Manager PDF
Manager PDF
Manager PDF
Manager Guides
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Manager Guides
Contents
1 First Steps. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.1 Initial Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2 Business Localization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
1.3 Users . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
1.4 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
1.5 Software Version . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
2 Structuring Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
2.1 Chart of Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
2.2 Capital Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
2.3 Common Business Situations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
2.4 Tracking Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
2.5 Special Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
2.6 Starting Balances. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
3 Customizing a Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
3.1 Business Logo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
3.2 Custom Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
3.3 Themes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
3.4 Form Defaults . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
4 Program Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
4.1 Learn the Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
4.2 Common Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134
4.3 Journal Entries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
4.4 Tax Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
4.5 Batch Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179
4.6 Search and Sort . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
4.7 Attachments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
4.8 Standard Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194
4.9 Custom Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221
4.10 Emails . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229
4.11 PDFs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 237
5 Cashbook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
5.1 Cash and Bank Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
5.2 Cash and Bank Transactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 252
5.3 Inter Account Transfers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
5.4 Expense Claims . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 293
6 Accounts Receivable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 300
6.1 Customers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 300
6.2 Sales Quotes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 306
6.3 Sales Orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310
6.4 Sales Invoices. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313
6.5 Credit Notes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 346
6.6 Billable Time. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349
6.7 Billable Expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 356
7 Accounts Payable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 365
7.1 Suppliers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 365
7.2 Purchase Quotes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 372
7.3 Purchase Orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
7.4 Purchase Invoices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 378
7.5 Debit Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 407
8 Inventory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 410
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Manager Guides
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Manager Guides
These Guides will get you started, providing information on how to manage businesses and users, set initial preferences applying to all
businesses, and choose the functional modules and accounting method you will initially use. (You can always add more or change later.)
Guides about localizing Manager for your country are also found in this group.
Enter the Business Name you want to appear in your list of businesses and click Add Business :
A Summary page for your added business will appear. Four universal tabs will be activated, because all businesses need them:
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Manager Guides
Note
When the data file of a business is opened directly in the desktop edition rather than by selecting the business in the
Businesses tab, that business is not added to the list. The list on the Businesses page contains only those
businesses stored in the application data folder. See this Guide for additional information.
Caution
Manager will not prevent adding or importing businesses with identical names. To avoid confusion, such as when
renaming and restoring a backup file by eliminating the date stamp, consider removing other businesses with the same
name from the Businesses tab first. (See instructions in another Guide.)
• Initial setup
• Setting the business file name that appears in Manager’s Businesses tab
• Setting the business or trading name on transaction forms, such as sales invoices, receipts, purchase orders, etc., and on statements
and reports.
Caution
While matching names are often convenient, the business file name is not used by the program in the same way as the
business trading name. A properly entered business trading name will remain fixed through data backups, restorations,
and transfers. It will appear on transaction forms and reports no matter what business file name is used. The business file
name, however, changes when a backup is made, with addition of a date. This feature allows you to determine which
version of a business data file is in use.
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Manager Guides
Note
If no business trading name is entered, Manager will use the business file name as the trading name.
Rename a business
The trading name of an existing business can be changed at any time following the same procedures described above for initial naming.
Click Update to save the new trading name.
A business file name, under which the business appears in the Businesses tab, can be changed by clicking Rename beside the business
name at the top of the Manager window:
Edit the business file name and click Update . This step has no effect on the trading name unless one has not been entered.
Note
Changing either a business file or business trading name affects no accounting data. Nor does it change data file names of
prior, existing backups or the trading names they contain.
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Manager Guides
• Business Name is the name you operate the business under. This does not necessarily need to be the same as your legal business
name. Nor does it need to match the business name used to identify your accounting file in Manager.
• Address will usually contain your address, phone number, email address, and so forth. It might also contain a business dentifier,
such as a tax identification number, banking number, or other type of information.
Notes
If you included information in the separate Business identifier field of older versions of Manager, that content was not
discarded, even though the separate field no longer exists. The information was appended in the Address field and appears
on transaction forms in the same location.
The fields will accept HTML code. So you can modify the appearance of your form headers without creating a custom
theme.
Example
The simple use of the HTML <br> tag in the Business Identifier field of the illustration above adds a line break to what
would otherwise be a closely spaced entry. The address information shown on the left appears on transaction forms as at
the right:
• Bank accounts
• Cash accounts
• Expense claims
• Customers
• Suppliers
• Employees
• Journal entries
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Manager Guides
• Special accounts
Note
Many reports do not include currency designations to reduce clutter, because they are always presented in your base
currency.
To set a base currency, go to the Settings tab, then click Base Currency :
• Code will be used to abbreviate the currency in various fields throughout the program where multiple currencies may be available.
Normally, this will be a three-letter standard code.
• Symbol is the designator for the currency that will appear on completed transactions when viewed.
• Decimal places is prefilled as 2 by default. If your base currency uses more or fewer decimal places, change the number here.
Caution
Do not use the Decimal places field to control rounding preferences. Use it only to define characteristics of your base
currency.
All existing accounts and subaccounts will automatically be denominated in the base currency. Transaction forms will now display the
appropriate symbol for the currency.
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Manager Guides
Example
Brilliant Industries sets its base currency to the Australian dollar:
Note
Establishing or changing base currency has no impact on numerical values previously entered in Manager. No currency
conversions are computed.
• Bank accounts
• Cash accounts
• Expense claims
• Customers
• Suppliers
• Employees
• Journal entries
• Special accounts
To define a foreign currency, go to the Settings tab, then click Foreign Currencies :
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Manager Guides
• Code will be used to abbreviate the currency in various fields throughout the program where multiple currencies may be available.
Normally, this will be a standard, three-letter code.
• Symbol is the designator for the currency that will appear on completed transactions when viewed.
• Decimal places is prefilled as 2 by default. If your base currency uses more or fewer decimal places, change the number here.
Caution
Do not use the Decimal places field to control rounding preferences. Use it only to define characteristics of the foreign
currency itself.
For all transactions where the context makes it appropriate, the option will now exist to choose the currency. Transaction forms using it will
now display the appropriate symbol for the foreign currency.
Example
Brilliant Industries sets its base currency to the Australian dollar. But it also defines the Euro:
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Manager Guides
Note
Establishing or changing a foreign currency has no impact on numerical values previously entered in Manager. No currency
conversions are computed.
Choosing a language
By default, you will see in the footer at the bottom of the Manager window:
If your web-browser is configured to accept other languages, you will also see those options by default. For example, if your web browser is
configured to accept English, Vietnamese, and Arabic, you will see this:
To switch to an available language, simply click on its link. No matter which language you currently have selected, you can also click the +
button in the footer :
Links to all available languages will appear. Choose your preferred language by clicking its link:
Example
Northwind Traders moves to the Netherlands and decides to switch languages. It follows the procedures described above,
clicking on Nederlands and now sees information in the new language:
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Manager Guides
• Report titles
The table does not include content you enter anywhere in the program. Therefore, Manager will not translate:
• Names of groups and accounts you create or edit in your chart of accounts
• Content of fields, such as inventory item names, line-item descriptions, or business details, even though labels of these fields are
translated
Note
Default, placeholder group and account names on the profit and loss statement side of your chart of accounts are special
cases. Because these placeholder names are not control accounts and are not related to hard-coded program functions,
they are treated as though they were created by the user. Therefore, they are not translated back and forth when the
language preference is changed.
However, because they are present by default when a new business is created, their names are known in advance, and they
are included in the translation table. So when they are first created, their names will be in the language currently set. If you
plan to operate a business in a certain language, set that as your preference before creating the business. The placeholder
groups and accounts will be titled in your desired language. They will not, however, be translated later if you change
language.
Manager also reverses layout from left-to-right to right-to-left when one of the following languages is chosen:
• Arabic
• Dhivehi
• Hebrew
• Kurdish
• Persian
• Urdu
When a business operates in multiple languages, whether because customers or suppliers use different languages or because internal users
do, a few ideas may be helpful:
• Title self-generated groups and accounts in the chart of accounts in both languages. For example, a bilingual Spanish/English
company could rename the default Donations account to Donaciones | Donations. (Automatic and control accounts will be
translated by the program.)
• Enter field content, especially in custom fields, in the language of its intended audience. For example, payment terms on sales
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Manager Guides
• Remember that Manager has no live translation capability, but is restricted to what the translation teams have put into the
translation table. Switch back and forth between languages to fully understand the effect and make necessary adjustments. Explore
all aspects of the program when doing this.
Note
The translation process is a collaborative, community effort. See Translations for more information. If you find incomplete
or incorrect translations, you might like to join our translation team. You can suggest new languages at the same link.
• Arabic
• Dhivehi
• Hebrew
• Kurdish
• Persian
• Urdu
Procedures for changing language are described in another Guide. Read it first.
When using one of the right-to-left languages, the entire interface will be right-to-left.
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Manager Guides
Example
A new business is added, and Arabic is chosen as the language. The default chart of accounts is displayed as on the
Summary page below:
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Manager Guides
Notes
Changing languages only translates predefined terms in the program. No live translation capability exists within the
program. See the discussion on effects of changing languages in this Guide.
Implementation of right-to-left text is not yet complete, but will continue to be improved:
• Manager’s internal PDF generator still assumes left-to-right mode. Users needing PDFs of transactions or reports
may obtain better results using the Print button and an external PDF generator.
• There are some issues with themes and some minor problems with layout. But most screens should function
correctly at this point.
• Users of right-to-left languages who notice specific problems should post them on the Forum (in English).
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Manager Guides
In the dropdown box on the screen that appears, choose your format and click Update :
Note
Number formats apply globally to all businesses created in Manager. In some previous versions of the program, they could
be set individually, by business.
From the dropdown box that appears, choose your format and click Update .
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Manager Guides
Note
Date format is a global preference affecting all businesses. In some prior versions of the program, date formats could be set
individually, by business.
Click on the Preferences tab at the top of the Manager window, then the day of the week currently in use under the First Day of Week
heading:
Click Update to save the change. Pop-up calendars will now display in the new format:
• Recover data from an earlier time, for example, before someone began making entry errors
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Manager Guides
A backup includes data of only one business. If you have multiple accounting entities, each must be backed up separately. If desired, these
backups can be to separate locations. And a single business can be backed up to multiple locations.
Making a backup
As long as new accounting data is being recorded, backups should be made frequently. A general guideline is to back up your data often
enough that you would be willing and able to re-enter recent data to bring your records up to date. For high-volume businesses, that
realistically means backing up at least daily. For lower-volume entities, weekly or monthly backups might suffice, as long as necessary
records would be available if data loss occurs.
Creating a backup file is very simple. Under the Businesses tab, click on the name of the business you are backing up. (This step is
unnecessary if you are already within the business.)
Then click the Backup button at the top right of the Manager window.
Depending on your operating system, the software will offer to save the backup file somewhere on your local drive. Generally, you should
choose a different location (see below). In this example, the backup is for a business named Northwind Traders.
The backup file name will contain a date stamp to indicate when the backup was created. Once you make multiple backups, it will be easy to
see when individual backup files were generated:
You should store backups separately from your computer. That way, if the computer fails, the backup will remain intact. Choose an
appropriate backup medium and location, considering cost, convenience, and the value you place on your accounting data (including the
effort required to recreate it). For protection from hazards or theft, the backup should aso be kept at a separate physical location. Some
possibilities include:
• External drive
• Network-connected drive
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The next screen may look slightly different, depending on your operating system. Regardless, browse to the location of your stored backup
and select the file you want to import. In the example below, the backup Northwind Traders (2016-10-25).manager has been chosen:
Click Import Business to complete the process. You will be returned to the Businesses tab listing your businesses:
Click on the imported business to open it so you can verify it was restored properly:
Note
The business name at the top of the Manager window retains the same date stamp as the backup file you imported. But
forms and reports in the data file keep the trading name entered at Settings Business Details . This can be
useful for differentiating versions of restored businesses. If you do not want the date stamp to show, you can rename the
data file either before or after importing it to remove the date stamp.
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Caution
Manager will not prevent adding or importing businesses with identical names. To avoid confusion, such as when
renaming and restoring a backup file by eliminating the date stamp, consider removing other businesses with the same
name from the Businesses tab first. (See instructions in another Guide.)
Transferring data
A backup file can also be used to transfer accounting data between computers or editions of the program. The Backup button works
exactly the same way on any platform. Follow these steps:
3. Install Manager on the computer to which the data is being transferred, or access the server or cloud edition of the program via a
browser on that machine.
4. Use the Add Business function to import the business to the new computer’s or browser’s list of businesses.
Caution
New versions of Manager can open files created by older versions of the program. But sometimes, in doing so, they
modify the data structure to incorporate new features. Therefore, older versions of the program cannot necessarily import
and open backups from newer versions of the program. Therefore, be sure all versions of the program on all machines
involved in data transfers are the same. And be aware, if transferring to or from the cloud edition, the cloud edition is
automatically updated.
Select the business to be deleted in the dropdown box and click Remove Business :
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Note
Removing a business name does not delete the business, which is not stored in the application. It only removes its name
from the Businesses list. The business’ complete data file will remain in the application data folder. But, inside the
application data folder, it will be transferred to the Trash sub-folder. To completely eliminate the business, it must be
deleted from there.
Note
Localization options are unique to an individual business. If you account for more than one business in Manager, you must
install localization options separately for each one.
To install localization options, go the Settings . In the heading bar, click Import :
You will see a dropdown menu listing countries for which localization options exist in the language currently selected:
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Notes
To see options for other countries, select a different language preference. For example, if Dutch is selected, a different list
appears:
If no localization options are available for the selected language, a notice like this will appear:
In that case, you will need to create your own localization settings and features, such as custom tax codes.
After choosing a country, click Next (or its equivalent in another language). A list of available localization options will appear. Check a box
to see what is included with a particular localization option.
Note
When a localization option for a report transformation is selected, subsidiary listings show tax codes and custom fields that
will be installed with the transformation. These additional options are necessary for proper functioning of the report
transformation. They must be used in place of any equivalent tax codes or custom fields you have already created. The
report will ignore other tax codes and custom fields.
When you have selected the desired option(s), click Import . If other options are desired, repeat the process.
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Example
Brilliant Industries has registered for GST in Australia and wants to add relevant tax codes and the GST Calculation
Worksheet report transformation to assist with lodgment. Following instructions above, Brilliant navigates to Australia-
specific localization options. First is the GST Calculation Worksheet:
After Import is clicked, the new tax codes appear under Tax Codes in the Settings tab:
When a transformation is improved, all users of it should obtain the new version. Good practice is to check whether an update has been
released every time you use a transformation. Simply click on Check for updates at the bottom of the page while viewing the report
transformation:
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If an update is available, click the Reload button and the revised transformation will be applied to your data:
1.3 Users
1.3.1 Create users
Users are discrete identities authorized to log into a business hosted in either the server or cloud editions of Manager. They are granted
permissions by an administrator consistent with their assigned duties.
Examples
• Accounting personnel might have full access to all tabs and functions.
• Sales staff might only be able to create customers and generate sales quotes.
• A production manager might be able only to view inventory status and create production orders.
Click New User . Enter the administrator’s Name, Username, and Password. Select Administrator in the dropdown box for Role:
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Click Create .
When restricted users are created, you will see them under the Users tab with the names of businesses they are allowed to see:
By default, restricted users will have full access to each business listed under their name. If you would like to restrict their access within a
business, click on the business name under their name and in the User Permissions field, change Full access to Restricted access.
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This will reveal new options to further control what the user can do and see.
A Permitted Actions dropdown box will appear, offering a range of choices. Below the Permitted Actions field, tabs enabled for the
business will be listed. Check boxes to assign permissions:
If the Reports tab is checked, a list of reports for active tabs will show. Check reports you want the user to see:
If Settings is checked, a list of settings applicable to enabled tabs will appear. Choose those the user should be able to modify:
When a user logs in, she or he will only see tabs for which permission has been granted:
Note
Manager will not, in general, prevent an administrator from creating duplicate users. However, the program will highlight
duplicates in red to help find and correct problems:
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The login screen logo option is universal, displaying to all users of all businesses recorded under the same license or subscription. So it will
normally be used in the following situations:
• Multiple users within a single business, where the benefit is primarily cosmetic
• Accounting professionals providing services to multiple businesses, where the intent is to emphasize the service provider as users
log in
Upload the logo under the Preferences tab in the top menu bar:
Note
The logo must be in PNG format and under 250 kB in file size.
The login screen will show the logo instead of the “Login” title:
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1.4 Summary
1.4.1 Customize a business
Manager has capabilities for all types of business entities, including:
• Sole traders/proprietors
• Trusts
• Social clubs
Many of Manager’s capabilities are not needed by all users; nor are they necessary for every business model or operating approach. Select
only the capabilities you need by enabling functional tabs. Necessary entry forms, data fields, reports, and (in certain cases) built-in accounts
required to fully use enabled tabs will become available automatically. Things you don’t need won’t clutter your screen or the program.
Summary provides an overview of position and performance by displaying the Balance Sheet for the current date and the Profit and Loss
Statement for a selectable period. The display can be set for accrual or cash basis accounting.
Bank Accounts is for setting up any form of monetary exchange managed by a financial institution, including bank accounts, credit cards,
online payment systems, and cryptocurrencies.
Cash Accounts is where repositories for physical money are set up, including petty cash funds, cash boxes, and tills.
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Receipts & Payments is where payments from and receipts to all bank and cash accounts are entered. All money entering or leaving the
business must be recorded in this tab.
Inter Account Transfers is where transfers between bank and cash accounts are recorded. Both the originating and destination
accounts can be either bank or cash accounts. In an inter-account transfer, no funds enter or leave the business.
Bank Reconciliations allows creation of reconciliation statements for bank accounts and attachment of supporting documents.
Expense Claims records expenses incurred by people on behalf of the business. These include (1) actual expenses paid with personal
funds, which in other circumstances could have been purchased directly with company funds and allocated to appropriate accounts, and (2)
allowances based on rates rather than actual expenditures but deductible from income under local law.
Customers is where you set up businesses, organizations, or individuals to whom you will sell on credit by issuing sales invoices. This tab
is not required if you plan to sell only to buyers who pay immediately. But it is necessary if you want to track transaction history with a given
customer.
Sales Quotes lets you offer goods or services at defined prices and terms. Strictly speaking, sales quotes are not accounting transactions
and have no financial or inventory impact. So this is another optional tab. Sales quotes can be renamed as offers, estimates, proposals, pro
forma invoices, or anything else to fit practices in your industry.
Sales Orders provides an optional way to record orders from customers, usually for internal purposes. Sales orders do not involve actual
provision of services, movement of inventory, or payment of money. They can be used for a variety of purposes: internal manufacturing or
fulfillment planning, documentation of agreed pricing, customer communication, or as drafts of purchase or sales invoices.
Sales Invoices is where you record the sale of goods or services to a customer and make demand for payment. Sales invoices increase
the balance of the customer’s subaccount in Accounts receivable and, therefore, are used when selling on credit. If all sales will involve
immediate receipt of money, this tab is not necessary.
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Credit Notes lets you record return of goods by a customer or a credit adjustment (refund) to a customer’s account for goods or
services previously delivered. It can be used only when the Customers tab is enabled and usually only when a sales invoice has already
been issued.
Late Payment Fees records fees automatically assessed on overdue sales invoices when those have been selected as an option. The tab
also allows direct, manual addition, editing, and deletion of late payment fees.
Delivery Notes generates documentation to accompany delivered goods. Delivery notes can be used as packing lists, delivery route
instructions, or confirmations of receipt. It is also used to record movement of inventory when multiple inventory locations exist.
Suppliers is where you set up businesses, organizations, or individuals from whom you will buy on credit using purchase invoices.
Subcontractors are included in this category. This tab is not required if you plan to pay immediately for all purchases, even if the seller sends
you a bill or invoice. But it is necessary if you want to track transaction history with a supplier.
Purchase Quotes lets you send unpriced requests for quotation to your suppliers and convert their responses to priced purchase quotes
prior to issuing purchase orders, entering purchase invoices, or creating goods receipts.
