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Chapter 4 The Revenue Cycle Summary

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Chapter 4 The Revenue Cycle

The Conceptual System

Sales Order Procedures


- receiving and processing a customer order, filling the order and shipping products to the
customer, billing the customer at the proper time, and correctly accounting for the transaction.
RECEIVE ORDER

customer order - The sales process begins with the receipt of this

- indicating the type and quantity of merchandise desired.


- When the customer is also a business entity, the order is often a copy of the customer’s purchase
order( expenditure cycle document)
sales order
- captures vital information such as the customer’s name, address, and account number; the name,
number, and description of the items sold; and the quantities and unit prices of each item sold.
- After creating, a copy of it is placed in the customer open order file for future reference.
CHECK CREDIT.

Before processing the order further, the customer’s creditworthiness needs to be established.

The credit approval process - authorization control and should be performed as a function separate from
the sales activity.
- In our conceptual system, the receive-order task sends the sales order (credit copy) to the
check-credit task for approval. The returned approved sales order then triggers the continuation
of the sales process by releasing sales order information simultaneously to various tasks.
PICK GOODS.
stock release document (also called the picking ticket)
- This document identifies the items of inventory that must be located and picked from the
warehouse shelves. also provides formal authorization for warehouse personnel to release the
specified items
*After picking the stock, the order is verified for accuracy and the goods and verified stock release
document are sent to the ship goods
prepares a back-order record, which stays on file until the inventories arrive from the supplier.
Back-ordered items are shipped before new sales are processed.
*Finally, the warehouse employee adjusts the stock records to reflect the reduction in inventory

SHIP GOODS.
Before the arrival of the goods and the verified stock release document, the shipping department
receives:
1. The packing slip will ultimately travel with the goods to the customer to describe the contents
of the order.
2. The shipping notice will later be forwarded to the billing function as evidence that the
customer’s order was filled and shipped.
 This document conveys pertinent new facts such as the date of shipment, the items and
quantities actually shipped,
*The shipping clerk packages the goods, attaches the packing slip, completes the shipping notice, and
prepares
a bill of lading - formal contract between the seller and the shipping company (carrier) to transport
the goods to the customer.
 This document establishes legal ownership and responsibility for assets in transit.

BILL CUSTOMER. The shipment of goods marks the completion of the economic event
S.O. pending file- until receipt of the shipping notice, which describes the products that were actually
shipped to the customer.
sales invoice - is the customer’s bill, depicts the charges to the customer.
*In addition, the billing function performs the following record keeping–related tasks:
 Records the sale in the sales journal.
 Forwards the ledger copy of the sales order to the update accounts receivable task.
 Sends the stock release document to the update inventory records task.

sales journal is a special journal used for recording completed sales transactions.

sales journal voucher - At the end of the period, these entries are summarized into this, which is sent to
the general ledger

- Each journal voucher represents a general journal entry and indicates the general ledger accounts
affected
journal vouchers- When properly approved ,are an effective control against unauthorized entries to the
general ledger.
The journal voucher system- eliminates the need for a formal general journal, which is replaced by a
journal voucher file.
UPDATE INVENTORY RECORDS.
The inventory control function updates inventory subsidiary ledger accounts from information contained
in the stock release document.
UPDATE ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE.
Customer records in the accounts receivable (AR) subsidiary ledger are updated from information the
sales order (ledger copy) provides
POST TO GENERAL LEDGER.
The AR summary- used to verify the accuracy of the journal vouchers from billing.
SALES RETURN PROCEDURES
An organization can expect that a certain percentage of its sales will be returned. This occurs for a
number of reasons like:
 The company shipped the customer the wrong merchandise.
 The goods were defective.
 The product was damaged in shipment.
 The buyer refused delivery because the seller shipped the goods too late or they were delayed in
transit.

