Calculating tax payments automatically and paying them electronically

    Processing federal and state quarterly and annual reports and preparing W-2 and 1099 forms

    Processing payroll for employees who work in your company’s state or another state

    Keeping payroll tax tables up to date without having to install updates (as you do with the QuickBooks Desktop product)

    Using the QuickBooks Payroll mobile app to pay employees, view past paychecks, file tax forms electronically, and pay taxes electronically

    The Core tier offers next-day direct deposit, and the Premium tier enables same-day direct deposit and adds time tracking. The Elite tier also adds project tracking, tax penalty protection, and a personal human resources advisor. You can get more details and start a payroll subscription at https://quickbooks.intuit.com/payroll/pricing/, or you can choose Payroll from the left-hand menu within your QuickBooks company.

    Warning Make sure that you’re ready to start processing payroll immediately before you embark on a QuickBooks Payroll subscription because you must connect your bank account and provide your tax identification numbers. If you want to try before you buy, use the online test drives I mention later in this chapter in the sections "QuickBooks Online Plus and QuickBooks Online Advanced."

    Table 1-3 shows the additional annual cost of adding a standalone QuickBooks Time subscription if you want time and attendance tracking but not necessarily payroll processing. It’s worth running the numbers for the various offerings because QuickBooks Core Payroll for five employees at $65 per month plus QuickBooks Premium Time at $60 per month is $125 per month versus paying $115 per month for QuickBooks Premium Payroll, which also offers time tracking. With that said, an Elite time subscription does include project tracking.

    Remember Although you can add time tracking on an á la carte basis, it typically makes more financial sense to use the time tracking bundled into the upgraded payroll service tiers. This also ensures that you avoid the complications that can arise if you start out with QuickBooks Time and then switch to a QuickBooks Payroll tier that offers time tracking.

    TABLE 1-3 QuickBooks Time Subscription Pricing for Five Employees

    QuickBooks Payments

    QuickBooks Payments enables you to accept electronic payments from customers and entails per-transaction fees instead of a monthly subscription. Table 1-4 shows the current rates as of this writing.

    TABLE 1-4 QuickBooks Payments per Transaction Fees

    Tip QuickBooks Payments deposits money from qualifying credit or debit card transactions into your bank account the next business day. Your payments and deposit transactions are recorded in your books automatically, based on the funding date.

    Comparing QuickBooks Features

    As you can see, the ongoing expenses for QuickBooks can add up fast. You can upgrade or downgrade your subscription at any time, although downgrading can entail disabling inventory or removing users. Use the search term downgrade at https://quickbooks.intuit.com/learn-support/en-us for more details. Read on for information on the various tiers so that you can find the right fit for your needs.

    QuickBooks Online Self-Employed

    This version of QuickBooks is aimed at freelancers and self-employed people who file Schedule C of IRS Form 1040 (www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-schedule-c-form-1040). Unlike the higher-level offerings, QuickBooks Self-Employed allows you to mix business with pleasure, meaning that you can track personal and business expenses, as well as mileage. It’s best suited to someone with a side hustle who wants to keep track of their business and simplify income tax filing.

    Remember I don’t discuss QuickBooks Online Self-Employed any further in this book, although some of the features may mirror what you see in the higher subscription levels.

    QuickBooks Simple Start

    A QuickBooks Simple Start subscription is great for a new business with basic bookkeeping needs. With Simple Start, you can

    Track your income and expenses, which I cover in Chapters 2 and 3, respectively.

    Download transactions from your bank and credit card accounts, as described in Chapter 5.

    Create an unlimited number of customers. Chapter 2 shows how to get started.

    Send estimates and invoices. You guessed it — this is in Chapter 2.

    Print checks and record transactions to track expenses (see Chapter 3).

    Track and pay sales taxes (Chapter 2).

    Track mileage.

    Categorize expenses by taking pictures of receipts, as I discuss in Chapter 7.

    Pay contractors and send 1099 forms (see Chapter 4).

    Connect one online sales channel, such as Amazon, eBay, or Shopify (see Chapter 7).

    Import data from Microsoft Excel or QuickBooks Desktop.

    Integrate with available apps in the QuickBooks Online App Center, as discussed in Chapter 7.

    View and customize more than 50 reports. Chapter 6 shows how.

    Although the Simple Start version supports accounts-receivable functions, you can’t set up invoices to bill customers on a recurring basis or track unpaid bills. If you’re on the fence between Self-Employed and Simple Start, you’ll have more options in the future with Simple Start.

    QuickBooks Online Essentials

    Established businesses that don’t have inventory may be able to use QuickBooks Essentials, which includes all the Simple Start functionality and allows you to do the following:

    Set up invoices to bill automatically on a recurring schedule. I cover automation capabilities like this in Chapter 7.