Purchase Orders provides an optional method for ordering goods or services from suppliers. Purchase orders have no financial or
inventory impact. They do not involve actual provision of services, movement of inventory, or payment of money. They can be used for a
variety of purposes: internal requests for purchase authorization, documentation of order pricing, inventory planning, supplier
communication, or as drafts of purchase or sales invoices.
Purchase Invoices is where sales invoices received from suppliers are entered into Manager. Purchase invoices increase the balance of
the supplier’s subaccount in Accounts payable and, therefore, are used when buying on credit. This tab is not required if you pay fully at the
time of purchase.
Debit Notes allows you to record changes by suppliers to amounts you owe them as Accounts payable. The tab is unnecessary if
suppliers refund money directly to your business, only for account adjustments. Debit notes are not normally provided to the supplier. They
might be for: return of goods, adjustment (refund) of price for goods or services previously delivered, or overpayment of amounts billed.
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Goods Receipts helps track location of inventory enroute from suppliers or between warehouse locations of the business.
Inventory Items is used to identify, define, count, and manage physical goods or materials held by a business for sale or production.
Inventory Transfers can be used when a business has multiple locations for its inventory. It is not necessary when all inventory is stored
at a single location nor when knowledge of inventory location is unimportant.
Inventory Write-offs is where you record loss, damage, or other non-revenue reductions of inventory.
Production Orders helps track inventory during manufacturing by producing output inventory items from input inventory items. It also
helps establish the cost of manufactured inventory. This tab is not necessary if you buy all inventory from outside suppliers.
Employees is the tab where you set up workers who will be paid by the business. If payroll functions are outsourced, this tab may not be
necessary, even if you have employees.
Payslips lets you record amounts earned by, owed to, withheld from, and contributed on behalf of employees. It does not generate
payments to employees. This tab may not be needed if you outsource payroll functions.
Billable Time allows you to record time that will later be billed to customers at an hourly rate. It is not, however, a time clock and
cannot record attendance.
Billable Expenses records expenses on behalf of customers for later invoicing and reimbursement. Expenses recorded in this tab do not
appear in expense accounts of the business, but are passed through to customers by invoicing. They also do not appear in income accounts
unless marked up for additional profit.
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Fixed Assets is where you define tangible assets being capitalized, that is, whose costs are being recovered over an extended period
rather than entirely as current expenses. The tab calculates current book book value of fixed assets from acquisition cost and accumulated
depreciation.
Depreciation Entries is where current depreciation expenses of fixed assets are recorded.
Intangible Assets records initial value and amortization of intangible assets being capitalized.
Amortization Entries is where current amortization expenses of intangible assets are recorded.
Capital Accounts is where partners, beneficiaries, owners, directors, or others having direct financial stakes in the business are set up
and their monetary interests are tracked. This tab does not record information about shareholders of public stock corporations.
Special Accounts allows you to create custom subsidiary ledgers, such as for landlord’s trust accounts or loans. Applications of special
accounts are fairly technical, so use of this tab is not common.
Journal Entries allows specialized entries with explicit identification of debited and credited accounts. It is used infrequently in
Manager, because most transactions are simplified in other relevant tabs. It is typically used for adjusting entries, earnings distributions, etc.
Folders allows organization of electronic attachments stored in Manager to document or justify accounting records.
Attachments provides capabilities to search, view, and edit attachments to transactions or folders. Bulk deletion is also possible. Unlike
most tabs, this one does not allow creation of new attachments. They must be added to individual transactions or folders.
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Reports lets you create, customize, store, view, and export reports to summarize, analyze, and present transaction data. Specific reports
are available only when relevant tabs have been enabled.
Settings is the place to customize many small details in Manager. Depending on which tabs are enabled, you will have options to enter,
define, modify, customize, or list everything from base currency to capital account members to tax codes to overall appearance themes for
your documents and forms.
In summary, between Customize and Settings , you can make Manager as simple as possible for your form of organization and
business operations. But you can also add capabilities for more complex situations. This flexibility lets Manager grow and change with your
business.
Note
Tabs that have never been used can be disabled if they turn out not to be useful. But once any record or transaction has
been entered in a tab, Manager will protect that data by not allowing the tab to be disabled. To disable a tab, all entered
data must first be deleted. Only data that has not been referenced by another transaction can be deleted, so disabling a tab
can be tedious. Think carefully before enabling tabs. They can always be added later.
This simple change does more than reduce scrolling past unused tabs. It will also:
• Rid your balance sheet of automatically generated accounts you won’t use
• Limit options under Settings and Reports to ones related to transactions you actually enter
• Eliminate unnecessary check boxes, data fields, and dropdown menu choices as you make entries throughout the program
These benefits streamline your experience and lower training requirements for new users. For accounting newcomers, this change can mean
the difference between efficient, professional record-keeping and complete frustration.
Enabling tabs
When a new business is created in Manager, four tabs are enabled and visible in the left navigation pane by default. These cannot be
disabled, because they are needed by all businesses:
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To add capabilities, click on the blue Customize link pointed to by the red arrow. A list of available modules appears. Check boxes next to
desired tabs:
Active tabs will appear in the left navigation pane. The number of active records of each type will show in windows to the right of tab names:
Disabling tabs
To disable an unused tab, click Customize again, uncheck the tab’s box, and click Update . Entry forms, data fields, and reports
associated with that tab will no longer be visible.
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Note
Unwanted tabs can be disabled only if they contain no transactions or records. This restriction prevents accidental loss
of accounting data. To disable a tab, all entered data must first be deleted. Only data that has not been referenced by
another transaction can be deleted, so disabling a tab can be tedious. So think carefully before enabling tabs. They can
always be added later.
Check the box to Show balances for specified period. Select the reporting period for which you prefer to see figures in your Summary
. Entering Today in the Until field produces a display that is always up to date, but other dates can entered by selecting Custom:
OR
The Summary tab will now show figures for the selected period:
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Accrual basis accounting more completely reports both financial performance and position. It is generally preferred by accountants, because
it shows when revenue has been earned and debts incurred, regardless of whether money has yet changed hands. It provides more and
better financial information for managing the business. Cash basis accounting is usually employed only by very small, simple businesses,
often those without inventory. It emphasizes the importance of cash in a company’s financial picture.
The choice between these options may be influenced by local laws. Many businesses start on the cash basis. But frequently, as revenue
increases beyond some threshold or inventory is added, authorities require a change to accrual basis accounting. Manager can handle the
switch easily.
Note
Accounting method cannot be selected until after the first sales or purchase invoice has been created.
To change between accrual and cash basis accounting in Manager, click Edit at the top of the Summary page:
Select one of the two accounting methods in the dropdown box and click Update :
Note
Balances of many accounts may change or disappear from the Summary when cash basis accounting is selected because
elements contributing to them have not been recognized through receipt or payment of funds. Manager will still make all
necessary calculations, though. Account balances will be restored when accrual basis accounting is again selected. No
information is lost when switching back and forth between methods.
The report will display the accounting method used in its heading:
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Reports of both types can be created and saved for the same period and will be available when the particular report is selected in the
Reports tab:
Enter the desired alphanumeric content in the Code field and click Update :
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Notes
If account codes have not been assigned yet, the checkbox will not be visible.
This selection applies only to the Summary . Various reports also include the option to show account codes on their
definition screens.
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Regardless of whether account codes are displayed, they will appear in the Account field dropdown box when entering line items on
transactions, including cash receipts, sales invoices, journal entries, and so forth:
If they have no transactions posted to them, accounts can be deleted. If you have used them, but they now have zero balances, you can
exclude them from the Summary .
Click Update .
The Summary tab will now show figures only for accounts with non-zero balances.
• It appears automatically on the Balance Sheet in the Equity grouping whenever it has a non-zero balance.
• It it not listed in the Chart of Accounts under Settings , so it cannot be edited or moved to a different account group.
• Many transaction fields in Manager default to Suspense until valid entries are made in them.
Any balance in Suspense signals a problem. Never attempt to clear the Suspense account with a journal entry. That only hides problems
and usually makes both your Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Statement inaccurate. Problems that caused transactions to post to Suspense
must be identified and corrected.
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All transactions contributing to the balance will appear. These might be either debits or credits:
If the Edit button for any transaction is dimmed, be sure Manager is set for accrual basis accounting. Return to the Summary page and
click Set Period :
Then drill down again on the Suspense balance. (You can return to cash basis accounting after problems with Suspense have been cleared.)
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Beginning with the most recent transaction in the example, an expense claim did not include a Payer:
Designating a Payer from predefined choices clears this transaction from Suspense:
A payment for messenger services recorded the payee, a description, number of deliveries, and price, but did not include proper allocation
to an expense account:
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The next transaction recorded a contribution of capital from a partner to fund a remodeling project. It listed the partner as the payee,
properly marked the receipt as a contribution, but neglected to direct the receipt to the specific partner’s subaccount:
A journal entry contained a typographical error, reversing digits when recording a distribution of earnings. This mistake resulted in an
unbalanced transaction:
Editing the mistake properly balances the transaction, removing it from Suspense:
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The final problem in the example is a purchase invoice for a delivery truck that did not properly assign the purchase to the specific fixed
asset created for the truck, despite assigning it to the Fixed assets account:
Manager is designed to preserve information rather than reject incorrect entries. But when anything is in your Suspense account, your
records and reports are almost certainly wrong.
• Zero out income and expense accounts before starting a new accounting period
• Limit accumulation and propagation of mistakes from one period to the next
These practices developed over centuries, not only to support meaningful analysis, but also to combat unavoidable omissions, mental
miscalculations, and oversights when entering and posting hundreds or thousands of transactions manually.
• Basing automatic double entries on type of transaction and account selection by the user, reducing the need for manual journal
entries with their requirement to deduce which accounts to debit and credit
• Furnishing real-time feedback when journal entries are made, reducing the possibility of unbalanced transactions
• Carrying forward information from one period to the next in a perpetual database
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1. Make necessary adjusting entries (when using accrual basis accounting) for prepaid expenses and income items.
2. Make desired distributions of earnings to capital or equity accounts using journal entries.
4. Create desired reports for the accounting period. These might be limited to a Profit and Loss Statement and Balance Sheet. Of
course, others can be added to suit needs of management, accountants, or tax authorities. Reports can be printed, stored
electronically, or just saved in Manager.
5. Consider locking past transactions by setting the lock date once end-of-period adjustments are complete. This prevents changes to
transactions forming the basis for statutory reporting obligations and tax returns.
Note
For many small businesses, especially sole traders/proprietors, none of these steps might be necessary. Perhaps the
business has no prepaid items. Depending on the equity structure of the chart of accounts, the second and third steps
might have happened over the course of the accounting period. And reports can always be generated later if they are
needed.
Be sure the box is checked to Show balances for specified period. Otherwise, all transactions from the date Manager was first used will
be included. Enter the first day of the new accounting period in the From field. Normally, select Today as the Until date so the Summary is
always current, but no transactions entered in advance will be included until their entry dates are reached:
You might want to define common reports for the new accounting period, too. That way, they will be quickly available when needed. But
they can also be created later.
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Example
Maria wants to prevent any changes to accounting transactions before 1 January 2015. She sets the lock date to 31
December 2014:
Now, if she tries to edit or delete any transaction dated on or before 31 December 2014, she will see the following notice:
You can temporarily remove the lock date if you need to edit or delete a transaction. Enter the lock date again when you have completed
the changes to previously locked transactions.
Note
Lock Date is useful in multi-user editions of Manager to prevent restricted users from modifying locked transactions.
Ensure the Lock Date feature is disabled for restricted users to prevent them from unlocking restricted data. For
administrators or unrestricted users, the feature will act as a reminder to prevent accidental data modification.
To download the current version of Manager, click Free Download on the Manager.io home page. Then select Free Download within
the Windows tile:
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To install or update Manager, double click or run the downloaded installer file. Unlike most Windows installers, this one is set up to run for a
normal user, so no administrator password is required:
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Choose whether you want to add a desktop shortcut, then click Next :
Confirm the directory where you will install Manager. The default location is the Windows user’s private (hidden) directory. Click Next to
complete installation:
Notes
Installation in Windows protected program directories such as C:\Program Files or access by multiple windows users is
not covered by this guide.
Multiple versions of Manager can be installed on a Windows computer by logging in as different Windows users.
During installation, you can also choose any other installation directory for which the current Windows user has write
permission. Manager will remember the installation directory chosen next time that particular Windows user installs
Manager.
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Initial installation
Before installing Manager, go to your computer’s System Preferences and click on Security & Privacy:
In the General tab of the Security & Privacy preferences pane, select the option to allow apps downloaded from the App Store and identified
developers (Manager is published by an identified Apple developer):
Next, to install the desktop edition of Manager on macOS, download the program from https://www.manager.io. Click on Free Download ,
then Free Download in the Mac tile:
A disk image file (with a .dmg extension) will appear in your designated downloads folder:
NOTE: Do not try to install the disk image. It will not launch Manager.
Double-click to open the disk image. A Manager disk icon will appear:
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Drag the Manager application icon from the Manager disk folder into the Applications folder on the computer.
Note
Do not drag the Manager icon to any icon for your Applications folder that may appear in the Dock. Such an icon is not
your Applications folder; it is just an alias.
Installation is complete.
Security warnings
MacOS includes features to reduce the chance of launching malicious software. The first time you launch Manager, you may see a warning
like this:
Click Open . When launching the same version of Manager again, you will not see the warning.
Note
MacOS version 10.15 (Catalina) includes more rigorous security features than previous versions of the operating system,
including a software notarization feature. If you see the following message saying the application cannot be opened:
you have not downloaded a current version of Manager from the official website.
Updating Manager
Always back up your accounting data to a remote storage device before updating.
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Do not delete or uninstall anything before updating. Updating Manager is similar to initial installation. After downloading the program,
opening the disk image, and dragging the Manager icon to the Applications folder, the macOS Finder will display a warning:
Selecting Keep Both will retain the existing version of Manager and save the new version with a number appended to the application
name. This option allows you to revert to an old version if you encounter a problem with the new one. (See Caution below.) Both versions
will appear in the Applications folder:
Selecting Stop will terminate the installation without affecting the downloaded file.
Selecting Replace will automatically remove the old version and install the new one in its place. If an alias of Manager is permanently kept
in the Dock, that alias will now launch the new version of Manager. (If both versions were kept, the Dock alias will launch the old version,
because the new version has a different name.)
Regardless of which installation option is chosen, all versions will call data from the same data file, so no further action is required to access
accounting data.
The first time Manager is launched after updating, the same security warning that appeared after initial installation may show again. Proceed
as described above.
Caution
Updates of Manager can always access and use older data files. But sometimes they modify the database structure. So
once you have opened a business with a newer version, problems might arise if the same business is opened with an older
version. If, for any reason, you need to return to an older version of Manager, restore the business from a backup file that
predates the update.
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Once you have established a business in Manager, the most important task is structuring your accounts to match your form of organization,
method of operation, legal reporting requirements, and management information needs. Effort here will pay dividends as long as you run
your business.
Every account has a balance based on additions and subtractions made since it was opened (or during a specified period of time). So
summaries or totals of balances of various types or groups of accounts are often included when displaying a chart of accounts. But strictly
speaking, only the accounts themselves make up the chart of accounts.
So it should be thought out carefully. Once it has been developed, written descriptions of which types of transactions are posted to each
account are convenient reminders and can be helpful during audits, when working with accountants, and for training new users or reminding
established ones.
Although the effort of building a good chart of accounts produces no direct revenue, it costs little or nothing, but will improve operations far
into the future. A well-designed chart of accounts ultimately makes your business easier to manage and can save time and money.
Understanding some basics will help you develop a good one.
Types of accounts
Accounts have been classified the same way by accountants and bookkeepers everywhere for over 500 years. (Nobody said accounting was
exciting.) Classification depends on whether accounts depict your current financial position or determine your performance over a period of
time. They are named for the two most important financial statements of any company: the balance sheet and the profit and loss (P & L)
statement, also called the income statement.
Accounts depicting position are called balance sheet accounts, because they appear on the balance sheet. (See, this is easy!) They are also
sometimes referred to as permanent or perpetual accounts, because they carry forward from one accounting period to another. When up to
date, they define the state of a business at the current moment.
• Asset accounts represent the value of what you own, including cash, inventory, fixed assets, and other things.
• Liability accounts represent what you owe to others outside the business, including loans, employee wages earned but not yet
paid, and so forth.
• Equity accounts record how much money is invested in the business, including profits that have not been distributed. Equity can be
thought of as the net worth of a business. (Net worth is different from value, which is what someone might pay to buy the
business.)
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Accounts determining performance are called profit and loss or income statement accounts, because they appear on reports of the same
name. (You probably predicted that.) Balances for these accounts are calculated over a specified timeframe or accounting period, such as a
month, quarter, or year.
• Expense accounts record amounts spent on business activities (not including any withdrawals, dividends, or distributions to owners
or shareholders)
Businesses may subdivide their accounts into elaborate hierarchies. But all accounts are one of those five basic types. There are no
exceptions. (That would be too exciting.)
Accounting equations
Accounting begins with the simple equation:
This is just an accountant’s way of saying the difference between what a business owns and what it owes is its net worth. (You already knew
that, right? This is getting simpler.)
To make things seem mysterious so they can keep their jobs, accountants like to scramble that equation a little by moving Liabilities to the
right side of the equation (reversing the sign, of course):
This version of the equation says the sum of all asset account balances must equal the sum of all liability and equity account balances.
Details of this balance constitute your financial position at any given time. A proper chart of accounts and good accounting procedures
make sure the two sides of the accounting equation are always equal. That’s what shows on a balance sheet, nothing more, though specific
accounts in each type and their arrangement may vary.
Example
Ravi has a bank account balance of 10,000 to start his messenger service. That is an asset. But 8,000 of that amount was
obtained as a loan, a liability. Ravi’s equity, or net worth, is 2,000. In fact, that is the amount he had saved and put into the
business venture. His accounting equation is:
But how can a business grow (or fail, for that matter)? This is where those profit and loss accounts fit into the picture. Revenue earned by a
business adds to Assets, possibly by increasing a bank account. Or it might take the form of a receivable, that is, an amount earned and
invoiced to a customer but for which money has not yet been received from the customer. A receivable is still an asset, because it has value
to your business.
In contrast, expenditures by the business effectively decrease assets, reducing that bank account or creating a payable, or amount owed to a
supplier. The accounting equation can be extended:
The portion in parentheses is called net profit and is what shows on the profit and loss statement and defines your performance. So the
extended equation combines position and performance into one calculation, merging status at a moment with changes not yet transferred
into the permanent accounts.
If you spend less than you make, you are profitable. Profits can increase your Assets. Or they can reduce your Liabilities. Either increases
Equity. The creative aspect of business involves using Assets, Liabilities, and Equity to generate profits. Eventually, profits are converted to
Equity and can be moved out of the business and into owners’ pockets. The chart of accounts guides and records that process. (And you
thought accounting would be completely boring. Well, it mostly is, until you get to the last step about putting money in your pocket.)
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Why bother? Because this version can help you understand the deepest mystical secrets of accounting: debits and credits. Scholars, Latin
linguists, and historians disagree about origins of those terms, including who first used them, when, and in what language. Every story is
thorough and convincing. But you don’t need to know any of them.
You only need to know two things about debits and credits:
• Your natural understanding of them from dealing with banks, merchants, and others who send you bills is probably backwards. The
terms they use are not from your perspective, but from your bank’s or the merchant’s. All accounting is done from the perspective
of the one keeping the books. So your bank’s debit is your credit.
• For accounting purposes, debit means “on the left” and credit means “on the right.”
Looking at the rearranged equation just above, Asset and Expense accounts are debit accounts. They are on the left side of the equal sign.
Liability, Equity, and Income accounts are credit accounts. They are on the right. (Pretty simple, eh?)