PREPARE RETURN SLIP. When items are returned, the receiving department employee counts,
inspects, and prepares a return slip describing the items
PREPARE CREDIT MEMO. Upon receipt of the return slip, the sales employee prepares :
credit memo- authorization for the customer to receive credit for the merchandise returned.
APPROVE CREDIT MEMO. The credit manager evaluates the circumstances of the return and
makes a judgment to grant (or disapprove) credit. The manager then returns the approved credit memo to
the sales department.
UPDATE SALES JOURNAL. the transaction is recorded in the sales journal as a contra entry.
UPDATE INVENTORY AND AR RECORDS. The inventory control function adjusts the inventory
records and forwards the credit memo to accounts receivable, where the customer’s account is also
adjusted.
UPDATE GENERAL LEDGER. Upon receipt of the journal voucher and account summary
information

CASH RECEIPTS PROCEDURES

OPEN MAIL AND PREPARE REMITTANCE ADVICE.


A mail room employee opens envelopes containing customers’ payments and remittance advices.
Remittance advices - contain information needed to service individual customers’ accounts
 a form of a turnaround document

*Mail room personnel route the checks and remittance advices to an administrative clerk who endorses
the checks ‘‘For Deposit Only’’ *reconciles the amount on each remittance advice with the
corresponding check.
* The clerk then records each check on a form remittance list ------ where all cash received is logged.
RECORD AND DEPOSIT CHECKS.
*A cash receipts employee verifies the accuracy and completeness of the checks against the prelist.
* the employee records the check in the cash receipts journal.
* the clerk prepares a bank deposit slip showing the amount of the day’s receipts and forwards this along
with the checks to the bank.
UPDATE ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE. The remittance advices are used to post to the customers’
accounts in the AR subsidiary ledger.
UPDATE GENERAL LEDGER. reconciles the figures, posts to the cash and AR control accounts,
and files the journal voucher.
RECONCILE CASH RECEIPTS AND DEPOSITS. Periodically (weekly or monthly), a clerk from the
controller’s office (or an employee not involved with the cash receipts procedures) reconciles cash
receipts by comparing the following documents:
(1) a copy of the prelist
(2) deposit slips received from the bank
(3) related journal vouchers.
REVENUE CYCLE CONTROLS

 Transaction Authorization to ensure that only valid transactions are processed


CREDIT CHECK. Performed by:
credit department- ensures the proper application of the firm’s credit policies.
 The principal concern is the creditworthiness of the customer.
 authorizes the processing of sales returns as well
RETURN POLICY. An approval determination is based on the nature of the sale and the
circumstances of the return
REMITTANCE LIST (CASH PRELIST). cash prelist provides way for verifying tht customer
checks & remittance advices match amt.
 Segregation of Duties - ensures that no single individual or department processes a transaction
in its entirety. three rules guide systems designers in this task:
1. Transaction authorization should be separate from transaction processing.
2. Asset custody should be separate from the task of asset record keeping.
3. The organization should be structured so that the perpetration of a fraud requires collusion
between two or more individuals.
 Accounting functions report to the controller.
 Supervision
 rely on supervision as a form of compensating control when there are too few
employees
 can also provide control in systems that are properly segregated.
 Accounting Records
 important operational feature of well-designed accounting systems
1. PRENUMBERED DOCUMENTS. (sales orders, shipping notices, remittance advices, and so
on) are sequentially numbered by the printer and allow every transaction to be identified
uniquely.
-This permits the isolation and tracking of a single event (among many thousands) through the
accounting system.
2. SPECIAL JOURNALS. By grouping similar transactions together into special journals, the
system provides a concise record of an entire class of events.
3. SUBSIDIARY LEDGERS. Two subsidiary ledgers are used for capturing transaction event
details in the revenue cycle: the inventory and AR subsidiary ledgers.
4. GENERAL LEDGERS. The general ledger control accounts are the basis for financial
statement preparation.
5. FILES. The revenue cycle employs several temporary and permanent files that contribute to the
audit trail. The following are typical examples:
 Open sales order file shows the status of customer orders.
 Shipping log specifies orders shipped during the period.
 Credit records file provides customer credit data.
 Sales order pending file contains open orders not yet shipped or billed.
 Back-order file contains customer orders for out-of-stock items.
 Journal voucher file is a compilation of all journal vouchers posted to the general
ledger.
 Access Controls prevent and detect unauthorized and illegal access to the firm’s assets.
The physical assets at risk in the revenue cycle are inventories and cash
Information--- is also an important asset at risk.
 Independent Verification
 To verify the accuracy and completeness of tasks that other functions in the process perform.
 To be effective, independent verifications must occur at key points in the process where errors
can be detected quickly and corrected
Physical Systems