    Use accounts-payable functions, including scheduling payment of vendor bills and online bill payment (see Chapter 8).

    Create and post recurring transactions.

    Track time for unlimited users, as discussed in Chapter 9.

    Connect three online sales channels, including Amazon, eBay, and Shopify (see Chapter 7).

    Control the areas of QuickBooks your users can access (see Chapter 9).

    View and customize up to 85 reports (see Chapter 6 for more on QuickBooks reports).

    QuickBooks Online Plus

    A Plus subscription goes beyond the Essentials level by adding the ability to do each of these tasks:

    Create, send, and track purchase orders (see Chapter 10).

    Track inventory using the first in, first out (FIFO) inventory valuation method. QuickBooks Online supports light inventory needs. If you sell finished goods, QuickBooks Online should be able to meet your needs. But if you need to assemble finished goods to sell, QuickBooks Online can’t meet your needs on its own. You can look for an add-on app to supplement your inventory needs. I talk about add-on apps in Chapter 7.

    Categorize income and expenses by using class tracking (see Chapter 11).

    Track sales and profitability by business location. You can assign only one location to a transaction, but you can assign multiple classes to a transaction. I go deep on this in Chapter 11.

    Give employees and subcontractors limited access to the QuickBooks company to enter time worked, which I discuss in Chapter 9.

    Track billable hours by customer. QuickBooks Online supports light job-costing needs, but it doesn’t allow you to cost labor automatically.

    Track projects, as shown in Chapter 11.

    Connect all online sales channels, currently Amazon, eBay, and Shopify, along with any future channels that get added (see Chapter 7).

    Create budgets to estimate future income and expenses. You can create multiple budgets per year, location, class, or customer. All of the details are in Chapter 12.

    View and customize 124 reports. I cover report basics in Chapter 6.

    Tip You can test-drive the QuickBooks Online Plus sample company at https://qbo.intuit.com/redir/testdrive.

    Usage limits for QuickBooks Simple Start, Essentials, and Plus

    Simple Start, Essentials, and Plus subscriptions are subject to the limits shown in Table 1-5. Long-term users may be allowed higher limits but can’t add any element that exceeds the use limit without upgrading to a higher-level plan or deactivating current elements. As detailed in the next section, you can work without limits in QuickBooks with an Advanced subscription.

    TABLE 1-5 Usage Limits for Simple Start, Essentials, and Plus Subscriptions

    QuickBooks Online Advanced

    QuickBooks Online Advanced is the flagship subscription for users who have outgrown QuickBooks Online Plus. It allows you to

    Have unlimited accounts, transactions, classes, time tracking users, and reports-only users.

    Connect with a dedicated customer success manager to handle support questions. (Support calls go to the front of the line instead of waiting in a queue.) Customer success managers also provide information on online training and QuickBooks products; Advanced subscribers are entitled to five free on-demand training courses annually.

    Establish custom permissions for your users, as discussed in Chapter 13.

    Efficiently import invoice and sales receipt transactions into QuickBooks by way of a comma-separated-value (CSV) file. You can create such a file in Microsoft Excel or Google Sheets, as discussed in Chapter 12.

    Use Spreadsheet Sync to create customized reports and edit existing records in Excel, and then post the changes back to QuickBooks. I get into the nitty-gritty of this in Chapter 16.

    Create custom reports using the Custom Report Builder that I discuss in Chapter 14.

    Enter, edit, or delete multiple transactions by way of the Batch Transactions feature, which I discuss in Chapter 15.

    Enable workflows to trigger reminders for customers and team members, which is also covered in Chapter 15.

    Use up to 48 custom fields.

    Visualize your data in the Performance Center with customizable chart widgets, as shown in Chapter 7.

    Employ premium app integration with services such as Bill.com, HubSpot, Salesforce, LeanLaw, and DocuSign. (Third-party subscription fees apply.)

    Restore QuickBooks data to a particular date and time. You can also schedule automatic backups and reverse changes made to customers, vendors, and company settings, which I discuss in Chapter 13.

    Export the lists and transactions for your entire company to comma-separated value (CSV) files by way of the Local Backup feature (see Chapter 13).

    Set up workflow automation to generate payment and invoicing reminders and assign tasks to team members, as discussed in Chapter 15.

    Tip You can test-drive the QuickBooks Online Advanced sample company at https://qbo.intuit.com/redir/testdrive_us_advanced.

    QuickBooks Online Accountant

    The Accountant version is a free cloud-based portal that accounting professionals use to access clients’ QuickBooks Online companies and communicate with clients. It includes one free QuickBooks Online Advanced subscription that accountants can use to keep track of their own books. Standard subscription fees apply for each additional QuickBooks company you create. I discuss QB Accountant in great detail in Chapters 17 to 19. You can create your QB Accountant account at https://quickbooks.intuit.com/accountants/products-solutions/accounting/online.