A debit transaction increases a debit account. A credit transaction increases a credit account. The reverse is also true. Debit transactions
decrease credit accounts and credit transactions decrease debit accounts. So (here comes the magic), you can determine whether a
transaction is a debit or credit by whether it increases an account on the left (a debit) or the right (a credit). (Yes, you can do it the other way
round, too, but that’s harder to remember.)
This relationship between debits and credits and the need to keep both sides of the accounting equation in balance led more than five
centuries ago to invention of double-entry accounting. Every transaction starts out as a debit or credit posted to one of the accounts in your
chart of accounts. But to balance your books, it must be offset by an opposite credit or debit to a different account.
Example
Ravi begins operating his messenger service. During the first month, he spends 2,500 from his bank account to pay
operating costs. The transactions increase various Expense accounts on the left side of the equation. So the Expense
accounts are debited. They also decrease his bank account, an Asset account, also on the left side. So the bank account is
credited the same amount. (Yes, a payment from a bank account is a credit, showing that what you probably thought you
knew was wrong.)
At the end of the month, Ravi deposits 4,000 received from customers into the bank. This transaction increases an Asset
account, on the left side, so the bank account is debited. To balance this, an Income account, on the right side, is credited
with 4,000. After these changes, Ravi’s bank balance is 11,500, and his extended accounting equation is:
11,500 (Assets) + 2,500 (Expenses) = 8,000 (Liabilities) + 2,000 (Equity) +4,000 (Income)
Fortunately, when using Manager, you don’t have to remember most of this. Except for occasional journal entries, all transaction forms in
Manager determine which accounts to debit and credit based on context. When faced with a decision, refer back to this Guide. And
remember the rule that debits increase debit accounts and credits increase credit accounts.
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Design considerations
Designing your chart of accounts is one of the most important things you do when starting a business or adopting Manager. Poor design
will irritate you every day. Yet too many businesses undertake the task in a hurry. Do some research first. Check with local authorities.
Consult an accountant or attorney (or both) to prevent costly problems. Several factors should influence your design:
• Laws and regulations. You may need accounts to record taxes collected or paid. If you have employees, you need accounts for
wages, contributions to retirement funds, etc.
• Business type. Retail shops need different accounts than repair businesses, consultants different than manufacturers, and schools
different than social clubs.
• Size. Larger companies with several divisions or locations need more complex charts of accounts than smaller ones.
• Legal organization. Partnerships need capital accounts; sole traders or proprietors may not. Trusts and corporations have different
needs, too.
• Government filings. All charts of accounts should be set up to easily support filings you will make, especially tax returns. It is much
easier to post transactions to accounts that match forms than to laboriously back them out of a jumble when a filing deadline
approaches.
• Management needs. Accounts should support management decisions during the current accounting period. They should also
support comparison with previous periods. But it is pointless to collect information you cannot use.
• Permanence. Remember that once an account has been used, Manager will not let you delete it. So good practice includes
accounts useful over the long term. Creating accounts for one-time events is usually poor practice. For example, accounts collecting
transactions on a category of customers are better choices than accounts set up for individual customers who might never buy
again. Accounts to handle expenses for events are fine, but accounts for the 2017 charity fundraiser might not be a good idea. They
will clutter your financial statements in 2022.
Notes
Smart planning will involve adding a test business in Manager. You can experiment with typical transactions you expect to
use in your business to evaluate how your chart of accounts supports your needs. Investigate whether available reports will
provide information you want. You will be much happier deleting a few sample transactions or starting over with a new test
business than rebuilding your real accounting records if things don’t work out.
Detailed instructions for building a chart of accounts are found in another Guide.
The default chart of accounts illustrates some key concepts. The Balance Sheet side includes three groups or categories in boldface type:
Assets, Liabilities, and Equity. Only the Equity group has an Edit button. It can be renamed (to accommodate needs of non-profit
organizations). The other two cannot be edited. (If you read the Guide linked to above, you know that all balance sheet accounts must fall
into one of these three groups, whatever they are called.)
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It also includes one account, Retained earnings within the Equity group. Retained earnings is an example of an automatically generated
account. Every business needs this account. So while you can Edit it by renaming it or assigning it to another group, you cannot delete it.
But more about that later.
The default chart of accounts also includes some common (but by no means universal) accounts for the Profit and Loss Statement in Income
and Expense groups. You can use these groups and accounts, rename them for other purposes, or delete them to fit your planned chart of
accounts structure (to save space, not all accounts are shown below):
Note
This chart of accounts will be your starting point. You will transform it into one tailored for your legal structure, market
sector, and reporting needs. As you work on it, it will be helpful to frequently check your Summary page to see what
affect your actions are having on the display. You may even want to consider your first draft a test business, into which you
can make a few sample entries to see their effects. Those few transactions can be deleted and the test business’ data file
copied, renamed, and opened as your real business.
A group can be subsidiary to another group. So on the Balance Sheet side of Brilliant Industries’ chart of accounts, we will create two groups,
Current assets and Plant, equipment, and property, and assign them to the Assets group. We click the New Group button, enter the
group name and choose Assets in the dropdown box:
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We’ll do something similar under Liabilities. Assets, Liabilities, and Equity always display in that order (by long tradition). But other groups
will display alphabetically unless we re-order them later. So far, the result looks like this:
Since liabilities are usually shown in order of their demand on cash, we want Short-term liabilities to appear first in the chart. So we click on
the double-ended arrow to the right of it:
A list of groups eligible for re-ordering appears. A multi-directional arrow cursor allows groups to be dragged into new positions. We drag
Short-term liabilities to the top of the list and click Update :
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Moving to the Profit and Loss Statement side of the chart of accounts, we take several actions:
• Rename the Income group to Operating income after clicking on Edit beside it.
• Add a Cost of goods sold group. Since this will be a top-level group, we do not assign it to another group. We check the box for
Expenses . This will display the group and its subsidiary accounts under the heading Less: Cost of goods sold, using positive
numbers. Leaving it unchecked will display negative numbers. There is no affect on accounting behavior, only on how displays are
presented.
• Reassign the Interest received account to the new Non-operating income group
• Add a Non-operating expenses group, leaving it unassigned, but checking the Expenses box.
We click on the double-ended arrow for one of the groups to re-order the groups, just as we did for Balance Sheet groups:
After clicking Update , our progress so far is shown below (again, some accounts have been eliminated to save space):
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Note
A bottom-line, net profit (loss) total can be added, named as desired. If one is not specifically created, Manager will
automatically add one labeled Net profit when a profit exists. If the business has a loss for the reporting period, the default
total will change to Net loss. This automatic total will not show in the Settings tab, but will appear on the Summary
page and in financial statements.
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Note
If an automatic account is not activated with the tab, make an entry in it. Such an entry can be a placeholder or setup entry.
This will allow you to position the automatic account correctly in order, add account codes, and even rename the account.
The placeholder entry can then be deleted. When a real entry is entered later, the account will reappear in the correct order,
with the assigned account code, and under the new name.
We enable the Bank Accounts , Customers , Fixed Assets , and Inventory Items tabs and make at least one entry in each tab.
After reassigning accounts to appropriate subsidiary groups and arranging in order of liquidity, the Balance Sheet side of the chart of
accounts looks like this:
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And the Profit and Loss Statement side looks like this:
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Similar additions can be made on the Profit and Loss Statement side.
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• Code is optional. See another Guide for more information on account codes.
• Choose the Group under which the account will be reported. (Groups must be defined before accounts can be assigned to them.)
• Select a Tax Code if all or most transactions posted to this account will have the same tax code applied. For Balance Sheet accounts,
this field is often left blank. The field will not appear unless at least one tax code has already been defined under Settings .
Define the account. Fields available for Profit and Loss Statement accounts are the same as for Balance Sheet accounts, and they have the
same purposes. a Tax Code is more commonly selected for Profit and Loss Statement accounts than for Balance Sheet accounts, because
income and expense transactions posted to them are more frequently subject to the same taxes. The Tax Code field is, nevertheless,
optional:
• The account was not automatically activated when you enabled a tab.
• The account is not Retained earnings, a mandatory account present by default in all businesses.
Under Settings , click on Chart of Accounts , then Edit next to the account you want to delete:
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Click Delete . If the first condition listed above has not been satisfied, a notice appears and transactions posted to the account are listed:
If no Delete button is available, either the second or third condition has not been satisfied. In other words, Manager will not let you
delete an account needed for proper functioning of the tabs you have enabled or necessary for proper maintenance of your account
records.
CAUTION
If Accounts receivable is created manually in the chart of accounts, many built-in functions will be lost. Manager will not be
able to associate sales invoices with specific customers. And it will not be able to apply customer advances, deposits, or
overpayments to sales invoices.
Accounts receivable will automatically appear in the Balance Sheet and chart of accounts when the first customer has been created:
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CAUTION
If Accounts payable is created manually in the chart of accounts, many built-in functions will be lost. Manager will not be
able to associate purchase invoices with specific suppliers. And it will not be able to apply advances, deposits, or
overpayments paid to suppliers to purchase invoices.
Accounts payable will automatically appear in the Balance Sheet and chart of accounts when the first supplier has been created:
Enter the desired alphanumeric content in the Code field and click Update :
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Notes
If account codes have not been assigned yet, the checkbox will not be visible.
This selection applies only to the Summary . Various reports also include the option to show account codes on their
definition screens.
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Regardless of whether account codes are displayed, they will appear in the Account field dropdown box when entering line items on
transactions, including cash receipts, sales invoices, journal entries, and so forth:
A custom control account is one you create yourself to segregate and give visibility to selected subsidiary ledgers that would otherwise be
assigned to a built-in control account. A custom control account may contain only one type of subsidiary ledger, including:
• Bank accounts
• Cash accounts
• Customers
• Suppliers
• Inventory items
• Employees
• Fixed assets
• Intangible assets
• Capital accounts
• Special accounts
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Examples
Jurgen operates a machine shop with some very expensive, digitally controlled boring and milling machines. He wants see
the value of these important assets on his balance sheet separately from other fixed assets like workbenches and office
furniture. So he creates a custom control account called Digital machinery and assigns those fixed assets to it.
Northwind Traders has a variety of bank accounts it uses for different purposes. Rather than leave them all lumped together
under the built-in control account, Cash at bank, it decides to break them apart for better management visibility. So the
company renames that account as Cash deposits. It creates two new custom control accounts, Payroll accounts and Term
deposits. Northwind leaves its various demand deposit accounts in the original, renamed control account. It assigns the
accounts at local branch banks used to pay employees in various cities to Payroll accounts. And it assigns its longer term
certificates of deposit to Term deposits. Now the balance sheet clearly distinguishes between highly liquid funds, money
available for the weekly payroll, and cash reserves that are not readily accessible.
You will see lists of existing control accounts (including automatic ones) for the categories mentioned above for which tabs are enabled. You
will also see the number of subsidiary ledgers for each category:
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Click New Control Account for the category where you want to define the custom control account. Regardless of category, the fields to
complete are identical:
• Select which Group the custom control account will be in: Assets, Liabilities, or Equity, or any subgroup of one of these.
Click Create to add the custom control account to your chart of accounts.
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Example
Brilliant Industries has defined a number of fixed assets. By default, the purchase costs of all fixed assets are shown on the
balance sheet under the Fixed assets account (a built-in control account). The company wants to split fixed assets into
categories and have each category show separately as:
• Motor vehicles
• Furniture
To do this, the company creates a custom control account for fixed assets. It assigns this custom control account to a
subgroup under Assets named Plant, equipment, and property:
It creates another custom control account named Motor Vehicles and a third for Furniture. It assigns both to the same
subgroup, Plant, equipment, and property.
Brilliant Industries also wants separate accumulated depreciation contra accounts for each fixed asset category. So it adds
custom control accounts in the accumulated depreciation category. It assigns the contra accounts to the same subgroup as
the corresponding asset accounts:
The Assets portion of the balance sheet now looks like this:
Brilliant edits individual fixed assets under the Fixed Assets tab to select the specific control accounts to which they
should belong. For example:
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After a control account has been selected for each fixed asset, the Fixed Assets tab shows which fixed asset belongs to
which control account:
Once you have created a custom control account made up of a specific subaccount type, you will be able to select control accounts for all
subaccounts of the same type when creating new ones or by editing existing ones.
Note
If no assets are assigned to the built-in accounts, Fixed assets, at cost and Fixed assets, accumulated depreciation, those
accounts will not appear in the chart of accounts. They will remain as default assignments for newly created assets, though.
So no asset will ever be unassigned.
To set up capital accounts, enable the Capital Accounts tab, following instructions in another Guide. The tab will appear in the left
navigation pane. The number in the window indicates the number of capital accounts established:
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In the Capital Accounts tab, click New Capital Account to define the first member or owner of a capital account:
If making a transition to Manager from a previous accounting system, the member may already have a capital account starting balance to
transfer. In that case, after creating the member as described above, follow procedures in another Guide to enter the starting balance.
Note
Terminology used in Manager to describe capital account balances is from the perspective of the business, not the capital
account holder. For positive capital account balances, which are credit balances to the business, Manager uses the
descriptive phrase, Amount to pay. This indicates the business owes capital to the member. For negative, or debit, balances,
Manager uses the phrase, Paid in advance, indicating the business had paid the member more than was actually distributed
to the member.
Sole proprietorships require only a single capital account. Partnerships require a capital account for each partner. Trusts require one for each
beneficiary. Funds require a capital account for each member. Repeat the process described until all capital accounts have been established:
If capital account members leave the company, they cannot simply be deleted, because there are transactions that reference them. Instead,
make them inactive by editing them and checking the Inactive box:
Inactive members appear in gray at the end of the Capital Accounts list. They can be reactivated after clicking the Edit button.
By default, all capital accounts are combined as Capital accounts in the Equity section of the Balance Sheet:
Sometimes, it is necessary to rename the account. For example, if the business operates as a sole proprietorship, the account can be
renamed as Owner’s equity. Click Edit under Chart of Accounts in the Settings tab:
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Note
In some situations, sole proprietors need not add the complexity of capital accounts to their business records. See this
Guide for a discussion of a simpler approach to equity accounting.
Sole proprietors and partnerships are unincorporated, meaning they have no shareholders. Their capital accounts can be set up as described
in this Guide. But companies or corporations (terminology varies in different jurisdictions), trusts, and funds are separate legal entities.
Depending on the legal structure of a business, it may be nessessary to change the classification of Capital accounts from Equity to Assets if
they are debit balances or Liabilities if they are credit balances. When in doubt, consult with a local accountant to be sure.
• Drawings
• Funds contributed
• Share of profit
Subaccounts are useful for segregating movements to and from capital accounts. Default subaccounts are sufficient for most businesses, but
you can add, remove or rename subaccounts under the Settings tab by selecting Capital subaccounts :
Drawings
Drawings tracks money a partner, beneficiary, or member withdraws from the business. When you transfer funds from a cash account to a
member, or if the business pays a private expense on behalf of a member, the transaction should be posted to the Drawings subaccount:
Funds contributed
Funds contributed tracks money a member has contributed to the business. When a member deposits personal funds into a business cash
account, the transaction should be posted to the Funds contributed subaccount.
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Share of profit
Share of profit is used to allocate net profit from Retained earnings to Capital accounts. Only certain types of legal entities are required to
distribute profit to owners. Such distributions are often done by an accountant at the end of a financial period using journal entries:
They prevent earnings from accumulating endlessly in Retained earnings. Such distributions show that funds are no longer available for
general business operations, but have been earmarked for the capital account owner.
Every new business created in Manager automatically includes a Retained earnings account, essentially the net of all inflows and outflows,
adjusted for various transfers, dividends, etc., since creation of the business. In many cases, the Capital Accounts tab is also enabled,
where members (owners of capital accounts) are designated, investment contributions and draws are recorded, and so forth. Frequently,
journal entries transfer amounts between Retained earnings and various subaccounts of Capital accounts. And both Retained earnings and
Capital accounts are included under the Equity heading on the Balance Sheet. But for the sole proprietor, things can often be simpler.
As sole owner of the business, a proprietor owns the Retained earnings account. So no real reason for separate capital accounting exists.
Retained earnings can be renamed as Owner’s equity, eliminating the need for other equity accounts. Benefits include fewer tabs enabled in
Manager and reduction of equity transfers with journal entries. Unnecessary reports disappear from the Reports tab. Any transactions
that might have involved Capital accounts can instead be allocated directly to Owner’s equity, bypassing needless steps.
1. You must be the sole owner of the business, with no partners or shareholders involved.
2. You must personally be entitled to all profits and liable for all debts of the business. (Loans are permissible, but outside investors
with capital interests are not.)
Rename the account as Owner’s equity. Add an account code if desired. Click Update when finished.
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Your chart of accounts will now show the new name, with the original, default name in gray strike-through text, revealing the automatic
origin of the account:
Your Balance Sheet will show a very straightforward equity account structure:
In essence, Owner’s equity shows how much value you have invested in your business at a given moment, taking into account all forms of
assets and liabilities, including unbilled time and expenses, cash and equivalents, fixed assets, loans, accounts payable and receivable, and so
forth.
Note
One characteristic of this simple equity structure is absence of a drawing account revealing how much you have drawn from
the business since the previous accounting period closed. (Drawing accounts are normally zeroed out at the end of each
period, requiring more transactions.) A drawing account is unnecessary because the information is more readily available in
Manager in the Statement of Changes in Equity report. Follow three simple steps:
3. Create a Statement of Changes in Equity report in the Reports tab covering the full account period.
The sum of your draws to date during the accounting period will appear as a single total in the report. Current information
will always be just a few clicks away.
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• Consultants
This Guide outlines basic steps for setting up business as a self-employed services provider. Rather than furnishing detailed instructions
at every phase, it links to other Manager Guides. Suggestions are offered for accommodating additional needs and for further simplification.
For purposes of illustration, this Guide will follow creation of a business named Sample Consulting. The first step is to enter the name of the
business:
Once the business has been created, a Summary page will appear showing four, default functional tabs and several default accounts:
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Click on the Settings tab and enter business details. If you have one, add a business logo.
• Bank Accounts (if you will make any transactions through a financial institution of any type)
• Cash Accounts (if you will deal with any physical coins or bills)
• Inter Account Transfers (only if you enable multiple bank or cash accounts and believe you will sometimes need to transfer
money between them)
• Expense Claims
• Customers
• Sales Quotes
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• Sales Invoices
• Billable Time
• Billable Expenses
• Fixed Assets
If all your work will come without needing to give customers quotes, proposals, or bids, do not enable Sales Quotes . If you will, for some
reason, be buying from suppliers on credit, add Purchase Invoices to the list. If you are not sure, leave both those tabs off the list. They
can easily be added later. Likewise, if you are not sure whether you will own depreciable fixed assets, do not enable that tab unless you need
it later.
If you will have a business credit card, set it up now. (This example does not include one.)
• In the Customers tab, create a customer called Setup Customer. Leave all fields blank except Name.
• In the Billable Time tab, create a billable time entry. Choose Setup Customer, but leave all other fields in their default states.
• In the Fixed Assets tab, create a fixed asset. Fill in Item name as Setup Fixed Asset. Leave all other fields blank.
• Under Settings Tax Codes , activate or create a tax code that will apply to your services.
Note
If your business will own no property qualifying as fixed assets or your services are not taxable in your jurisdiction, omit one
or both of the last two setup entries above.
Now click on Settings , then Chart of Accounts , where all active accounts will be listed:
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Click Edit next to Retained earnings. Change the name of this account to Owner’s equity. This built-in account will function in the same
way, but the default title was more appropriate to corporate ownership structures.
Click Edit buttons next to income accounts to rename or delete them. Automatically created accounts cannot be deleted while their tabs
are enabled. But they can be renamed. Their default names show in grey strike-through text when editing. Add any additional income
accounts you think you will need.
Example
Because Sample Consulting expects to perform some work on an hourly basis and some on a fixed price basis, we will
rename Billable time - invoiced to Service sales - billable time and Sales to Service sales - fixed rate. Since no interest-bearing
accounts or investments are anticipated, we will change the Interest received account to Other income, providing a place to
post miscellaneous income items.