 reinforce the importance of segregation of duties through clearly defined departmental


boundaries

*Manual systems serve as a visual training aid to promote a better understanding of key concepts.
*Manual (document) flowcharts depict information as the flow of physical documents.
reinforce the importance of segregation of duties through clearly defined departmental boundaries
Manual Systems

SALES ORDER PROCESSING

Sales Department - records the essential details on a sales order.

Credit Department Approval - To provide independence to the credit authorization process, the credit
department is organizationally
and physically segregated from the sales department

Warehouse Procedures - The next step is to ship the merchandise, which should be done as soon after
credit approval as possible.
The Shipping Department- the shipping clerk reconciles the products received from the warehouse with
the shipping notice copy of
the sales order received earlier

The Billing Department


- The shipping notice is proof that the product has been shipped & is the trigger document that
initiates the billing process.
- the billing clerk compiles the relevant facts about the transaction (product prices, handling
charges, freight, taxes, and discount terms) and bills the customer.
Accounts Receivable, Inventory Control, and General Ledger Departments – clerks update their
respective subsidiary ledgers
SALES RETURN PROCEDURES

Receiving Department
The sales return process begins in the receiving department, where personnel receive, count, inspect for
damage, and send returned products to the warehouse. The receiving clerk prepares a return slip, which
is forwarded to the sales department for processing.
Sales Department
Upon receipt of the return slip, the clerk prepares a credit memo.

Processing the Credit Memo


The objective of the sales return system is to reverse the effects of the original sales transaction. Billing
records a contra entry into sales return, and allowance journal inventory control debits the inventory
records to reflect the return of goods

CASH RECEIPTS PROCEDURES

Mail Room
Customer payments and remittance advices arrive at the mail room, where the envelopes are opened. The
checks are sent to the cashier in the cash receipts department, and the remittance advices are sent to the
AR department.
Cash Receipts
The cashier records the checks in the cash receipts journal and promptly sends them to the bank,
accompanied by two copies of the deposit slip.
Accounts Receivable
The AR department uses the remittance advices to reduce the customers’ account balances consistent
with the amount paid.
General Ledger Department
Upon receipt of the journal voucher and account summary from cash receipts and AR, respectively, the
general ledger clerk reconciles the information and posts to the control accounts.
Controller’s Office
Because cash is a liquid asset and subject to misappropriation, additional controls are necessary. In this
case, someone from the controller’s office periodically performs a bank reconciliation
Computer-Based Accounting Systems

Automation - using technology to improve the efficiency and effectiveness ofa task.
Reengineering - involves radically rethinking the business process and the work flow.
 The objective of reengineering is to improve operational performance and reduce costs
by identifying and eliminating non–value-added tasks.
AUTOMATING SALES ORDER PROCESSING WITH BATCH TECHNOLOGY
Sales Department
begins with a customer contacting the sales department and placing an order. The sales clerk records the
essential details and prepares multiple copies of a sales order, which are held pending credit approval.
Credit Department Approval
When credit is approved, the sales department releases copies of the sales order to the billing, warehouse,
and shipping departments. The customer order and credit approval are then placed in the open order file.
Warehouse Procedures
Next the warehouse clerk receives the stock release copy of the sales order and uses this to pick the
goods.
The Shipping Department
The shipping clerk reconciles the products received from the warehouse with the shipping notice.
Assuming no discrepancies exist, a bill of lading is prepared, and the products are packaged and shipped
via common carrier to the customer.
KEYSTROKE