    Tailoring Your QuickBooks Environment

    Once you choose a subscription, a comprehensive wizard walks you through the set-up process. I don’t regurgitate the steps here, but I do share some customizations you may want to make. For instance, the navigation menu along the left side of the screen is called the sidebar menu, which I sometimes refer to as the sidebar. I also explain customizing the chart of accounts, which you use to categorize every transaction you make, but let’s first see how to prevent QuickBooks from logging you out of a work session prematurely.

    Extending the default length of a QuickBooks session

    By default, QuickBooks signs you out of your company after 60 minutes of inactivity. You can extend this to as much as three hours like so:

    9781394206513-ma001 Choose Settings ⇒ Account & Settings ⇒ Advanced.

    9781394206513-ma003 Click the Edit icon in the Other Preferences section.

    Make a choice from the Sign Me Out If Inactive For list.

    Click Save and then Done.

    Tip Advanced and Accountant users can use the QuickBooks Online desktop app, which I discuss in Chapter 13, in lieu of working in a browser window. The desktop app requires you to log in to your Intuit account only once every six months, unless you choose to manually log out of the app.

    Customizing the sidebar menu

    The sidebar menu is on the left side of your QuickBooks company and is the primary navigation aid for working with QuickBooks. You can customize this menu to hide commands you don’t use and bookmark commands you do use. For instance, you’re not going to need the Commerce choice on the menu if you don’t sell products online. Here’s how to customize the sidebar:

    9781394206513-ma003 Click the Edit icon next to the Menu or Bookmarks sections of the sidebar menu.

    A Customize Your Menu dialog box appears with Menu and Bookmarks tabs.

    Optional: Toggle checkmarks on or off to enable or disable menu groupings or bookmarks by clicking on Menu or Bookmarks to switch between the lists.

    Click Save to preserve your changes or Cancel if you change your mind.

    Remember Turning commands off doesn’t remove any functionality from QuickBooks but instead moves those commands into a More section at the bottom of the Menu portion of the sidebar menu.

    You can also use a second approach to add bookmarks:

    Click a grouping from the sidebar, such as Payroll, to reveal a submenu.

    9781394206513-ma008 Hover your mouse over a command, such as Employees, and then click the Bookmark icon that appears at the right edge of the submenu.

    Touring the Chart of Accounts page

    When you create a new company, QuickBooks starts you off with a chart of accounts that it thinks matches your industry. You can keep this list intact, edit it manually as I describe, or replace it with what you import from Excel, a CSV file, or Google Sheets, which I discuss in the later section titled "Importing a chart of accounts." Your chart of accounts is limited to 250 active accounts unless you have an Advanced subscription.

    9781394206513-ma001 I encourage you to review the chart of accounts that QuickBooks establishes for your company. To do so, choose Settings ⇒ Chart of Accounts or Transactions ⇒ Chart of Accounts. The page shown in Figure 1-1 displays your chart of accounts and lets you carry out a variety of actions:

    The snapshot of the chart of account page contains the details of name, account type, detail type, quickbooks balance, bank balance and action.

    FIGURE 1-1: The Chart of Accounts page.

    Click the Run Report button to generate a report that lists your chart of accounts.

    Click the New button to create a new account.

    Choose New ⇒ Import to import a new chart of accounts, which I discuss later in more detail in the "Importing a chart of accounts" section.

    9781394206513-ma003 Click the Edit icon below the New button to turn on the Batch Edit feature, which enables you to edit multiple account names at once.

    Click the printer icon to print your chart of accounts.

    Warning You’re better off clicking Run Report versus clicking Print because the Print command generates a rather unaesthetic-looking report.

    9781394206513-ma001 Click the Settings icon to control which columns appear on the page and whether inactive accounts are displayed.

    Click the checkbox for one or more accounts, and then choose Batch Actions ⇒ Make Inactive to deactivate unnecessary accounts.

    Click View Register adjacent to balance sheet accounts or Run Report adjacent to income and expense accounts to view a register or report showing all activity.

    Click the arrow next to an account to reveal the following choices, depending on the account type:

    Connect Bank: Starts the process of syncing checking and credit card accounts with a financial institution.

    Edit: Allows you to change the account type, detail type, name, description, or subaccount status of an account.

    Make Inactive: Deactivates an account so that it can no longer be used for new transactions.

    Warning QuickBooks zeros out accounts that you make inactive, so make sure that you move the account balances by way of a journal entry or other transaction. I discuss journal entries in Chapter 22. You can mark multiple accounts inactive by clicking the checkbox for one or more accounts and then choosing Batch Actions ⇒ Make Inactive.

    Run Report: Enables you to run a report showing the activity for a given account.

    Adding new accounts to your chart of accounts

    Here’s how to add an account

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