Lastly, Edit expense accounts to rename or delete them. Good practice is to match required expense reporting categories for tax filing in
your jurisdiction. Add accounts if necessary.
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Note
Default expense accounts are only placeholders. When their names are edited, original names are no longer visible in the
Settings tab. This behavior is different from other account categories.
Example
Donations are not allowable business expenses in Sample Consulting’s jurisdiction, so we will delete the Donations account.
Computer equipment is not treated differently from other tools and equipment, so we will rename Computer equipment as
Equipment. The owner of Sample Consulting plans to work from home, so we will change Rent to Other expenses.
With all changes mentioned, Sample Consulting’s chart of accounts is complete. It’s Summary page now looks like this:
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• Delete the billable time entry by clicking Edit in the Billable Time tab.
• Delete Setup Customer. (You will not be able to delete this customer unless you have first deleted the billable time entry above.)
• Delete Setup Fixed Asset by clicking Edit in the Fixed Assets tab.
Some accounts will temporarily disappear from your Summary and chart of accounts. They will return when real entries are made.
Note
As long as your setup tax code was one you will actually use, leave it in place.
Begin operations
Manager is now configured to handle your business. Among other things, you will be able to:
The next step is to enter any expected customers. Others will hopefully follow. Enter other transactions as they occur.
Example 1
Brilliant Industries wants to monitor profitability of its incandescent and LED lamp manufacturing divisions. It sets up two
tracking codes: INC and LED. All income and expenses are designated with one code or the other. At the end of each
financial period, Profit and Loss Statements are generated separately for the two divisions. Combined Profit and Loss
Statements can also be created comparing performance of the two divisions.
Example 2
Atlas Construction assigns tracking codes to each building project by year: 2016-1, 2016-2, 2017-1, etc. Transactions related
to a single project are tagged with appropriate tracking codes. Those pertaining to the business in general are left uncoded.
Profit and Loss Statements can be generated for individual projects or the entire company. If necessary, Atlas could
designate separate lists of expenses and accounts on which tracking codes would be used for distinct project types.
Concrete projects might have tracking codes applied on subcontractor labor, while internally performed electrical projects
might have tracking codes applied on wages.
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For purposes of illustration, asume you want to track three divisions: Alfa, Beta and Gamma. Enter the name of the first code and click
Create :
The same applies to expenses. If an expense should be spread across multiple divisions, you can split the expense to allocate the appropriate
amount to each division.
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Define the new report by entering a date range and selecting the desired code in the Tracking Code field. (Leave the selection as Any to see
all transactions.) You can add comparative columns for other tracking codes:
View the report so see income, expenses and profitability of selected tracking codes side by side for the specified period:
Caution
Tracking code Profit and Loss Statements only show amounts with tracking codes applied to them. You can check the
Tracking Exception Report under the Reports tab to view transactions that do not have tracking codes. This can help
you determine whether tracking codes were accidentally forgotten.
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If a report for the desired time period has already been created, click View . If a report has not yet been created, click New Report and
define the desired report:
Click Create to save the report. The resulting report lists all income and expense accounts, by group, that have transactions without
assigned tracking codes:
Edit transactions to add tracking codes. Be sure to click Update to save changes.
Note
Of course, Manager cannot determine whether assigned tracking codes are correct. It only knows when they are missing.
Confirmation that assigned tracking codes are correct is a management activity.
Manager includes several in-built control accounts that are activated as various functional tabs are enabled.
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Examples
Accounts receivable is an in-built control account, where customer accounts are the subsidiary ledgers or subaccounts, and
the sum of all customers’ balances equals the balance of the Accounts receivable account on the Balance Sheet.
Inventory on hand is another in-built control account. Its subsidiary ledgers or subaccounts are the various inventory items.
A Balance Sheet would be too long if the value of every item in inventory appeared individually.
Some businesses may require special accounts because the in-built control accounts with their subsidiary ledgers are not suitable.
Examples
A real estate manager might require custom subsidiary ledgers to manage trust accounts for various properties in a
portfolio. Rather than every property’s trust account being displayed separately in financial reports, they can be
summarized in a control account named Trust funds payable. Yet funds associated with different properties are separately
identified in their own special accounts.
A designer and manufacturer of robotic fabrication equipment receives large advance deposits with sales orders. Because
delivery of its customized products typically takes 18 to 24 months, the company prefers more visibility into customers’
deposits than is furnished by Manager’s normal handling under Accounts receivable. So it creates a custom control account,
Customer deposits in the Liabilities group and uses special accounts as subsidiary ledgers for various customers’ deposits.
No matter how many customer deposits are received and eventually consumed, the Balance Sheet structure remains fixed
from year to year, with only the one control account showing.
Note
Special accounts cannot be used for income or expense accounts on the Profit and Loss Statement side of the chart of
accounts. They can only be used for Balance Sheet accounts in the Assets, Liabilities, or Equity groups.
To create a custom subsidiary ledger, first enable the Special Accounts tab. Below the left navigation pane, click Customize , check the
box for Special Accounts , and click Update :
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Example
The real estate property manager creates a control account named Trust funds payable:
You can have multiple control accounts made up of special accounts. This is useful if you require more than one category of custom
subsidiary ledgers.
As you define each special account, select your newly created control account in the Control account field:
Example
The property manager creates a new special account for each property she manages. These all show under the
Special Accounts tab:
Special accounts can be used for most transactions as if they are regular accounts. When the control account is selected for a line item on a
transaction entry form, another field appears for the particular special account.
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Example
The property manager receives rent from a tenant and records the transaction under the Receipts & Payments tab:
Inactive special accounts appear in gray at the end of the Special Accounts list. They can be reactivated after clicking the Edit
button.
Other applications
Special accounts can be used for many purposes. If you have numerous loan accounts, rather than show them individually on a balance
sheet, you can create all loans as special accounts within their own subsidiary ledgers, summarizing them in a single control account named
Loans. This keeps your Balance Sheet concise enough to be easily analyzed, but lets you track what you owe on every loan.
You could also use custom subsidiary ledgers to track store credits given to customers (e. g., gift cards or customer loyalty program
bonuses). When a customer wants to use store credit, you can easily check the available balance in the Special Accounts tab, then apply
it to a receipt.
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Example
John Smith buys a $500 item, but has a $400 gift card, entered as a special account under a Store credit custom control
account. Even though John forgot to bring the gift card with him, the store can look up his balance and apply it on a sales
receipt:
If John later brings the gift card to the store, trying to use the balance again, no credit will be available.
If there is no unpaid invoice, the receipt or payment amount is posted to Accounts receivable (for a customer) or Accounts payable (for a
supplier) and automatically applied to the next sales or purchase invoice issued for the customer or supplier involved. This automatic credit
allocation is the default process for handling deposits from customers or advance payments to suppliers.
You can avoid automatic credit allocations by creating a special account for the customer or supplier to hold credits until they are
eventually allocated manually. This way, you can be sure receipts and payments are applied only to specific invoices.
Note
The process described in this Guide is totally optional. Advances, deposits, and refunds are handled automatically during
normal operation of Manager. But some users prefer to track them separately from ordinary Accounts receivable or
Accounts payable, either for improved visibility in accounting records or for contractual reasons.
Go back to the Special Accounts tab and click New Special Account :
Name the account to match the customer or supplier. Leave the default Control account as Special Accounts, or select a custom control
account you have already created:
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Click Create .
Example
Northwind Traders has a customer named Morgenstern Gesundkost. Because Northwind expects deposits to be paid with
orders, it establishes a special account for Morgenstern Gesundkost. The initial balance of the account is zero:
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Example
Morgenstern Gesundkost currently has two unpaid invoices:
Morgenstern pays Northwind Traders a deposit of $5,000 on a new order. If Northwind posted money received from them
to their ordinary customer account, $5,000 would be instantly applied to their two outstanding invoices, leaving a credit
balance in Accounts receivable.
After the transaction is created, Morgenstern’s invoices remain unpaid and their balance under the Special Accounts
tab shows a credit of $5,000:
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Example
When Northwind raises a sales invoice for the order to which the deposit applies, it adds a new line item as described
above:
This results in a new invoice for the difference between purchased items and the earlier deposit. The balance under
Special accounts goes to zero:
Notes
By default, Special accounts appears in the Assets group of the Balance Sheet when the first special account is created.
Customer deposits of the type illustrated in the examples above contribute to the account balance as negative amounts.
Deposits paid to suppliers appear as positive amounts. If your Special accounts balance is usually negative, you may want to
move it to the Liabilities group by editing the account under Settings Chart of Accounts .
The examples shown illustrate a deposit by a customer and application to a sales invoice. Procedures for deposits to
suppliers and application to purchase invoices are similar, but the initial payment is a New Payment rather than a
New Receipt transaction.
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Notes
Transactions dated prior to the start date will be ignored by Manager, except those used to establish starting balances.
Note
Starting balances cannot be set for accounts on the profit and loss statement, because balances of such accounts depend
only on transactions during the current financial period.
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Example
Sample Consulting, a sole trader, switches its accounting to Manager at the beginning of calendar year 2018. It sets its start
date accordingly, and its balance sheet accounts are listed. All starting balances are initially zero:
Note
Starting balances are initially listed in Debit or Credit columns according to account types. For more information about
whether an account is a debit or credit account, see this Guide. If a balance later changes to the other category, Manager
will move it to the opposite column.
Once the list appears, there are two methods for entering starting balances, depending on the nature of the account:
• By clicking on the blue starting balance figure for control or special accounts
Manager allows only one method for any account, so you cannot choose incorrectly. A few automatically created contra accounts, such as
Fixed assets - accumulated depreciation, allow neither option. This is because starting balances for these accounts are entered on the same
screen as their corresponding ordinary accounts. (See the second Example below.)
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Example
On its start date, Sample Consulting has a liability in its Tax payable account for VAT collected from customers but not yet
paid to the tax authority. So it enters a starting balance credit:
• Inventory on hand
• Employee clearing account
• Capital accounts
• Special accounts
Depending on the exact nature of the subsidiary ledgers, they may offer either Edit buttons, additional blue links, or both. Steps for
entering starting balances should be intuitive. Always remember to click Update when finished.
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Example
Sample Consulting has one fixed asset, its office computer. So two companion accounts are included on its balance sheet,
Fixed assets and Fixed assets - accumulated depreciation. Fixed assets all have their own subsidiary ledgers, so no Edit
button appears for either account:
When the balance for Fixed assets is clicked, the computer asset is listed:
When the Edit button is clicked, Sample Consulting enters the original purchase cost of the computer from its old
accounting system:
Returning to the Starting Balances list, Sample clicks the balance for Fixed assets, accumulated depreciation, then Edit for
the computer, and enters the accumulated depreciation to date from the old accounting system:
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After Update is clicked, all three modified accounts show their correct starting balances:
Manager uses these pre-start-date transactions only to establish starting balances. It ignores them for reporting during the current financial
period. Such transactions include:
Unpaid invoices
Unpaid sales and purchase invoices are entered after first clicking the blue balance of Accounts receivable or Accounts payable, respectively,
then clicking on the Unpaid invoices balance:
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OR
The invoices are created exactly as usual, but with dates before the start date, as they were entered in the prior accounting system.
Example
On its start date, Sample Consulting has an overdue sales invoice issued to Brilliant Industries last year. It enters the invoice
using the process described. The unpaid invoice shows in the Unpaid invoices starting balance ledger for Brilliant
Industries:
The starting balance for the Accounts receivable control account also reflects the change:
Note
More information about starting balances for customers is here. More information on suppliers is here.
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Pending bank transactions are entered after first clicking the blue balance of Cash at bank (or the relevant control account if bank accounts
have been set up under different reporting accounts), then clicking on the blue balances for Pending deposits or Pending withdrawals:
OR
Again, transactions are entered as usual, with dates from before the start date.
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Manager includes many features for customizing your business’ look to the outside world. It also allows customization of inputs and displays
to streamline your internal workload.
Browse to the graphic file containing your logo and select it. Manager will accept most standard graphic file formats:
**Note
Regardless of your logo’s file size, it should not be larger in any dimension than 1,000 pixels.
**Click Update when your file has been selected. The logo in use will be displayed on the Business Logo screen:
It will appear on all forms in the default theme and wherever included in coding for other in-built or custom themes:
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Change a logo
To change a logo, go to the Settings tab and click Business Logo . Click Delete .
If you want to replace the logo, add the new one as described above.
Custom fields can be added for most functional tabs enabled in the left navigation pane:
• Expense claims
• Sales quotes
• Inventory items
• Inventory transfers
• Inventory write-offs
• Production orders
• Employees
• Payslips
• Fixed assets
• Capital accounts
• Journal entries
• Folders
They can also be added for several categories in the Settings tab:
• Inventory kits
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• Non-inventory items
• Withholding taxes (for tax withheld at source, not payroll withholding, which is set up as a payslip deduction item)
Notes
Custom fields for individual line items can also be created for some transaction forms. Those are explained in another
Guide.
Earlier versions of Manager included many non-essential fields on transaction entry forms. This practice took up unnecessary screen space
and added needless complexity to the program. Upon update to the current version, any non-essential fields with content are converted
automatically to custom fields with the same labels. So no data is lost. Now, entry screens can contain only information you desire or the
program requires. And you have the option to purge unnecessary data from old records.
Custom fields are unique to the tab, form, account, or item for which you create them. Fields created for one form are not automatically
available on other forms. This separation helps you customize forms without unnecessarily cluttering others. On the other hand, fields
created for accounts and items may be available on multiple forms or displays where those accounts or items are used. Regardless of where
they are created, though, custom fields are not available in situations where they would be pointless.
Just as custom fields do not automatically appear on other forms, contents entered in a field for one transaction do not automatically appear
in a field for a related transaction, even if the fields have the same label. However, if a transaction containing custom fields is copied to
another type transaction for which custom fields with identical labels have been created, contents of the custom fields will be transferred.
Note
If default content for the destination form has been set under Form Defaults in the Settings tab, content from the
source form will override default content.
Example 1
You create a custom field, Delivery route, for sales invoices to help plan daily delivery schedules. You also create a
custom field labelled Delivery route for delivery notes.
You next create a sales invoice and enter Route #1 into the custom field. The content of this field will not carry forward to a
delivery note created in the ordinary way in the Delivery Notes tab. But if you use the Copy to button to create a
delivery note from the sales invoice, Route #1 will transfer.
Example 2
You add a custom field, Point of contact, for your customers, and set it to show on printed documents. This field will be
visible for every form where customers are included, such as sales quotes, sales orders, sales invoices, delivery notes, etc.
The field is unique to the customer, not any single form. Note, however, that because the field is not associated with any
form, it does not appear on the input screen for a sales-related transaction, only on the completed form when it is viewed.
Example 3
You define a custom field for inventory items, Country of origin. This field can appear in the Inventory Items tab
listing, and shows when editing individual inventory items. But it does not appear when inventory items are entered as line
items on forms. (If you want country of origin to appear on sales invoices, for example, you must include that information in
the Description field or a line-item custom field.)
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The screen will show a New Custom Field button for each form, account, or item you have enabled.
Click the relevant New Custom Field button and complete the definition:
• Label is your assigned name for the custom field. This label will appear where appropriate on forms or displays to designate the
field. So it should be something you are willing for customers and suppliers to see.
• Position controls the order in which custom fields appear. Enter a number, if desired.
• Type lets you choose Single-line text, Paragraph text, Dropdown list, Image, Date, or Number as the nature of the field. Dropdown list
in the Type field brings up a new window, Options for drop-down list, where you can enter fixed choices for the list:
• Size allows a choice of Small, Medium or Large for either text type. Your selection will alter the size of the field on the entry screen
so you know how much text will fit.
• Check Show custom field as a column if you want the field to be included in listings of the relevant tab.
• Check Show custom field on printed documents to display the field on forms.
Click Create to save the custom field. Later, the field can be edited. Be sure to click Update after editing.
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Example 4
Roger, the accounting manager at Northwind Traders, wants to closely monitor depreciation and disposition of fixed assets
to be certain the company follows prescribed accounting standards. He creates four custom fields for the Fixed Assets
tab. All are single-line text and designated to show as columns:
When Roger views the Fixed Assets tab, he sees a more complete picture of the company’s fixed assets:
Example 5
Anastasia sells her glass artwork both to wholesale corporate distributors and directly to residential customers. To remind
herself of discount rates and payment terms, and to simplify marketing campaigns, she establishes a custom field, Customer
type, in the Customers tab. She sets it to show as a column:
Before mailing a new brochure targeting residential customers, she uses the Search function to filter her customer list:
Example 6
ModTek Design Associates wants its customers to know which partner has reviewed and approved billings. It creates a
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custom field for the Sales Invoices tab, labelling it Approved by. The field will show at the bottom of the sales invoice:
Notes
Entry screens always show custom fields, labelled as such. For example:
But fields show on completed forms and as display columns only when they contain an entry and the field has been
defined to show on the relevant form or display.
Field type applies only to the form on which the entry is first made. When forms containing custom fields are copied to
other forms with identical labels, the type of field does not matter. So for example, an entry in a single-line text field will be
copied to a custom field of the dropdown list type, regardless of the options normally available in the dropdown list.
Lastly, default text that you want to appear in a custom field on all new forms should be entered under Form Defaults for
that transaction form.
Inactive custom fields appear in gray at the end of lists. They can be reactivated by clicking Edit and unchecking the box. Always click
Update after editing.
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Rather than incorporate the image itself into Manager’s business data file, the image must be stored at a web-accessible location. HTML
code is entered into the custom field referencing the URL of the stored image.
Example
A custom field for sales invoices is defined, with a Label of Photo. The custom field is defined to show on printed
documents. On a sales invoice, the following HTML code is inserted, referencing a photograph of an apple:
The resulting sales invoice shows the custom field with the photograph:
Notes
Resize large images before storing them.
You may find that images will not display onscreen, but are replaced by a symbol indicating inability of the software to
download them:
This happens when the image host restricts ability to hotlink images to local IP address 127.0.0.1. In these situations, PDFs
of a transaction or emails sent from the program generally display the images correctly. But the only reliable solution is
using a different host to store images.
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• Sales quotes
• Delivery notes
• Goods receipts
Caution
Although line-item custom fields and their contents are replicated when a transaction is cloned, they do not carry over to
line items on other forms, even when the Copy to function is used. This is because transferring information in custom
fields to different circumstances would rarely be desirable. However, line-item custom fields with identical names can be
created for more than one form, providing locations for manual information transfer when appropriate.
To create a line-item custom field, go to the Settings tab, click Custom Fields , then find the list with -Line appended to its name for
the form to which you are adding the field. Click New Custom Field for that list:
• Give the custom field a Label, which will appear as a column heading.
• Enter an optional, numerical Position. All custom fields appear after Description and before Qty.
• Unless the custom field is for internal purposes only, check the box to Show custom field on printed documents.
Note
Multiple lines of text can be entered in line-item custom fields. Simply hit the Return key to add another line.
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Example
Northwind Traders sells caviar and needs to include lot numbers on sales invoices for warranty purposes, but doesn’t want
to include them in descriptions of inventory items. So Northwind creates a line-item custom field under Custom Fields :
Northwind labels this custom field Lot # and checks the box to show it on documents:
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Note
This Guide applies to custom fields for transaction forms. It does not cover line-item custom fields, which appear on
individual lines of the form and cannot be moved using techniques described here.
Let’s adapt the built-in, default theme and call our new theme Plain (custom). When opened for editing, notice how lines 18-21 contain the
following code:
These 4 lines are responsible for showing transaction dates, reference numbers, etc., all of which are elements of an array named fields that
is separately defined for each transaction type. If you want to show content of your custom field below these basic fields, insert the following
two lines after {% endfor %}:
Note
When adding lines, substitute the actual label of your custom field for Some Custom Field.
Create or Update your custom theme. Edit the transaction form to which you want to apply your custom theme by checking the
Custom theme box and selecting your theme:
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When you view your transaction, your custom field will show below the basic fields in the header:
This will cause the program to bypass your custom field when looping through and displaying any others you may have in the
custom_fields array.