 The keystroke clerk converts the hard-copy shipping notices to digital form to produce a
transaction file of sales orders.
 This is a continuous process. Several times throughout the day, the keystroke clerk transcribes
batches of shipping notices.
EDIT RUN

 first validates all transaction records in the batch by performing clerical and logical tests on the
data.
 Typical tests include field checks, limit tests, range tests, and price-times-quantity extensions
 The edited sales order file is then passed to the file update run.
UPDATE PROCEDURES

REENGINEERING SALES ORDER PROCESSING WITH REAL-TIME TECHNOLOGY


Interactive computer terminals replace many of the manual procedures and physical documents of the
previous system. This interactive system provides real time input and output with batch updating of only
some master files.
TRANSACTION PROCESSING PROCEDURES
Sales Procedures

Using a computer terminal connected to a sales order system, the clerk performs the following tasks in
real-time mode:
1. The system accesses the inventory subsidiary file and checks the availability of the inventory. It
then performs a credit check by retrieving the customer credit data in the customer’s (AR) file.
Based on programmed criteria, the customer’s request for credit is approved or denied.
2. If credit is approved, the system updates the customer’s current balance to reflect the sale and
reduces inventory by the quantities of items sold to present an accurate and current picture of
inventory on hand and available for sale.
3. The system automatically transmits a digital stock release document to the warehouse, a digital
shipping notice to the shipping department, and records the sale in the open sales order file.
The structure of this file includes a CLOSED field that contains either the value N or Y to
indicate the status of the order. Closed records (those containing the value Y) have been shipped,
so the customer can now be billed.
Warehouse Procedures
The warehouse clerk’s terminal immediately produces a hard-copy printout of the electronically
transmitted stock release document.
Shipping Department
A shipping clerk reconciles the goods, the stock release document, and the hard-copy packing slip
produced on the terminal. The clerk then selects a carrier and prepares the goods for shipment. From the
terminal, the clerk transmits a shipping notice containing shipping date and freight charges
GENERAL LEDGER UPDATE PROCEDURES -- batch updating of general ledger records is done
to achieve operational efficiency in high-volume transaction processing systems An alternative approach
is to update the general ledger accounts in real time, if doing so poses no significant operational delays.
Finally, the batch program prepares and mails customer bills and transfers the closed sales records to the
closed sales order file (sales journal).

ADVANTAGES OF REAL-TIME PROCESSING

1. Real-time processing greatly shortens the cash cycle of the firm.


2. Real-time processing can give the firm a competitive advantage in the marketplace
3. Real-time editing permits the identification of many kinds of errors as they occur and greatly
improves the efficiency and the effectiveness of operations.
4. Finally, real-time processing reduces the amount of paper documents in a system.
AUTOMATED CASH RECEIPTS PROCEDURES

Mail Room
The mail room clerk separates the checks and remittance advices and prepares a remittance list. These
checks and a copy of the remittance list are sent to the cash receipts department. The remittance advices
and a copy of the remittance list are sent to the AR department.
Cash Receipts Department
The cash receipts clerk reconciles the checks and the remittance list and prepares the deposit slips. Via
terminal, the clerk creates a journal voucher record of total cash received.
Accounts Receivable Department
The AR clerk receives and reconciles the remittance advices and remittance list. Via terminal, the clerk
creates the cash receipts transaction file based on the individual remittance advices
Data Processing Department

