Caseasda 2
Caseasda 2
Caseasda 2
USA Cycle Company is one of the fastest-growing bicycle distributors in the United States, with headquarters in Chicago.
Its primary business is distribution of bicycles assembled in China, but it also has a smaller, custom-order business for
which it builds bicycles from parts purchased from various suppliers. The product line includes mountain, road, and comfort
bikes as well as a juvenile line with frames up to 24 inches. The company also distributes BMX bicycles as well as tricycles
and trailer bikes. In addition, it distributes various bicycle accessories such as helmets, clothing, lights, and spare parts for
all models the company carries.
Established in 1975, the company’s first warehouses were in Illinois and Wisconsin and supplied retail bicycle outlets
primarily in the Midwest. One year ago, USA Cycle Company expanded, adding two additional facilities in Sacramento,
California, and Redmond, Washington, to meet the growing demand for its bicycles. The company now also sells customized
bicycles direct to retailers through the Internet as well as by conventional means.
The company’s expansion to the West Coast was coupled with a planned increase in reliance on suppliers in China.
Although this resulted in decreased costs, some problems regarding inventory levels arose due to unexpected delays in
shipping, primarily attributable to miscommunication and shipping conditions. Because the company does not want to carry
excess inventory, it is sometimes forced to seek local suppliers at an increased cost.
USA Cycle Company uses limited computer technology to process business transactions and record accounting data, but
the data is distributed and not shared throughout the company. This has caused data redundancy and associated problems
of data currency, and these problems have been exacerbated by the company’s recent rapid expansion on the West Coast.
Initially, USA Cycle Company was a family-owned business. In need of capital for expansion, the company went public
when it added the two facilities on the West Coast. The number of employees rose from 100 to 200 during the expansion.
Gross sales also rose from $10 million to $20 million.
The USA Cycle Company sales order process begins when a sales representative takes an order from the customer over
the phone or fax (for established customers) and prepares the customer order. The sales clerk uses a PC to input the
customer order into one of two different data files, either the custom-design order file or the regular order file. The system
manager in the sales department periodically checks the web server for orders that come in through the Internet and prints
these orders for the sales clerk to enter as sales orders.
At the end of the day, the sales clerk updates the customer file from the regular sales order file and the custom-design sales
order file and prints three copies of the sales orders, including a factory order for each custom-design order. The clerk
forwards the sales orders to the warehouse, where goods are retrieved from inventory and shipped to the customer. The
clerk also sends the factory orders for custom-design bicycles to the factory for assembly. One copy of the sales order is
filed in the open customer order file for use in answering customer inquiries. The last copy of the sales order is sent to the
billing department for preparation of the sales invoice.
Once the warehouse receives a sales order, a warehouse worker retrieves the goods and accesses the warehouse
department PC to update the inventory and general ledger using an inventory management application program. Another
worker packs the goods and prepares two copies of the bill of lading as well as a packing slip. The packing slip is attached
to the shipping container, and the two copies of the bill of lading are sent to the shipping company along with the goods.
The worker also prepares a shipping notice that is sent to the billing department along with a bill of lading, sales order, and
a factory order (if the goods were for a custom-designed bicycle).
When the factory receives a factory order for a custom-designed bicycle from the sales department, a factory worker
prepares a material-release form and sends it to the warehouse for the materials. After the worker assembles the product
according to the order specifications, the factory order and the finished product are sent to the warehouse, where the
shipping documents are prepared, and the goods are shipped to the customer in the same way as other sales orders.
After receiving the sales order from the sales department, the billing/AR department clerk files it in a temporary file until the
shipping notice, the bill of lading, and the sales order or factory order have arrived from the warehouse. Once the shipping
notice and other documents have arrived, the clerk reviews these documents along with the sales order from the temporary
file and prepares two copies of the sales invoice using the billing/AR department PC, which automatically records the sale
in the sales journal and updates the AR subsidiary ledger and the general ledger. One copy of the sales invoice is mailed
to the customer, and the other is forwarded to the sales department, which closes the open customer order file. After closing
the open customer order file, all documents in the file are sent to the billing/
AR department. These documents are then filed in the AR pending file along with other documents the billing/AR department
receives to await customer payment.
When goods are returned to the receiving department, the receiving clerk counts and inspects the returned goods and then
prepares two returned goods slips. Following this, the manager in the receiving department evaluates the circumstances of
the return and decides whether to grant credit and stamps the slips accordingly. Afterward, the goods are sent to the
warehouse with one of the stamped return slips.
In the warehouse, a warehouse employee enters the information on the warehouse department PC, which updates the
inventory records and automatically posts to the general ledger. The second stamped slip is sent to the billing/AR
department, where the sales journal, AR subsidiary ledger, and general ledger are automatically updated by crediting the
customer account. Both return slips are filed by billing/AR in the returned goods file for future business evaluation.
All of USA Cycle’s mail arrives in the mail room in the cash receipts department. A cash receipts clerk in the mail room
opens all the mail, separates the checks and remittance advices, and endorses all the checks “For Deposit Only.” Afterward,
the clerk records each check on a remittance list and sends one copy of the remittance list to the billing/AR department
along with the remittance advices. Then the clerk prepares a bank deposit slip and updates the cash receipts journal on the
cash receipts department’s PC, which automatically posts to the general ledger as well. Later that day, the cash receipts
manager deposits the checks in the bank. In the billing/AR department, a clerk updates customer accounts on the
department’s PC with the information from the remittance advices, which automatically updates the AR subsidiary and
general ledgers. The billing/AR clerk also closes the AR pending file for invoices that have been paid in full. Finally, the clerk
files all source documents along with the remittance list and remittance advices in the sales history file.