Note
When adding the line, substitute the actual label of your custom field for Some Custom Field.
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{% if custom_fields["Customer Reference"] %}
<div style="font-weight: bold; padding-top: 10px">Customer Reference # : {{ custom_fields["Customer Reference"]
}}</div>
{% endif %}
{% if custom_fields["Supplier Reference"] %}
<div style="font-weight: bold; padding-top: 10px">Supplier Reference # : {{ custom_fields["Supplier Reference"]
}}</div>
{% endif %}
The program will test all custom fields incorporated in the form as it loops through them to see if they are Customer Reference or
Supplier Reference. If one is present, its label and field content will be displayed. Otherwise, execution of theme code will continue
without action.
3.3 Themes
3.3.1 Change the look of forms with themes
Themes change the overall design and presentation of forms and documents displayed or printed by Manager. They provide a unified look
for:
• Expense claims
• Sales quotes
• Production orders
• Payslips
• Journal entries
Note
Other than customer and supplier statements, themes do not affect the layout or design of reports.
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By design, Manager minimizes displayed information. So fields not populated do not show. For example, in the illustration above, inventory
codes are not present, so the Code column is not displayed. The Plain theme also incorporates Paid in Full and Overdue “stamps” that display
at the bottom of sales invoices when appropriate.
A large screenshot of the theme, populated with representative data, will appear:
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Note
Theme previews do not represent any specific transaction form. They only display the general look of the theme and
location of your logo and business details. Their content does not match what appears when using the theme.
To activate (or deactivate) the theme, click Edit and check (or uncheck) the box:
Note
All features of Manager are not supported by all built-in themes. Most do not include the Paid in Full and Overdue stamps
for sales invoices without further modification. Be sure any theme you choose meets all your needs before committing to
use it. (The built-in Plain theme supports all features.)
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To write your own theme, select the Settings tab, then Themes and New Theme :
Give your new theme a Name and write code directly in the Theme code box:
Click Create . Your theme will automatically become active and visible in the list of themes:
An easier approach is to modify a built-in theme similar to what you need. While viewing that theme, click on the Copy to button and
select New Theme:
The Liquid code for the built-in theme will appear in a code box:
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Rename the theme, modify the code, and click Create . Your new theme will become active.
Note
Unlike built-in themes, custom themes cannot be deactivated except by deleting them.
Using themes
When at least one built-in or custom theme besides the Plain theme is active, transaction entry forms include a Custom theme checkbox:
To use a theme, check the box. A dropdown list of active themes will appear:
Select a theme, and the form will display with the new look:
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Manager will remember the theme you have chosen for a particular form. However, all new forms will use the themes chosen for their form
types in Form Defaults under Settings unless you change them.
Editing a theme
Note
Built-in themes cannot be edited. Only custom themes can be edited.
To edit a theme, go to Settings Themes and click Edit next to the theme you want to customize:
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Edit the code directly in the window. Click Update below the editing window to save changes. If you are not familiar with the Liquid
language, numerous educational websites can be found on the internet, including at https://shopify.github.io/liquid/.
Viewing a theme
To see the results of your editing, return to the Themes list and click View :
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OR
To set a theme for an Unpaid invoices statement, click Set Date and choose an active theme from the dropdown list:
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Click Update . The theme will apply to all statements of that particular type until changed.
Transactions type
To set a theme for Transactions type statements, click Set Period and choose an active theme from the dropdown list. Click Update .
The theme will apply to all statements of that particular type until changed.
• Bank reconciliations
• Expense claims
• Payslips
• Production orders
• Journal entries
• Folders
Sales invoices, sales quotes, receipts, and payments include the ability to set a custom title directly from the transaction entry screen.
Modification of titles for those forms are common, sometimes even being required by law.
Note
When known regulations require, built-in tax codes automatically change Invoice on sales invoices to Tax Invoice. In some
cases, other form titles are similarly modified. If a requirement in your jurisdiction is not already incorporated into Manager,
you can change titles as described below.
Any other form’s title can be changed by modifying a custom theme. (You cannot modify built-in themes.) If you have not created a custom
theme yet, follow instructions in another Guide, then these steps:
• Under the Settings tab, click Themes . Then click Edit next to the custom theme you want to modify:
• When the custom theme’s computer code appears, locate the following segment of code: {{title}}. (You may have to scroll to the
right to see complete lines.)
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• Replace that code with {{title | replace: "Old Title", "New Title"}}. Preserve all other code in the same line. “Old Title”
must be the name of the form you want to change, exactly as it appears when using the default theme. “New Title” is the text you
wish to substitute. Both are case sensitive, and the quotation marks must be included.
• Click Update .
Any time forms are viewed in the particular custom theme, old title text will be replaced by new title text.
Example
An Expense Claim could be turned into a Travel Expense Report with this substitution:
producing:
CAUTION
Beware of unintended consequences. Any place old title text appears in the title of any form, it will be replaced with new
title text. So you may wish to limit usage of custom themes to specific forms or create additional themes. You might also
use more sophisticated conditional tests in your code. Those are beyond the scope of this Guide.
For example, you can change the built-in theme, Bold Yellow, to use the Agency FB font. While viewing the theme, copy it to a new theme
and set the style attribute in the first line of Liquid code to font-family: Agency FB:
A sales invoice using the new custom theme will look like this:
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Of course, you can have multiple fonts within single PDF document. You just need to set the font-family attribute on relevant tags.
Caution
Substitution of custom fonts may be different for PDFs and printed documents, because printing occurs through your
operating system. Printed documents may require insertion of the font-family attribute at multiple places in the Liquid
code of a theme. Experiment with your custom theme to be sure you have the desired font showing in all the right places.
Because custom fonts must be installed on your machine, they will not be used for emailed transaction forms. If
you want to email a form with a custom font, you must first create a PDF and then email the PDF.
• round — rounds an input number to the nearest integer or, if a number is specified as an argument, to that number of decimal
places
Example 1
Let’s say you have two custom fields defined for sales invoices. Both are number type fields:
• Field 1
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• Field 2
and you want to also show on invoices the sum of Field 1 and Field 2. You do not need to define a third custom field and enter content
into it. Instead, inject the following lines into your custom theme at the appropriate place, following the code that displays the
custom_fields array:
The first line displays a label for your calculated result. The second includes the Liquid arithmetic filter that adds your two custom fields’
values. The result is:
Example 2
You can also code a custom theme to perform calculations involving built-in fields. For instance, if you want to add the value of Field 1 to
the total or balance due on your invoice, inject one of the following lines into your theme:
or:
Note
This Guide is not a comprehensive tutorial on arithmetic filtering, and certainly not on Liquid coding in general. It is meant
only to illustrate the concept of using filters to perform calculations in custom themes. Additional Liquid code will probably
be necessary to obtain desired results. Users are responsible for the performance of their own custom themes and should
consult online syntax guides or hire competent programming support if necessary.
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</tbody>
</table>
Notes
The purpose of this Guide is to furnish basic information about how the page number feature is implemented. We will not
furnish detailed coding instructions on how to control placement and style of page numbering. Users are responsible for
coding and debugging their own custom themes. This Guide offers only a couple examples to get you started.
Page numbers are automatically included on PDFs of multi-page reports, which are not affected by themes. (Customer and
supplier statements are exceptions, because they are displayed according to the theme selected.)
When generating a PDF, Manager looks for the exact HTML comment tag, <!--Page Counter—>, in your theme. By incorporating this tag in
your Liquid theme, you can control where the page numbers will be positioned and how they will be presented (colors, font size, alignment
etc.) The page numbers will appear in the format Page X of Y.
For example, you can customize the default, Plain, theme by adding the following three lines between the </tbody> and </table> tags near
the end of the theme code:
<tfoot>
<tr><td colspan="99" style="text-align: center"><!--Page Counter--></td></tr>
</tfoot>
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Resulting transaction forms using the custom theme will not show page numbers on screen, because lengthy forms are not paginated on
screen. But when you generate a PDF, the page counter will show at the bottom center of each PDF page:
Likewise, if you are using the Glossy Green theme and want to show the page counter in the top right corner in a green color, you could add
the <!--Page Counter--> comment tag to the beginning of the theme:
Since there is no standard for window location, this will require some simple customization of a theme.
Example
Customize the default theme, named Plain, by finding the following code:
<td>
<div><b>{{ recipient.name }}</b> {{ recipient.code }}</div>
<div>{{ recipient.address | newline_to_br }}</div>
<div>{{ recipient.identifier }}</div>
</td>
<td>
with:
This will move recipient details 20px to the right and 10px toward the bottom of the page. Adjust these numbers as
required until the address fits your envelope window exactly.
3.3.10 Include or exclude OVERDUE and PAID IN FULL stamps on sales invoices
Sales invoices displayed using the built-in, Plain, theme display colored “stamps” at the bottom when paid in full or overdue:
Other built-in themes do not include these stamps, regardless of sales invoice status.
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One or both stamps can be included on other built-in themes or excluded from the Plain theme by creating a custom theme and modifying
a few lines of computer code. The only programming skills needed are the ability to copy, paste, and delete. Before starting, however, read
and understand this Guide.
Click View beside the Plain theme, then Copy to and select New Theme:
When the computer code for the theme appears, locate these lines near the bottom:
The first three lines control appearance of the green PAID IN FULL stamp. The last three lines control appearance of the red OVERDUE
stamp.
There is no need to Create the source theme once you have copied the code from it, because the Plain theme already exists in every
version of Manager.
To eliminate either or both stamps from the Plain theme, delete the relevant lines of code. Modify the new theme’s name so you can
distinguish it from the default, Plain, theme and click Create .
The due date also will not appear on the completed sales invoice. But the PAID IN FULL stamp will appear when the invoice amount has
been received.
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Form defaults apply only to the form for which they are defined, but they can be set for forms in every Manager tab except
Billable Expenses (because there is no separate form), including recurring versions (where available):
• Bank accounts
• Cash accounts
• Payments or receipts
• Expense claims
• Sales quotes
• Production orders
• Customers
• Suppliers
• Employees
• Inventory items
• Capital accounts
• Special accounts
Note
Form defaults can only be set for transaction forms and subsidiary ledgers related to functional tabs already enabled
through the Customize link.
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Examples
Standard terms and conditions can be set up in a custom field for sales invoices. These will appear on every new sales
invoice.
If only one bank or cash account exists, or is most regularly used, it can be pre-selected as a form default for receipt and
payment forms.
If a sole proprietorship only enters expense claims by its owner, the owner can be selected as the expense claim payer.
The Title of sales quotes can be changed for all future quotes by entering a new one as a form default.
Click Edit beside the form or ledger category for which you want to set or modify default content or custom theme:
A copy of that form or ledger entry appears. Enter content in any field except Date (on any form) or Type (on the receipt or payment form).
Notes
Regardless of any entry in the Date field, the program defaults to the current date when the default form is saved. And the
current date is prepopulated on every new transaction created except clones.
The Type field is also ignored for receipts and payments. That field will conform with the type of transaction selected when
clicking New Receipt or New Payment .
Check any option box. Add lines, if available and necessary. (Visible fields and options depend upon tabs you have enabled and settings you
have entered elsewhere in the program, just as they would when entering a normal accounting record.)
You can set a default Custom theme for a transaction form if you have activated at least one theme besides the automatically activated Plain
theme. Check the box and choose an active theme in the dropdown list:
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• Whenever a new transaction form is created, the default content and custom theme appear. Both can be edited or augmented,
either before clicking Create or afterwards by editing. If no default custom theme is designated, new transaction forms appear in
the built-in, Plain, theme.
• When a form is cloned, content of the source form is carried forward, overriding default content. An exception to this rule exists for
reference numbers. Clones follow the default setting for reference numbers, whatever it is, in order to support mandatory automatic
sequencing.
• When a form is copied to another type, content of the source form is also carried forward, overriding default content of the
destination form type.
• Whether generated by cloning or copying, a new destination form appears in the custom theme (if any) set as default for that form
type. If no custom theme has been set as default, all forms appear in the Plain theme.
• When a new ledger entry is created, default content will appear. Content can be edited or augmented, either before clicking
Create or afterwards by editing the ledger entry.
Note
Form defaults affect only new transactions and ledger entries. They do not modify content or theme selection retroactively.
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Many features of Manager appear consistently throughout the program or draw upon several functional modules. These make the program
fairly intuitive to use.
Enter the name of your test business and click Add Business :
A Summary page for your test business will appear with a minimal set of tabs enabled and a few sample income and expense accounts:
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The test business will also appear on the home page with any others you have created:
Note
An alternative to setting up your own test business is to import one already set up. Follow the procedure outlined in
another Guide.
• Explore new tabs to decide whether to enable them for a real business
• Learn how automatically created accounts (such as Billable time - movement or Fixed assets - loss on disposal) function
• Investigate complex charts of accounts, incorporating groups, special accounts, custom control accounts, etc.
When using your test business, here are some helpful tips:
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• Consider deleting all transactions in a tab or entries in a field to see how Manager handles the absence of data
Of course, there is no danger of making mistakes as there would be if you experimented with a real business. In the worst case, you can get
rid of the test business by deleting its file. And you can always create another test business.
• Issue invoices to customers and track how much customers owe to Northwind
• Monitor stock levels and measure profit margins on all inventory items
Import Northwind
To download the fictitious company, Northwind Traders, and add it to your application data folder, click on the link below:
Launch the Manager application. On the Businesses page, click Add Business and select Import Business:
Navigate to the downloaded file, Northwind.manager, and click Import Business . You will be taken to the Summary screen for
Northwind:
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Points of interest
• You can click on each tab to see how invoices and other transactions have been created.
• Have a look at financial statements such as Profit and Loss Statement or Balance Sheet under the Reports tab.
• Have a look at customer or supplier reports such as Aged Receivables, Aged Payables, Customer Statements or Supplier Statements,
also under the Reports tab.
• Enter new transactions or edit existing transactions to see how those actions affect individual balances on reports.
Note
You can always delete a sample business and re-import a new one or have multiple sample businesses side by side.
Begin typing in the box. Titles and contents of all Guides are searched progressively as text is added. Results appear below the search box:
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Matching text is underlined in text excerpts. Link to a Guide by clicking anywhere within the excerpt.
• All hyperlinks in the online Guides are functional in the PDF file.
To download the book, go to the Guides page on the Manager web site. In the introductory paragraph, click on PDF book . The PDF file
will open in a browser tab according to your selected preferences. From there, it can be saved to any drive as a standalone file.
Note
The PDF file is about 17 MB. The resulting book is almost 475 A4-sized pages. Users should consider printing only selected
portions, especially when taking into account the daily update cycle.
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• Improve accounting accuracy by always posting similar income or expense items to the same accounts
• Store and apply consistent prices to commonly sold or purchased goods or services
Note
Non-inventory items can be used for sale and purchase of physical goods, but they do not support counting quantities on
hand, monitoring stock movement, or calculating profitability. For those functions, use inventory items.
With at least one such tab enabled, go to the Settings tab, click on Non-inventory Items , then New Non-inventory Item :
• Item code can be anything that helps find, sort, or categorize the item. If used, Item code will appear on forms.
• Item name will appear when searching for a non-inventory item to complete a line item. If no further description of the item is
entered, Item name will appear in the Description field on completed forms, such as sales invoices.
• Unit Name is optional, but can be used to specify units by which the item will be sold or purchased. Only one unit name is allowed;
if goods or services are purchased and sold in different units, either apply conversions before making entries or create separate
non-inventory items.
• The Description field is for more comprehensive information. Its contents will appear on finished forms in place of Item name.
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Anything a customer or supplier should see can be placed into this field.
• Two checkboxes are used to indicate whether the non-inventory item can be purchased or sold (or both). When these are checked,
fields appear for additional information. The illustration above is for a service that can be sold, but not purchased. The Sale price,
Account to which a sale will be posted, and applicable Tax Code are entered. A Tracking Code can also be selected. Notice that
only the Sale price is free text. The other three fields must be selected from previously defined accounts, tax codes, or tracking
codes. This information will be prefilled whenever this non-inventory item is added to a form.
The second illustration below shows a non-inventory item created for advertising purchased frequently in local publications:
• Expense claims
• Sales quotes
When completing any of these forms, an Item field will appear at the left end of line items whenever any inventory or non-inventory items
have been defined that are applicable. For example, if no inventory items are defined, but non-inventory items for sales of services have
been, all sales-related forms will include the Item field. But unless non-inventory items for purchases have been defined, forms like purchase
invoices will not include the Item field.
To use a non-inventory item, click on the dropdown box of the Item field. Or, begin typing the Item code or Item name in the field to take
advantage of the autosearch capability. When a non-inventory item has been selected, all its parameters will automatically be filled for the
line. Anything can be edited except the account to which the item is posted:
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Note
Although only applicable type (sale or purchase) non-inventory items are normally available when creating a form manually,
items already included on a form will be copied to new forms when the Copy to function is used.
Settings Non-inventory Items and click Edit for the item to be changed:
Edit the item as desired and click Update . Existing transactions using the non-inventory item will not be modified. Only future forms
will be affected.
If the non-inventory item is no longer needed, it can be deleted as long as it has never been used. But Manager will not allow non-inventory
items to be deleted if they have been used. In that case, check the box, and the non-inventory item will no longer be available.
If an inactive non-inventory item becomes useful again, scroll to the bottom of the non-inventory items list, where you will see the item’s
name in light grey text with strike-through markings:
Click Edit next to the item’s name. Uncheck the box and the item will once again be available. Remember to click Update
when finished editing.
In two cases, it is given a label more in keeping with traditional accounting usage. Following is a list of forms that include the Reference
field. Where a different label is used, this is shown in parentheses:
• Expense claims
• Sales quotes
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• Production orders
• Payslips
• Journal entries
Free text
The default mode allows entry of any alphanumeric content as free text. Possibilities include:
• Customer or supplier reference numbers, such as purchase order or sales invoice numbers
You have complete control. And, using Form Defaults, you can prefill portions of the Reference field on a form-by-form basis.
Automatic numbering
Manager can also assign sequential reference numbers for you. Just check the box within the Reference field:
When the form is created or updated, Manager will find the highest number among existing forms of the same type and add 1 to its
reference number. Automatic reference numbers can also be set under Form Defaults. In that case, the Reference field will show the
checkbox ticked and Automatic. Manager will assign the number when you click Create . Afterwards, only the assigned number shows if
the transaction is edited. Regardless of how references are originally set, they can be overridden by editing a transaction.
Warnings
When searching for existing reference numbers, Manager ignores alphabetic content and punctuation marks. For example,
if the highest-numbered sales invoice includes a prefix, such as INV2018-45, the next automatically assigned number will
be 201846.
If a form with an existing reference number is edited to assign an automatic sequence number, that form is included in
Manager’s search. So, if sales quote 347 is edited to include an automatic reference number, it will become 348 when
Update is clicked.
Because of these features, mixing free text and automatic reference numbers is seldom advisable. Your free-text entries will
become the criteria for determining automatic number assignments. However, the search process for each transaction
type is separate from all others. So using free-text invoice numbers on purchase invoices and automatic ones on sales
invoices would be perfectly acceptable.
• Sales quotes
• Sales orders
• Sales invoices
• Credit notes
• Purchase quotes
• Purchase orders
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• Purchase invoices
• Debit notes
The option lets you show customers discounts you are extending. It also lets you record how much of a discount, if any, a supplier has
extended to you.
The Discount column is not normally displayed to save space. Where discounts can be applied, a checkbox appears on the entry form:
If the checkbox is activated, you can choose between Percentage or Exact amount options:
Selecting the Percentage option will add a Discount column where you will be able to enter the percentage.
Choosing the Exact amount option allows you to enter a fixed amount.
Notes
Although the checkbox activates the column for the entire form, discounts must be entered line item by line item.
Discounts applied to line items are not posted separately to any account. They reduce the calculated Amount field for each
line item. Therefore, they are effectively the same as changes to unit prices.