REENGINEERED CASH RECEIPTS PROCEDURES

Some organizations have reengineered their mail room procedures to effectively reduce the risk and the
cost.
special transaction validation software - employs artificial intelligence capable of reading
handwriting.
- The system scans the remittance advices and the checks to verify that
the dollar amounts on each are equal and that the checks are signed.
POINT-OF-SALE (POS) SYSTEMS

used extensively in grocery stores, department stores, and other types of retail organizations. In this
example, only cash, checks, and bank credit card sales are valid. The organization maintains no customer
accounts receivable. Inventory is kept on the store’s shelves, not in a separate warehouse.
DAILY PROCEDURES
First, the checkout clerk scans the universal product code (UPC) label on the items being purchased
with a laser light scanner. The scanner, is the primary input device of the POS system. The POS system
is connected online to the inventory file from which it retrieves product price data and displays this on the
clerk’s terminal
END-OF-DAY PROCEDURES
At the end of the day, the cash receipts clerk prepares a three-part deposit slip for the total amount of
the cash received. One copy is filed and the other two accompany the cash to the bank. Finally :
batch program - summarizes the sales and cash receipts journals, prepares a journal voucher, and posts
to the general ledger

REENGINEERING USING EDI


Doing Business via EDI
electronic data interchange (EDI). - to expedite routine transactions between manufacturers and
wholesalers and between wholesalers and retailers. The customer’s computer is connected directly to the
seller’s computer via telephone lines.
REENGINEERING USING THE INTERNET
Doing Business on the Internet
By entering the seller’s home page address into the Internet communication program from a PC, a
potential customer can access the seller’s product list, scan the product line, and place an order.
Typically, Internet sales are credit card transactions. The customer’s order and credit card information
are attached to the seller’s e-mail file.
CONTROL CONSIDERATIONS FOR COMPUTER-BASED SYSTEMS

o Authorization
- Transaction authorization in real-time processing systems is an automated task.
- In POS systems, the authorization process involves validating credit card charges and
establishing that the customer is the valid user of the card
- Programmed decision rules must be closely monitored.
o Segregation of Duties
- Programmers who write the original computer programs should not also be
responsible for making program changes. Both of these functions should also be
separate from the daily task of operating the system.
o Supervision
- In a POS system, where both inventory and cash are at risk, supervision is particularly
important. Customers have direct access to inventory in the POS system, and the crime
of shoplifting is of great concern to management. Surveillance cameras and shop
floor security personnel can reduce the risk.
- the cash register’s internal tape or database is an added form of supervision
o Access Control
- magnetic records are vulnerable to both authorized and unauthorized exposure and
should be protected
 Must have limited file accessibility
 Must safeguard and monitor computer programs
o Accounting Records
- rest on reliability and security of stored digitalized data

DIGITAL JOURNALS AND LEDGERS

- The accountant should, therefore, be concerned about the quality of controls over the
programs that update, manipulate, and produce reports from these files.

FILE BACKUP.
- The physical loss, destruction, or corruption of digital accounting records is a serious
concern. The data processing department should perform separate file-backup
procedures
o Independent Verification
- is restored somewhat by performing batch control balancing after each run and by
producing management reports and summaries for end users to review.
- consolidating accounting tasks under one computer program can remove traditional
independent verification controls. To counter this problem:

 perform batch control balancing after each run

 produce management reports and summaries for end users to review

PC-Based Accounting Systems

 Used by small firms and some large decentralized firms

*PC applications -tend to be general-purpose systems that serve a wide range of needs. This strategy
allows software vendors to mass-produce low-cost and error-free standard products.
*Most PC systems are modular in design

*The central control program provides the user interface to the system. From this control point, the user
makes menu selections to invoke application modules as needed
* Commercial systems usually have fully integrated modules. This means that data transfers between
modules occur automatically.
PC CONTROL ISSUES

Segregation of Duties
 PC systems tend to have inadequate segregation of duties.

 should be compensated for with increased supervision, detailed management reports, and
frequent independent verification

Access Control

access controls to the data stored on the computer tends to be weak


Solutions for dealing with the problem include data encryption, disk locks, and physical security
devices.
Accounting Records

Computer disk failure is the primary cause of data loss.


Formal procedures for creating backup copies of data files and programs can reduce this threat
considerably

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