• Sales quotes
• Sales orders
• Sales invoices
• Credit notes
• Purchase quotes
• Purchase orders
• Purchase invoices
• Debit notes
The option lets you show customers overall discounts you are extending. It also lets you record separately a discount a supplier has
extended to you. Rather than associating a discount with a specific line item, this feature may be helpful distinguishing the effects of
promotional discounts from costs and sales prices in profit margin calculations for inventory items.
To enter a discount as a separate line item, check the Discount box when creating a transaction. Select the Exact amount option:
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• Select an appropriate Account where the discount will be posted, such as Discounts, Advertising and promotion, or Miscellaneous
expenses.
• Enter the monetary amount of the discount (in the currency of the customer) in the Discount field as a positive number.
• A Tax code may or may not be applicable to the discount, depending on local regulations. In many cases, it will be, because
discounts are reductions to prices. If one is, be sure that all line items on the invoice are taxable at the same rate.
Notes
Manager will not calculate the discount amount for you from other line items or the transaction subtotal. You must
determine the discount manually or enter the calculation directly into the Discount field.
The discount amount will appear on the completed transaction in a Discount column. The amount being subtracted from the total will
appear as a negative number in the Amount column.
Example
Brilliant Industries sells five ceramic lamps (inventory code 101) to a wholesale customer, so no sales tax is due. Under terms
of this customer’s incentive plan, Brilliant extends an overall discount of 295:
Discounts entered this way will be posted to the account selected without affecting other line items.
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Cloning a transaction
Cloning generates an exact duplicate of a transaction. All standard and custom field contents, checkbox options, and custom themes will
appear on a new transaction entry form exactly as they were for the parent transaction, with one exception. That exception is the reference
number field, which will follow the setup for that form type under Form Defaults in the Settings tab. Other aspects of the default
form content will be overridden by cloning.
When the entry screen appears, anything can be edited or added to it. Click Create to save the new transaction. If the default is for
automatic reference numbers, the reference number will be added only at this point. The newly cloned transaction will appear.
Cloning a report
Cloning a report does not generate a duplicate of the report itself. Instead, it generates a duplicate report definition screen. As with
transactions, anything can be edited or added, just as if a new report were being created from scratch. This feature is especially helpful when
creating reports for new reporting periods or designing similar, but not identical, custom reports. Click Create to save the new report
definition. The newly cloned report will appear.
• Saves time
• Prevents mistakes
When a form or report is copied, a new entry screen for the destination form appears, but the new transaction is not immediately created. All
entries can be edited, deleted, or augmented first. The destination form is finalized only when the Create button is clicked.
The table below shows which original forms and reports can be copied to various destination forms:
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Notes
Copy to options appear only for tabs that are enabled. If no tabs are enabled except the one for the original form, the
Copy to button itself will not appear.
No report can be copied to another report, because reports are generated from numerous individual transactions.
When both original and destination forms include custom fields with identical labels, content of original custom fields will
copy to the destination custom fields, overriding any default content for the destination form set under Form Defaults.
However, if an original custom field is empty, default destination content will be used.
When a purchase-related form is copied to a sales-related form or vice versa, the customer or supplier does not carry over.
When inventory or non-inventory items are included on a form, posting accounts and prices change to those appropriate
for the destination form.
Example
A description in a sales invoice line item such as:
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Notes
To keep your data file size small, Manager does not store images directly. Note the reference to the image in the example
above is a URL where the image is stored.
You may find that images will not display onscreen, but are replaced by a symbol indicating inability of the software to
download them:
This happens when the image host restricts ability to hotlink images to local IP address 127.0.0.1. In these situations, PDFs
of a transaction or emails sent from the program generally display the images correctly. But the only reliable solution is
using a different host to store images.
You can also use HTML for greater control over how custom fields are displayed.
Example
You would like to show a box for a signature on a sales invoice. Enter the following code into a custom field named
Signature:
Example
You want to list your terms and conditions in unobtrusive fine print on sales invoices, but do not want the trouble of
creating a custom theme. So you create a custom field for sales invoices, labelled Terms and Conditions. In it, you enter the
following default text:
The following appears near the bottom of all new sales invoices:
When entering a transaction, simply include an arithmetic expression in a number field. Allowed characters include:
• Numerals 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9
• Operators +, -, *, and /
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Do not include an equal sign (=) in the field. While entering the calculation, Manager will display the entered characters. If the expression
is incomplete or unallowable, the field is outlined in red. When a valid expression has been entered, its result is shown in real time and
included in other calculations performed by the program.
Examples
The following entry is invalid because of mismatched parenthesis and brace. Note how the Amount field remains zero:
When the expression is corrected, its results are used in the transaction:
Calculations can be entered into multiple fields in the same line. They can also be quite elaborate. The following
calculations:
produce:
When returning to the entry screen by clicking Edit , the results of the calculation have been stored:
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Note
Calculations cannot be performed in number-type custom fields. If an arithmetic expression is entered in such a field, the
program ignores it.
Notes
Completed transaction forms, such as sales invoices, expense claims, journal entries, or purchase orders, cannot be
exported. These forms are not data files, but presentations of data from files. Customer lists, cash account registers, or fixed
asset ledgers, on the other hand, are data lists and can be exported.
In addition to exporting, reports can be copied to the clipboard. That process is covered by another Guide. Copying to the
clipboard preserves more formatting, but does not allow selective copying of rows.
Example
Northwind Traders wants to create a spreadsheet of expense claim information to support a monthly management review.
The main listing of the Expense Claims tab can be exported. It is sorted according to claim amount by clicking on the
Amount column heading:
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Example
Example
Functions available in the destination application can be applied to the exported data for analysis or presentation.
If your screen width is limited, Manager’s left navigation pane can be minimized to gain valuable space by clicking the symbol at the
bottom left corner of the Manager window, eliminating tab names and record count windows and leaving only icons:
As you scroll over the icons, the tab names will be visible:
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In Manager, most transactions are entered in other functional tabs, thereby automating many decisions about account posting and reducing
errors. So journal entries are relatively few; most record transfers between accounts. In fact, no transaction involving the actual receipt or
payment of funds by a business can be recorded via a journal entry.
The Journal Entries tab is always enabled for every business. To make a journal entry, go to that tab and click New Journal Entry :
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• Reference can be used for any form of identifier. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will add a sequence number
automatically when the journal entry is created. Manager finds the highest Reference among existing journal entries and adds 1.
• Account indicates which account the line will post to. If necessary, subaccount fields appear and must be completed.
Notes
The journal entry form initially opens with fields for two line items, and every journal entry must include lines for at
least two accounts. More can be entered, as long as the sum of all debits equals the sum of all credits. Click
Add line if more lines are needed.
If an account is chosen that involves previously specified inventory locations, an Inventory location field
appears below the Narration field:
• Enter debit amounts under the Debit column and credit amounts under Credit.
• Select Tax codes and Tracking Codes if applicable. Frequently they are not for journal entries. (These fields do not appear unless
tax codes and tracking codes have been defined under Settings .
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Caution
If a journal entry requires a tax code, enter the gross amount, including tax. The amount debited or credited to the
selected account is automatically reduced, proportionate to the tax code. The reduction is debited or credited to Tax
payable (or another account designated in the tax code’s definition). See the example below.
Because debits and credits must balance for all journal entries, Manager calculates the difference between their sums as inputs are made.
The difference shows in red to the right of the totals. A red zero indicates a balanced transaction:
Order of lines can be changed by dragging the arrow symbols to their left. Lines can be deleted by clicking X to their right.
Note
By long tradition in accounting, debits in a transaction are entered first, followed by credits. But the order has no financial
impact.
Click Create to save the entry. If the journal entry includes more than one debit or credit, the finished transaction view will show totals for
both:
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Example
Brilliant Industries purchases a delivery truck and records it as a fixed asset. At the same time, it buys and installs a package
rack in the truck. The rack costs 100.00, inclusive of 10% tax. Brilliant posts the tax-inclusive payment to its Motor vehicle
expenses account, applying the 10% tax code.
Brilliant’s accountant later determines that local tax law requires the cost of the rack, including tax, to be capitalized and
depreciated as part of the cost of the truck, not taken as a current operating expense. So the rack’s full cost, including tax,
must be shifted to the Fixed assets account. And since the tax can no longer be counted as an offsetting input tax, it must
be removed from the Tax payable account.
This oversight is corrected with a single journal entry. The transaction records a 100.00 debit to Fixed assets and the
subaccount for the truck. No tax code is selected. To balance this, a 100.00 credit is posted to Motor vehicle expenses with a
10% tax code applied:
When the journal entry is created, the book value of the truck in Fixed assets goes up by 100.00. But the balance of the
Motor vehicle expenses account only goes down by 90.91. The remaining 9.09 is added to Tax payable to compensate for
the input tax that can no longer be claimed. The accuracy of the Motor vehicle expenses account is preserved because, when
the rack was originally recorded as a tax-inclusive payment, only 90.91 was posted to the expense account. (90.91 x 1.10 =
100.00)
Note
Procedures for making regular journal entries are described in another Guide. Read it first. Recurring journal entries are very
similar.
To set up a recurring journal entry, go to Settings Recurring Journal Entries and click New Recurring Journal Entry :
Complete the entry form as you would a regular journal entry, with the following changes:
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• Next issue date is the date of the next recurring journal entry. You should enter a date that is the same day of the week or month
you want future journal entries to be recorded. This field replaces the Date field of a regular journal entry.
• Interval must include the number of weeks or months between recurring journal entries. Future entries will be on the same day of
the week or month.
Click Create to save the recurring journal entry, which will be visible in the Recurring Journal Entries listing under Settings :
Example
One recurring journal entry has at least one journal entry pending:
The second notification occurs any time you go to the Journal Entries tab. You will see a yellow notice that at least one journal entry is
pending:
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Click Create to enter all pending recurring journal entries. Necessary edits (if any) can be made after the journal entries are created.
If the recurring journal entry ceases to be useful, Delete it in the Settings tab. Since a recurring journal entry is a template, not an
actual transaction, Manager will allow you to delete recurring journal entries that have already been used.
Whatever the reason, a debt should only be written off when there is a reasonable and sincere belief it cannot be recovered.
Note
Standards may exist in your jurisdiction for when bad debts can be written off and what evidence may be required to justify
the write-off. Check with a local accountant or tax authority for accurate information.
Write-offs of bad debts do not include credits for return of merchandise, price adjustments for faulty or damaged items, or warranty refunds.
Those should be handled with credit notes, as described in another Guide.
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Example
Quick Computer Repair previously invoiced Brilliant Industries 350.00 for computer repair services. No taxes were applied:
Brilliant Industries has gone out of business without paying for the work, so Quick Computer Repair must write off the bad
debt. It makes a journal entry, debiting 350.00 to Bad debts and crediting the same amount to Accounts receivable, Brilliant’s
subaccount, and the specific sales invoice:
If the original debt was the result of a sales invoice, the journal entry leaves the income in the income account where it was first posted. This
preserves a record of the economic activity. But that income is offset by the expense in the Bad debt account.
Adjust taxes
If the debt being written off was the result of a taxable transaction, things are more complex. You must first determine whether, under local
tax law:
• Tax is payable to the authority because taxable goods or services were delivered, regardless of whether they were paid for, OR
• Tax is not payable because the goods or services were not paid for.
Tax is payable
In the first case, debit Bad debts for the gross amount of the debt, including taxes. Credit the asset account where the debt is recorded by
the same amount. But do not apply any tax codes.
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Example
The services in the prior example are subject to a 10% goods and services tax. The original sales invoice was entered as
follows:
Since the tax is payable regardless of collection status, the debt is written off with the following journal entry. Note the
absence of tax codes:
After the journal entry is made, Service sales - fixed rate still records the sale at 350.00. Bad debts records the full write-off at
385.00. And 35.00 remains in Tax payable. Thus, Quick Computer Repair incurs a loss on the transaction of 35.00, equal to
the tax it must pay on behalf of its defunct customer.
In the second case, not only must the full debt be transferred to expenses, the tax liability must also be eliminated. So apply the relevant tax
code to the Bad debt debit.
Example
The journal entry includes gross amounts and applies the tax code only to the debit line:
Tax is removed from Tax payable. Both Service sales - fixed rate and Bad debts include 350.00. The final result is no tax owed
to the authority and no net profit on the transaction. But both sales activity and the bad debt are recorded.
Reverse a write-off
Occasionally, a bad debt legitimately thought to be unrecoverable becomes recoverable, such as when:
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• A customer or debtor emerges from bankruptcy and makes good on its former debts
Do not delete the write-off journal entry. Instead, place the formerly bad debt back into your assets with a reverse journal entry. This time,
debit the asset account where the debt was lodged and credit Bad debts.
Example
Brilliant Industries resumes business and notifies Quick Computer Repair it will honor its former obligations. A second
journal entry is made:
(This illustration is for the second tax situation, where tax is not payable unless it is collected. In the opposite case, where
tax is payable regardless, apply no tax code to Bad debts on the credit side of the journal entry.)
The reversal leaves 35.00 in Tax payable, 350.00 in Service sales - fixed rate, and removes the debt amount from Bad debts.
Accounts receivable shows 385.00 due from Brilliant Industries, just as though the unfortunate circumstances had never
occurred.
• Expense claims
• Journal entries
Tax amounts calculated from tax codes are posted to the account selected when defining a specific tax code, regardless of whether they are
debits or credits. This account must be added to your chart of accounts before a tax code is used.
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Note
A tax code account offsets taxes collected or received under its tax code(s) against taxes paid under the same tax code(s),
regardless of transaction type. Whether taxes are collected from customers, paid to suppliers, refunded by or remitted to
tax authorities, they all post to the same account and offset one another. This has important ramifications for how tax codes
are applied on forms. The determining principles are whether and how the particular transaction affects the amount you
owe to a tax authority.
Example 1
Johanna charges and collects VAT from customers on architectural design services. For tax filing, VAT she collects from
customers is offset by VAT she pays to her suppliers. So she must use the same VAT tax code on sales and purchase
invoices. Johanna’s tax liability balance will be the difference between VAT collected and VAT paid. When she remits that
amount to her tax authority, applying the same tax code on the payment, the balance will drop to zero.
Example 2
Roberto collects sales tax from customers at his coffee shop. But local law does not permit him to offset sales tax he pays to
suppliers. (In some jurisdictions, Roberto would not be assessed sales tax by his suppliers on items he will resell.) Roberto
should apply the sales tax code on receipts and sales invoices. But when he purchases taxable supplies, he should include
sales tax paid to his suppliers in the price of the supplies and apply no tax code on purchase invoices or payments. His tax
liability balance will reflect only sales tax collected until he remits that amount to his tax authority, dropping his tax liability
balance to zero. Sales tax he pays to suppliers will be included as an expense in the cost of supplies, reducing net income.
But it will not reduce the amount he must remit to his tax authority.
On some transaction forms, an option is available as to whether amounts are tax-inclusive or tax-exclusive:
When tax-inclusive, Manager calculates effective prices that, when combined with tax at the specified rate, equal the amount entered. In
other words, the tax amount is effectively backed out of the total. When tax-exclusive, Manager applies the tax rate to the entered amount
and adds the resulting tax to obtain a higher total.
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• Give the account a Name. In this example, the name is Tax payable.
• Enter a Code, if desired, to match an overall scheme for the chart of accounts.
• Assign the account to a Group. Normally, tax accounts are placed in the Liabilities group, because more tax will be payable to the
tax authority than is recoverable from the authority. (When a tax is not offsetting, this will always be true.) If, under unusual
circumstances, you expect to always be paid a recoverable tax by the authority instead of remitting tax, classify the tax code under
Assets.
• Leave the Tax Code field with the default, No tax entry.
Click Create . If you will be separating different tax codes into different balance sheet accounts, repeat the process above as many times
as necessary.
Note
Prior to Manager version 19.11.85, a built-in account named Tax payable was activated automatically when tax codes were
used. All tax codes posted to this account by default. Much greater flexibility is achieved by defining your own tax liability
account(s).
For businesses already established when version 19.11.85 was released, the built-in Tax payable account was converted
automatically to a standard account, defined as in the example above. No action is required by the user for the conversion.
• Business localization tax codes, which are predefined for specific countries or regions
Localization settings and features, including predefined tax codes, are available in the program for some locations. These are always
preferable if they meet your needs. Generally, predefined tax codes exist only when localization options include a report transformation that
calls data for specific tax codes. Unless the tax code is predefined, the report transformation cannot find necessary data.
In many cases, more than one tax rate or type is available for a country. To activate localization tax codes for your location(s), follow
instructions in this Guide.
When the tax codes are first imported, they will be assigned to the Suspense account by default. On the Tax Codes page of the
Settings tab, click Edit for all tax codes and assign each one to the desired tax liability account.
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Notes
If a localization tax code is for a 0% rate, that is, if it is required by local law only to show that no tax is being levied, no tax
liability account assignment will be possible.
Once tax codes are activated, they remain available even if localization options for other countries are imported. This way,
tax codes can be added from more than one country.
Example
Sample Manufacturing Company operates in Australia. It follows instructions for installing the GST Calculation Worksheet.
That installation includes several tax codes. Clicking Edit for the GST 10% tax code, Sample sees the tax code is set up as
a single rate, 10% tax that changes the title of every sales invoice on which it is applied to Tax Invoice. Sample selects the
Tax payable account it previously established following instructions above and clicks Update :
If your country or the specific tax type and rate you need are not available through the localization feature, you will need to create one or
more custom tax codes. Manager provides a generic framework for creating simple or complex tax codes to handle almost any tax scenario.
To set up a custom tax code, go to the Settings tab, then Tax Codes , and click New Tax Code :
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• Under Tax rate, choose one of three rate options in the dropdown box. Choose 0% to create a tax code for tax exempt
transactions where it may be necessary to show the tax-exempt status. No tax will be calculated, but forms will show the 0% rate is
being applied. Choose 100% to create a tax code for line items that are all tax. A common application is when a tax authority sends
a bill for tax due on imported goods; the tax is paid to the tax authority instead of the supplier who sold you the goods. Forms will
show the tax amount as a regular line item rather than an addition to the subtotal. The entire amount will post to the designated tax
liability account. For most custom tax codes, select Custom.
If the custom tax code includes only one component, select Single rate in the next dropdown box that appears and enter the
custom rate:
If the custom tax code includes more than one component, select Multiple rates and enter each tax component on its own line. Use
the Add line button to add additional components. If your tax code contains components subject to compounding, enter the
compounded rate into applicable Tax rate fields. On completed transactions, your tax components will be shown separately.
• Select the Account from those tax liability accounts already created. For single-rate codes, only one account can be selected. For
multiple rate codes, different accounts can be selected for each component.
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Example
Roger’s consulting services are subject to sales tax from several jurisdictions. But all are remitted to a central tax authority.
So he creates a single Tax payable liability account and a custom tax code with multiple rates:
Roger applies the custom sales tax on a sales invoice for a day of services. Each tax component is separately listed:
Caution
Taxes from custom tax codes you create are not included in figures computed by tax calculation worksheets in the
Reports tab. Only predefined tax codes associated with the country for which a worksheet was developed are taken
into account. Therefore, if you create any custom tax codes and want to use one of the tax calculation worksheets, you
must manually adjust values from the worksheet for all taxes collected or paid under self-created tax codes when filing
information with your tax authority.
To add a flat rate tax code, follow the same procedure as for any other single-rate custom tax code. (Flat rate schemes cannot be used with
multi-component tax codes.) Name the tax code as you want customers to see it, normally with the standard tax rate’s name. Check the Flat
rate box and enter the lower rate you will pay to the tax authority:
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Customers will see the standard tax rate on sales invoices, and Accounts receivable will show the full amount as being due. But your tax
liability account will show a lesser amount. The difference will be added to the income account where the particular line item on the sales
invoice is posted.
Caution
When operating under a flat rate tax scheme, no tax code should be applied on purchases, because tax paid cannot be
used to offset tax owed. Unit prices of purchased items should include tax paid. In the case of purchased inventory items,
tax paid will be included in average cost, just as if it were a shipping charge or other cost of purchasing the item.
Custom titles
Some jurisdictions require different titles on transaction forms including tax, such as Tax Invoice instead of Invoice. You can enter custom
titles for sales invoices and credit notes by checking appropriate boxes when defining a tax code. The default titles show in grey:
Click Edit beside the tax code you want to change. Modify the tax code definition and click Update .
Caution
Editing a tax code will retroactively change every prior transaction that used that code, as well as future transactions.
Consider carefully before editing a code.
Be sure to click Update . If the tax code comes back into use, simply uncheck the box and click Update .
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The basics
The election of tax-exclusive versus tax-inclusive pricing can be made on:
• Sales quotes
Default choices can be made for each form type in Form Defaults under Settings . Such defaults can edited on a transaction-by-
transaction basis. When a form has a financial impact, such as a receipt, sales invoice, or debit note, amounts contributing to the untaxed
sub-total are posted to appropriate income or expense accounts. Calculated taxes are posted to Tax payable, where they offset one another
according to whether they are being paid or received.
Caution
If the tax scheme in your jurisdiction does not offset taxes paid against taxes collected, do not use tax codes on your
purchases. Include tax in the unit price of every line item, where it will add to the expense of the item.
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Example
You buy an item for 1,000 plus 10% goods and services tax. If the amount of 1,000 is tax-exclusive, 10% tax is added to it,
increasing the total to 1,100. The tax shows as an addition when you create a purchase invoice:
Since the transaction is a purchase, 100.00 is debited to Tax payable, where it offsets amounts you have collected from
customers on behalf of your tax authority. The 1,000.00 sub-total is debited to the designated expense account. The entire
1,100 is credited to Accounts payable.
If this were a sales invoice instead of a purchase invoice, entries would be similar, but results would be reversed. Manager
would credit 100.00 to Tax payable and 1,100 to an income account. It would debit Accounts receivable by 1,100.
Thus, both effective unit prices and calculated taxes are lower for tax-inclusive pricing, assuming identical inputs.
Example
You make the same purchase as in the previous example, using a payment form, but pricing is tax-inclusive. The resulting
Total, calculated tax, and presentation change:
Manager debits only 90.91 to Tax payable, 909.09 to the designated expense account, and credits 1,000.00 to the bank or
cash account where the transaction is entered.
Were this a receipt, Manager would credit 90.91 to Tax payable and 909.09 to the designated income account. It would
debit a bank or cash account by 1,000.00
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Caution
When purchase or sales prices have been defined for inventory or non-inventory items, choosing a different tax
methodology does not modify the unit price entered automatically as the item is selected. So you should always be aware
of how your inventory and non-inventory prices were determined and choose the matching tax methodology.
Basic instructions for creating multi-component custom tax codes are contained in another Guide. Read that Guide first. Those instructions
are adequate for simple situations where all components:
An example
This Guide uses a custom tax code with three components as an example. The overall tax code is named Sales tax 6.25%. Components are
levied by the state, the county, and a special transit district. Percentage tax rates are as shown:
In the simple situation outlined above, all components were assigned to a single tax liability account. (That situation is also illustrated in an
example in the other Guide.) On a sales invoice with a line item to which this tax code applies, the applicable tax code is selected:
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The resulting sales invoice lists the individual tax component amounts rather than the amount for the overall tax code:
Assuming no other taxable transactions have been recorded yet, the Summary shows all taxes payable in a single account:
The various tax reports in the Reports tab also group all components together. For example, the Tax Summary report includes just one
line:
If it is necessary to determine how much of each component was collected, a calculation must be made outside Manager. That amount is the
ratio of a component to the total tax rate multiplied by the tax collected. But this approach is cumbersome. Manager can streamline the
process.
On the Balance Sheet side, we click Edit for the original Tax payable account and change its name to State sales tax payable,
corresponding to the first component of the tax code. For purposes of illustration, we also assign a Code to the tax liability account. We click
Update to save our changes:
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We enter a name for a tax liability account for the second tax component, in this case, County sales tax payable, and assign it the Code of
2502. We repeat the process for the third component, creating a Transit tax payable account, 2503. All accounts are placed in the Liabilities
group (or they could be assigned to a subgroup under that). The Tax Code fields are all left blank.
We then return to Settings Tax Codes and edit the tax codes by assigning each component to its matching tax liability account:
Now, the Summary shows a breakdown of how much tax is owed to each authority:
Required payments to various tax authorities can now be determined from their appropriate accounts, eliminating the need to calculate
prorated shares of the overall tax code.
At the present time, tax reports in Manager cannot break out individual components.
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Component account assignments are made to the same three tax payable accounts, as applicable. Tax codes would also be created for any
other feasible combinations of customer, location, and applicability. Every tax code is, in effect, a subset of the basic, three-component code
originally created. Transactions can be designated for proper tax treatment based on identity or location of the customer, type of goods, etc.
If necessary, tax codes can be selected on a line item basis within any transaction form.
After the new tax codes are in place, a second sales invoice for the same services to a customer outside the county is summarized on a new
line on the Tax Summary, reflecting the lower tax rate:
But the various components are posted to the same tax liability accounts as before (reflecting the two transactions entered so far):
Caution
Never edit components of a tax code that has already been used for any transaction. All previous transactions using that
code would be retroactively modified.
Returning to the example, assume the state sales tax component increases to 3.5% mid-year. We create new tax codes and make obsolete
ones inactive. Subsequently, we issue a third sales invoice for identical services to a customer within the county. The resulting Tax Summary
shows all three rates used during the accounting period:
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Note
Changing component rates do not require adjustment of tax liability accounts or changes to their names. Only a new tax
code must be created, with components assigned to the same liability accounts as before.
Often, this is justified by explaining that foreign entities will be spared the need to register or make tax filings with the authority. But the
method also eliminates the need for a tax authority to obtain filings and remittances from entities outside its control. Thus, reverse charged
VAT improves tax collection.
Basically, reverse charging of VAT transfers responsibility for assessing and collecting VAT from a seller to a purchaser. Instead of being
assessed VAT by and paying VAT to your supplier, you assess VAT on yourself and remit it directly to the tax authority.
However, since typical VAT regimens offset VAT paid on purchases against VAT collected on sales, the result is no tax actually paid on goods
or services subject to reverse charged VAT. Think of this as simultaneously claiming the tax you would have paid the supplier and reporting
the same tax the supplier would have received from you in a normal situation. Since those amounts are the same, no money changes hands
for VAT.
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So why implement such a scheme? And if no money is due to anyone, why not use a regular, zero-percent tax code? As mentioned above,
reverse charged VAT improves tax compliance. But data submitted to the tax authority in connection with reverse charged VAT is also used
to track the volume of trade with other jurisdictions for:
• Revenue sharing
The use of reverse charged VAT tax codes ensures that total sales volumes are still reported and can be categorized according to their
proper tax codes.
When creating the new custom tax code, give it an informative name and select 0% in the dropdown Tax rate field. Check the box for
Reverse charged. When the percentage field appears, enter the rate of the VAT tax to be reverse charged. Click Update .
Example
Sample Manufacturing Company needs to reverse charge 5% VAT on purchases from outside the country. It creates a new
custom tax code, named RCM VAT 5% (for Reverse Charge Method), as follows:
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Example
Sample Manufacturing purchases an annual subscription for accounting software from ACME Services. The subscription
costs 1,000.00, and 5% VAT is due on the purchase. But, because the supplier is foreign, local tax regulations require the tax
to be reverse charged. Sample applies its RCM VAT 5% tax code on the purchase invoice, with the following results:
A Tax Summary report for a time period including the transaction shows both the VAT amount that would have been collected by the
supplier on its sale in an ordinary situation and the VAT you would have paid the supplier on your purchase in such a case. These offset,
leaving a net tax liability of zero for the transaction. Note that for reverse charged VAT tax codes, figures on the Tax Summary are effective
amounts, although they do not reflect the actual transaction.
Example
Sample Manufacturing creates a Tax Summary for the first half of its financial year. (For purposes of illustration, only the
single, reverse charged VAT transaction in the examples above is included.)
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A Tax Transactions report will include every reverse charged VAT transaction during the period covered. On this report, actual transaction
amounts are shown.
Example
Sample Manufacturing creates a Tax Transactions report for the same period. The only figure that appears is the 1,000.00
total purchase amount:
Because both the purchaser’s and supplier’s sides of the reverse charged VAT transaction are reflected in the tax reports, all figures typically
necessary for proper tax filing are available.
Note
Tax codes that have been used cannot be deleted, because doing so would compromise existing transactions. However, if a
tax code has not yet been applied in any transaction, it can be deleted.
To archive a tax code, go to the Settings tab and click Tax Codes :
Click Edit next to the obsolete tax code and check the Archived box:
Click Update . The archived tax code will be listed in gray text. It can reactivated, if necessary, by clicking Edit and unchecking the box,
then clicking Update again.
An archived custom tax code can also be renamed to highlight its former purpose. Record such changes in your business files to support
future questions or audits. Potentially useful name changes include:
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Example
Sales by Brilliant Industries are subject to a 10% goods and services tax. Brilliant has added an in-built tax code, GST 10%,
for the country where it operates. The government increases the tax rate to 16%. So Brilliant adds the new tax code and
archives the obsolete one. Both are now listed under Settings , but the archived tax code is distinguished by its gray
text:
The archived GST 10% code does not appear as an option when entering transactions:
To properly adjust tax accounting, split a line item partially for personal use into two lines on the payment form. Apportion the Unit price
by the percentage of business versus personal use. Apply the tax code only to the line for the business portion. Post the remainder to
Owner’s equity or Capital accounts (as a draw), depending on your form of organization. Include the applicable portion of tax paid on the
personal-use line, but do not apply a tax code, since tax paid for personal use is not a business expense.
Example
John Smith, a partner in a business, spends $110 on fuel and oil for a business vehicle. The payment includes 10% tax. John
would normally record the transaction like this (after checking the box to indicate Amounts are tax-inclusive):
$100 would be added to the Motor vehicle expenses account and $10 would be subtracted from the Tax payable liability account.
But 50% of this expense is for John’s personal use of the company’s car, so he can’t claim the full $110 as having been paid by the business
on Motor vehicle expenses. He can only claim half. John splits the transaction using the Add line button like this:
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And John’s Capital accounts balance is reduced by $55, just as though he had received a payment from the company from his share of
profits.
If you will be importing taxable goods to Australia, you should add the in-built tax code named Australia - GST on Imports. Instructions for
adding tax codes can be found in another Guide.
When you pay the GST bill from customs, post the payment to the same account used for the corresponding purchase and select the GST on
Imports tax code:
After you have the $5,000 paid to your overseas supplier and $500 in GST to Customs, they will show on your GST Calculation Worksheet as
follows:
When recording purchases from overseas subject to GST, select the GST 10% (Deferred) tax code:
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The deferred GST will be shown under 7A of the GST Calculation Worksheet:
Example
Below is an example of a sales invoice you can generate in Manager:
This invoice contains two different tax codes. The amounts are tax-exclusive, which means taxes are added to the sub-total.
Other variations are supported, too.
Note
HSNs and tax rates applied in examples in this Guide are for illustration only. They are not necessarily correct for product
types shown.
Here are instructions you must follow to properly implement Indian GST.
Number format
Enable the Indian numbering system under Preferences . See this Guide:
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HSN column
Set up for showing HSN in one or both of two ways:
• Free-text custom fields for line items. This method by itself is simplest, but forces you to enter the HSN on every line item. It is
most useful when your line items vary from one transaction to another and do not include inventory items.
• Pre-defined custom fields for inventory items or non-inventory items. This method takes longer to set up, but saves time when
entering line items. It is not well suited when line items frequently change.
The two methods can be combined on a single form. HSNs entered by either method will show in a single column. Setup instructions for
both methods follow.
To add the capability to include HSN in a line item, go to Settings Custom Fields and find the list for XXXXXXXX - Line, where
XXXXXXXX is the name of the form on which you want HSN to show. (Illustrations below are for sales invoices.) Click New Custom Field :
Name the field HSN and check the box to Show custom field on printed documents:
Click Create . When entering line items, the HSN field will appear:
To show the same HSN every time an inventory item or non-inventory item is added to an invoice, define a custom field for Inventory
Items or Non-Inventory Items (or both, if necessary) under Settings Custom Fields . Mark the custom field to show both as a
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When a custom field HSN is created like this, you can then set the HSN value for your inventory items (in the Inventory Items tab and
When items with HSNs are used on invoices, the numbers will automatically show in the HSN column:
Caution
An HSN defined for an inventory or non-inventory item will not appear on the transaction entry screen. But it will appear
when viewing the completed transaction form.
If you do not define the HSN for an inventory or non-inventory item, it will not appear on the completed document,
because the custom field will be blank.
If you define a line-item custom field for HSN, that field will appear when entering relevant transactions. It will be blank,
even though you may have defined an HSN for an inventory or non-inventory item entered. This is because you will be
viewing the line-item custom field, not the item’s custom field. However, an entry in the visible, line-item field will
overwrite any defined entry in the item’s custom field. This feature allows you to correct erroneous HSNs without editing
the inventory or non-inventory item definition.
GSTIN identifier
GSTIN identifiers can be entered under Settings Business Details for your business and under Customers tab for individual
customers:
When a business identifier is entered, it will show under contact details like this:
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Tax codes
Manager contains in-built tax codes for India. Add tax codes relevant to your business so they can be chosen on transactions.
Tax codes will show as a column for every line item where one is selected:
Note
Some invoice examples for the new tax scheme on the Internet show tax amounts being individually calculated on each line
item, but this is not legally required. What is important is to show the correct tax name for each line item, such as CGST
14% + SGST 14%.
Legal requirements are to show totals for each tax code. This is what you should see in Manager:
Or if you are issuing invoices where amounts are tax-inclusive, you will see:
Invoice heading
When charging GST on invoices, the invoice must say Tax Invoice. Manager will modify the heading automatically if in-built tax code is
used.
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Total in words
Common Indian practice adds the total invoice amount in words. If you set your base currency under Settings Base Currency
to Indian Rupees, Manager will automatically inject the spelled out total as a custom field.
Note
This guidance does not rely on custom themes. Custom themes are meant to vary presentation, not meet legal
requirements. The advantage of this approach is that you are still free to use any of the built-in themes. None of those
themes incorporate anything about Indian GST requirements, but you will still have everything in place.
Example
Below is the same invoice as in the first example above, but shown in a different theme. No additional coding or setup was
necessary:
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• Billable Expenses
• Folders
• Emails
• Reports
• Bank Rules
• Exchange Rates
• Inventory Kits
• Non-inventory Items
• Tracking Codes
These batch operations are available whenever you see these buttons in the bottom-right corner of the Manager window:
Batch Create
To add new items to a tab, regardless of whether others already exist, click Batch Create . Follow the instructions sequentially. First, copy
the blank template by clicking Copy to clipboard :
The template contains only column titles. It tells you what information is required for the batch operation.
Note
Illustrations in this Guide are for batch operations on inventory items, but procedures are the same wherever batch
operations work. The blank template changes automatically.
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Example
Brilliant Industries enters information for some of its lighting products:
Note
To understand each column, it may be helpful to first complete one entry of the type you are creating, filling all fields. Copy
the resulting listing from the Batch Update window (see instructions below) and paste into a spreadsheet as an example.
If columns are not understood, leave them blank. You can always edit them later.
Finally, copy and paste data for the newly created entries from the spreadsheet back into Manager. Be sure to copy and paste the column
headings in addition to the data.
Click Next to review the information being added. If satisfactory, click Batch Create to enter the new items into Manager:
If not satisfactory click the Back button, modify the spreadsheet, and repeat the pasting process.
Example
Brilliant Industries’ batch-created inventory items now appear in the Inventory Items tab:
Batch Update
Batch updates are used to modify already existing items in a tab. They are somewhat simpler than batch creation, because the structure of
the database is more obvious. Click on Batch Update . Again, follow the sequential instructions:
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Example
Brilliant Industries decides to raise prices on its LED products using the Batch Update function. It copies and pastes
inventory item data into a blank spreadsheet:
Note that each line in the spreadsheet now has a unique Key.
For convenience, you can remove any rows you don’t need to update from the spreadsheet. You can also leave them in place, however. Do
not remove or modify any content in the Key column for rows you keep.
Caution
Do not, under any circumstances, remove columns in the spreadsheet while updating. This will result in deletion of all
content in those columns for included transactions.
Example
Brilliant Industries deletes the incandescent light bulb product, leaving only LED inventory items. It doubles their prices,
using spreadsheet tools:
Copy and paste the updated data from the spreadsheet back into Manager. Be sure to copy and paste column headings in addition to
the data. Click Next to review changes being made. If satisfactory, click Batch Update .
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Example
Brilliant Industries’ updated Inventory Items list shows increased sale prices on LED products. The 100W incandescent
bulb’s listing has not changed:
Note
You cannot add elements when using Batch Update , because a key is required for every row in the database. These keys
are generated when new elements are added. To add elements in groups, use Batch Create .
• Emptying tabs of unneeded customers, suppliers, assets, and so forth when constructing a standard business “shell”
The operation is begun by clicking the button at the bottom right corner of any screen where it can be used:
Click the link or the Back button at the top left corner of the Manager window to abandon the operation without affecting any data.
Warning
The Batch Delete operation cannot be reversed. As with editing throughout Manager, the program will not allow you
to delete anything that has already been referenced in a transaction. Still, Batch Delete is a brute-force tool. Use it
cautiously. Do not use it unless you are certain you want to permanently remove all data selected on the review
screen. And always back up your data before any batch operation.
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Elements of the list can be edited and viewed, if necessary, to correct or confirm their content while in batch delete mode. Just click the
appropriate buttons. Entries can be unchecked if you decide not to delete them. When satisfied you wish to delete all remaining checked
entries in the table, click the red button:
To conduct a search, enter the search argument in the Search field and click Search . The following guidelines apply to all searches:
• Searches cover information visible on screen, but not content of underlying subsidiary ledgers, items, registers, or transactions.
• Searches are conducted for literal matches of text strings, with numbers treated as text.
• All text strings in the search argument must be present somewhere in the record. (The Boolean logic applied is AND, not OR.)
• When a table or list extends to more than one page, all pages are searched, including those not visible.
• Sort order in place before a search is preserved in search results. So both sort and search functions can be used simultaneously to
find desired data.
• To restore a full list or table, click the link in the yellow header bar of the search results.
• Searches cannot be narrowed from previous results. New searches cover the entire, original table or list.
• Quotation marks are not interpreted as demarcating a literal string consisting of the quoted characters as in many search engines.
They are interpreted as characters within the search string, usually resulting in no search results.
• When the searched screen includes totals, search results include totals for the returned records.
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Examples
Some examples from a list of sales invoices illustrate the search principles. All searches are conducted on this default listing:
After reverse sorting by date, a search for “OVERDUE” (note the uppercase letters) produces:
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A search for “55” returns the invoice 55 days overdue, as well as all invoices including “55” in their balances:
Reversing the order of words returns identical results. To illustrate, the search arguments “bob ware” and “ware bob” return:
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AND
• Issue date
• Clearance date
• Payment status
In most cases, the default order is most convenient, because it was designed with context in mind. But if it does not work for you, sorts can
be performed on any column in the list or table. And they can be in ascending or descending order.
To sort a list or table, click on the heading for the column by which you want to sort. To reverse order, click the heading again. A small or
symbol will appear beside the column heading to indicate an ascending or descending sort direction.
Sorts are preserved during searches. Likewise, search results can be sorted without disturbing the search results. So the sort and search
functions can be used simultaneously to amplify the effectiveness of each.
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Examples
All sort examples below are based on the following, default list of sales invoices. Notice that overpaid invoices are listed
first, then coming due invoices, then overdue according to age:
Clicking the reference number symbol twice lists oldest invoices first:
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A sort by invoice total, followed by search for “Lumen” producers an ordered list of invoices to Lumen Lighting:
4.7 Attachments
4.7.1 Attach supporting documentation
Transactions in Manager can be substantiated and documented with digital attachments. These can include:
• Spreadsheets
• Scanned invoices
• Scanned receipts
Note
Normally, an attachment is made to the specific transaction to which it relates. When attachments do not apply to
individual transactions, but, for example, to entire projects or accounting periods, they can be organized in folders. See
another Guide for instructions.
Add an attachment
Click View to see any transaction form or folder in Manager. Add an attachment to the transaction or folder by either of two methods:
• Click New Attachment at the bottom of the page. Browse to the file you want to attach and select it according to normal
procedures for your operating system.
• Drag and drop the attachment onto the form while you are viewing it.
In the illustration below, a spreadsheet file has been attached to a sales quote:
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Managing attachments
Attachments will be incorporated into the business’ data file, not stored separately for independent file management. The attachment will
not be deleted from its original location. There are two ways to manage attachments:
To view an attachment, click on its name while viewing the transaction or folder. To delete an attachment from that transaction or folder,
click X after its name. Deleting an attachment from a transaction only removes it from that transaction or folder in the business’
accounting database. It does not delete it from other transactions or folders or wherever else it may be stored.
If the Attachments tab is not already enabled, click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box, and click Update :
Note
If an attachment has already been added to a transaction or folder, the box will already be checked. You can just click
Update .
Go to the Attachments tab to view a list of all attachments saved in the business data file:
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Individual attachments are identified by date of attachment and transaction or folder type. They can be viewed or edited. Batch Delete is
also available.
Note
Editing an attachment changes its name within the data file, but does not change content of the attachment.
Caution
Deleting an attachment within the Attachments tab deletes it from the transaction or folder in the data file where it was
attached. However, if it was attached separate to different transactions or folders, those attachments will remain.
• Spreadsheets
• Scanned invoices
• Scanned receipts
Normally, the attachment is made to the specific transaction to which it relates. But sometimes, attachments do not apply to individual
transactions, but to entire projects or accounting periods. In these cases, organize attachments with folders.
Create a folder
Below the left navigation pane, click Customize . Check the box for the Folders tab, then click Update :
Enter a Description of the folder’s contents. Be sure to click Create to save the folder.
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Example
Northwind Traders creates a folder for general business documents:
Add an attachment
Click View to see contents of a particular folder. The folder will display much like any Manager transaction form. The display has no
accounting function, but provides a way to add, list, and delete attachments consistent with other tabs in the program.
• Click New Attachment at the bottom of the page. Browse to the file you want to attach and select it according to normal
procedures for your operating system.
• Drag and drop the attachment onto the folder form while you are viewing it.
In the illustration below, two files have been included in the folder:
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Attachments will be incorporated into the business’ data file, not stored separately for independent file management. The attachment will
not be deleted from its original location. To view an attachment, click on its name while viewing the folder. To delete an attachment, click
X after its name. Deleting an attachment from a folder only removes it from the business’ accounting database. It does not delete it from
wherever else it may be stored.
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Example
Northwind Traders creates a custom field is named Contents. Both boxes are checked, and the field type chosen is
Paragraph text. The 2017 General Business Docments folder is edited to include basic information about categories of
documents within it:
The resulting Folders tab listing now includes searchable information about the folder:
And the View screen for the folder includes the same information:
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Enabling reports
Many reports are available to users whenever tabs related to them are enabled. By default, when a new business is added in Manager, a few
tabs are already enabled, so a few reports common to all businesses can be generated:
As more tabs are enabled, more reports are available. For example, when Customers and Suppliers tabs are enabled, aging reports
and statements can be produced:
Reports are available related to tax codes, fixed assets, inventory, expense claims, capital accounts, and other aspects of accounting.
Some reports pertain only to certain business locations. These are enabled in one of three ways:
• Importing tax codes for a specific location following instructions in this Guide. This feature automatically adds reports associated
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• Importing report transformations relevant to a location according to the Guide cited above. Additional reports can be added at any
time. This is the only option for existing businesses or those operating in multiple locations.
Creating reports
Begin creating a new report by clicking on the report’s name under the Reports tab. Then, in most cases, click New Report . (One
exception is Custom Reports , which is not covered by this Guide.) Depending on which report is being created, various fields will appear.
Some have default content, shown in grey. This content can be overwritten to customize a report. Other fields, such as dates, may be
required. Some reports offer options for adding explanatory information, showing account codes, or excluding zero balances. For example, a
new Cash Summary entry screen is shown below:
For some reports, comparative columns can be added. These can be useful for comparing current performance with past accounting periods.
Note that columns can be named and their order adjusted by dragging the double-arrow symbols to the left of column names up or down.
The top-listed column will appear at the left on the report in bold type. Other comparative columns will appear to the right of that column:
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Occasionally, an option exists to set the end or as-of date as Today. When that choice is selected, the report will always be up to date when
viewed. A custom date can also be entered:
OR
Reports that are simple lists can be exported for further manipulation in a spreadsheet by clicking at the bottom of the screen.
Saved reports can be edited after clicking the Edit button to the left of a report in the list:
Click Update after editing to save the revised report. Saved reports can also be deleted when no longer needed by clicking Delete at
the bottom of the edit screen.
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Note
Manager does not actually save reports as documents or files. It stores definitions of reports, including necessary dates,
titles, column headings, etc. When a saved report is viewed, Manager actually creates it in real time from the stored
definition. Therefore, a deleted report can always be recreated, because Manager never deletes the underlying transactions,
only the information needed for a particular display. And if report formats are improved as Manager is updated, all saved
reports will automatically be updated, too.
Cloning reports
Definitions of reports can be cloned. This capability is useful when nearly identical reports must be produced, especially when they are
complex. For example, Profit and Loss Statements might be generated under both accrual and cash basis accounting.
To clone a report, click View beside it in its listing. Click Clone at the top of the report window:
When an account group is collapsed, only the group name and combined balance are displayed on the financial report. Individual accounts
and balances within the group do not show. To collapse a group, go to the Edit screen for the report and click inside the field below
Groups to collapse:
A dropdown list of groups eligible for collapse on the financial report will appear. Click on the one you want to collapse. Repeat the process
if you want to collapse additional groups.
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Example
Northwind Traders has designed its Profit and Loss Statement with several groups, including Other Income and Other
Expenses:
But Northwind does not need to display all these accounts in its quarterly management review package. So it selects the
Other Income group for collapse:
To expand a group that was previously collapsed, select Edit for the financial report and click the X in front of the group’s name in the
Groups to collapse field.
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• Listing opening balances, receipts, new charges, and closing balances during a billing period
• Summarizing aging of Accounts receivable (how long overdue payments might be)
The Unpaid invoices option produces a classical customer statement based on sales invoices that have not been completely paid. When
selected, it brings up a list of all customers with unpaid invoices as of the date last set. To change the date or choose a theme, click
Set Date:
Enter the desired Date. Choices include Today or Custom, which adds a field where any date may be entered. Choose a Theme from the
dropdown list and click Update :
The resulting list shows numbers of unpaid invoices and Accounts receivable balances:
Click View to see a specific customer’s statement, which can be printed or emailed:
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Transactions statements
The Transactions option provides the opportunity to specify both From and To dates and show individual transactions. When selected, it
brings up a list of all customers with past transactions. By default, Manager shows all transactions from your start date to the current date.
To modify those dates or select a theme, click Set Period at the top of the list:
Modify dates or choose a theme from the dropdown list and click Update . The date range and theme apply to all customers:
Click View to see the desired customer’s debits, credits, and running balance over the specified period:
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This format lists transactions as debits or credits according to their impact on the balance of your Accounts receivable, not the balance of
your bank or cash account. Thus, invoices are shown as debits and receipts as credits.
Note
Customer statements do not include any sales made as cash transactions (without sales invoices), because these are not
processed through the Accounts receivable account and therefore do not involve the customer’s subsidiary ledger.
• Listing opening balances, payments, new purchases, and closing balances during a billing period
• Summarizing aging of Accounts payable (how long overdue payments might be)
Supplier statements are rarely sent to suppliers, but are often used internally.
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The Unpaid invoices option produces a classical supplier statement based on purchase invoices you have not yet completely paid. When
selected, it brings up a list of all suppliers with unpaid invoices as of the date last set. To change the date or select a theme, click
Set Date :
Enter the desired Date. Choices include Today or Custom, which adds a field where any date may be entered. Choose a Theme from the
dropdown list and click Update :
The resulting list shows numbers of unpaid invoices and Accounts payable balances:
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Transactions statements
The Transactions option provides the opportunity to specify both From and To dates and show individual transactions. When selected, it
brings up a list of all suppliers with past transactions. By default, Manager shows all transactions from your start date to the current date. To
modify those dates or select a theme, click Set Period at the top of the list:
Modify dates or choose a theme from the dropdown list and click Update . The date range and theme apply to all suppliers:
Click View to see a supplier’s debits, credits, and running balance over the specified period:
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This format lists transactions as debits or credits according to their impact on the balance of your Accounts payable, not the balance of your
bank or cash account. Thus, suppliers’ invoices (corresponding to expenses) are shown as credits and payments as debits.
Note
Supplier statements do not include any purchases made as cash transactions (without purchase invoices), because these are
not processed through the Accounts payable account and therefore do not involve the supplier’s subsidiary ledger.
These reports automatically become available when the Sales Invoices tab is enabled. Below the left navigation pane, click
Customize , then check the Sales Invoices box:
Click Update to enable the tab. The three reports will be added under the Reports tab:
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Click on a report title, then New Report . Follow the general procedures for creating any report in Manager, as discussed in another Guide.
Specific information about the sales invoice reports is given below.
Caution
These reports only include information from sales invoices. They do not report cash sales. So the figures they present may
not match total balances in sales revenue accounts for the period. If you want these reports to be comprehensive, all sales
must be recorded on sales invoices.
Example
Northwind Traders prepares a report comparing sales results for a three-year period:
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Example
Northwind prepares a report for the same three-year period to analyze sales results by item:
• Sales invoice
• Customer
• Inventory item
• Non-inventory item
When a new report is defined, available custom fields are displayed by type:
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As with the other two reports described above, comparative columns can be set up, results are sorted in descending order of sales in the
primary column, and all figures are clickable.
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Example
Northwind has sales associates who earn commission on generated sales each month. So it needs a report giving sales
invoice totals by sales associate to calculate their commissions.
It creates a custom field for sales invoices called Sales associate, and every time it creates an invoice, it selects the sales
associate who closed the sale.
It creates a new report, specifying three monthly time frames and selecting the Sales associate custom field:
The report will show sales invoice totals by sales associate (not by customer or item as with the previous reports):
You can accomplish more with this report. For example, if you have thousands of customers, it may not be very useful to see invoice totals
by customer because the report would be so long. Perhaps it would be more useful to see invoice totals by country. Likewise, if your
inventory is large, it might be helpful to create custom fields for inventory items (e. g., group, material, type, brand, etc.) and view totals by
those custom fields.
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Examples
Northwind adds a custom field, Country, to its customer definitions. Now, it can generate reports by country:
It also defines a custom field, Brand, for inventory items and limits choices to a few popular brands. Now it can see how
those brands perform relative to one another:
Note
Custom field content is not mandatory. Sales invoices that do not contain anything in the custom field selected will be left
out of the report. So, if Northwind sells other brands of appliances, but only wants to track the five in the example above, it
can do so. Results for items with different brands will be available in other reports.
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Manager includes a simple budgeting capability under the Reports tab. Click on Profit and Loss Statement (Actual vs Budget) :
Note
New budgets can also be started by cloning existing budgets:
• Title can be anything that will help identify the budget when it is viewed in a list.
• From is the first day of the budget period. By default the first day of the current month will appear. Edit as necessary.
• To is the final day of the budget period. By default, the last day of the current month will appear. Edit as necessary.
• Tracking Code allows you to create a budget for a division, branch, or project by selecting its tracking code. This field does not
appear unless you have defined at least one tracking code.
• Account fields offer all accounts from the Profit and Loss Statement side of your chart of accounts. (Budgets cannot be created for
Balance Sheet accounts, because those are perpetual.)
• Amount is the expected income or expense during the budget period for the individual account.
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Note
Enter income as positive numbers, expenses as negative numbers.
• Click Add line to add more accounts. Only those accounts with expected income or expenses need to be included in the
budget.
Click Create to store the budget. You can create as many budgets for as many different time periods as you want. A budget from one
time period can be cloned as a starting point for building a budget for another time period.
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Example
The business, Northwind, creates a budget for the month of May 2016. Although it uses tracking codes, this budget is for
the entire company:
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Northwind can view the budget to see a comparison between actual and budgeted figures for the defined time period:
Caution
When creating a budget, only accounts already in your chart of accounts can be included. So build your chart of accounts
first, then create your budget, which will appear in the same basic format.
Accounts will be included in the Profit & Loss Statement (Actual vs. Budget) if you enter a budget figure or there is an
actual income or expense transaction during the budget period. Only if both are true will Percentage figures be
calculated.
A profit and loss statement (P&L) is a financial statement that summarizes the income and expenses incurred during a specific period of
time, usually a fiscal quarter or year.
In Manager, there are two ways to get P&L out. The “dirty” way assumes you already know the final figures and “clean” way means you don’t
know the figures so you will enter all transactions within a period individually and let Manager sum them up for you.
Create a business
Click Add Business button then Create New Business , enter your business name and click Add Business button.
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Normally at this point we would click on Customize to add new tabs but if all you want is to generate a P&L statement and you know the
figures (dirty way), we don’t have to enable any additional features as we have all we need.
Then enter your figures for all applicable Income and Expense accounts. Income figures always go to Credit column and expense figures go
to Debit column. Also, make sure to set the date to 31/12/2016.
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Normally all journal entries must balance to adhere to rules of double-entry accounting principles. Since we only want to
generate P&L statement, we can relax rules a bit for now.
Here you will need to enter period for which your P&L is for. Let’s say the income and expense figures you have entered in journal entry
cover the whole year 2016. Your period should be set to be from January 1, 2016 until December 31, 2016. Optionally you can also set
column name to FY 2016 which is abbreviation for Financial Year 2016.
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After you click Create , you will be able to view your newly-created report.
So there you go. Quick & dirty way to generate professional-looking P&L for your bank or an accountant.
Then edit this P&L report to add comparative period by clicking on Add comparative column button. Then enter period details for FY
2015.
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As you can see, now you have two periods side-by-side which looks much better. You can keep going to add as many periods as you like.
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This feature is in addition to the Export button at the bottom right corner, described in another Guide.
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To copy a report to the clipboard, simply click the button while viewing it. Copy to clipboard copies the HTML code used to render the
report on screen. Therefore, it can produce a more finished document than the Export function.
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Example
Brilliant Industries prepares a comparative Profit and Loss Statement for two years. Viewed on screen, it looks like this:
The Export function allows data to be copied and pasted into a spreadsheet:
Note that some header information is missing, and no distinctive formatting is preserved. The Copy to clipboard
function produces a better result when clipboard contents are pasted into a spreadsheet. The only change necessary to
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Note
While exported data in TSV format can be pasted into spreadsheets or word-processing documents, clipboard content can
only be pasted into spreadsheets. Pasting into a word-processing document pastes the HTML code itself:
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This feature allows great flexibility in defining reports, yet requires no particular software or database skills. Essentially, every variable from
every ledger entry from all transactions in a business’ accounting records can be queried and included in a custom report. The results can be
filtered, ordered, and grouped.
Create a custom report by going to the Reports tab, clicking Custom Reports , then New Report :
The query builder screen appears with a placeholder report already defined:
• Text fields for titles, names, descriptions, or certain search or operator parameters (more about these below)
• Dropdown menus for selecting database elements to include in the report and operators to apply to the data
In most cases, multiple choices can be made by clicking Add line . Dropdown menu content varies according to prior selections. Some
selections activate additional fields (see examples below). Criteria can be deleted by clicking the X at the end of a line. Fields and checkboxes
on the query form are as follow:
• Name is used as a title on the completed report. If not edited, the report will be titled Custom Report. Any name you enter will also
appear in the Custom Reports listing.
• Description appears only in the Custom Reports tab listing, not on the finished report. This is useful for identifying a saved
report without having to view it.
• From and Until identify the first and last dates to be searched and reported. By default, the current date is prefilled for both. The
date of a transaction is not a separately searchable variable, but is generally included for every line in the report listing a variable
from a transaction.
• Select… allows you to choose the specific variables or elements to be included in the report. Each selection criteria line will become
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a column on the finished report. Their order can be adjusted by clicking and dragging on the double-ended arrows to the left of the
lines.
• Alias is used to rename a column. This is especially helpful when selection criteria are lengthy. For example, the combination of
Inventory item and Code might receive the alias Code for the sake of simplicity and saving space.
• The Where… checkbox activates filters. These can become complex, especially when multiple filters are applied. Typically, additional
context-specific fields appear. (See examples below.)
• The Order by… checkbox provides the ability to sort results by something besides date. Order can be ascending or descending. It
can also be determined by criteria that are not selection criteria, but are present within the ledger entries. For example, a custom
report on inventory items sold could be sorted by unit price, even though only quantity and total amount are shown on the report.
• When context is appropriate, another checkbox appears for Groups to collapse. With this option, entire groups can be reduced to
a single line summarizing all entries.
Notes
Multiple selection criteria will capture transactions with any of the criteria listed. Since Manager is a double-entry
accounting system, and some actions (such as invoicing for inventory items) involve more than just two accounts,
transactions can seem to be duplicated. But these are simply postings to individual accounts in the general ledger that
must be addressed with filters in some situations.
Multiple filters are governed by the Boolean AND operator. In other words, a selection must pass all filters sequentially to
appear in the report. There is no option for an OR operator. To achieve the effect of OR filtering, you must using multiple
filters to exclude everything you do not wish reported.
When groups are collapsed, only group names and subtotals are preserved.
The placeholder custom report mentioned above produces this result for a day on which there are no transactions:
Obviously, that is not very informative. But it illustrates the effect of some entries on the query builder. The best way to understand custom
reports is to build a few and experiment. Here are a few examples to get you started:
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Example 1
To generate a custom report listing all inventory your customers have purchased on credit, create the following:
Both inventory items and inventory kits were included as selection criteria to be sure both were captured. Negative values
were selected for quantity and amount purely to generate a more conventional presentation. Manager designates credits
and lists quantities that reduce inventory as negative numbers. But a sales summary normally presents positive numbers.
The first filter selects only transactions with a designated customer listed. It therefore excludes cash sales to payers. The
second filter captures only postings to the Inventory - sales account, leaving out other categories of sales.
The ordering alphabetizes customers. The grouping provides subtotals for each customer. The resulting report looks like
this:
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Example 2
You can generate a custom report showing your general ledger transactions grouped by account for a specific period:
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In this case, no filtering is applied, because all transactions are desired. Notice that the report is grouped by general ledger
account, even though that variable is not a selection criteria (only a portion of the report is shown to save space):
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Example 3
A custom report showing general ledger transactions only for Accounts receivable, grouped by customer name, can be
created as follows:
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The resulting report is shown below. One customer still owes money; the other’s account is fully paid:
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Notes
Unlike most Manager reports, custom reports cannot be exported. They can, however, be copied to a clipboard for pasting
into other applications’ documents. Simply click Copy to clipboard while viewing the report:
Custom reports can also be cloned. This feature is useful when nearly identical reports are desired, avoiding the need to
recreate most of the query. To clone a report, click its View button, then Clone :
Another custom report form will appear. After editing it with characteristics of the new custom report, click Create .
4.10 Emails
4.10.1 Email transactions and reports
You can email PDF-formatted versions of completed transactions and reports directly from within the Manager program. This Guide
covers:
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To enter email settings, go to the Settings tab and click Email settings :
• Check the box to Send a copy of every email to this address if you want copies of your outgoing emails.
• Name will be used as the sender’s identity. Your business name is the default entry, but may be edited.
• Paper size can be set to A4 or Letter, depending on which you expect recipients to use.
• Email sending format can be set as Plain text or HTML. This setting controls how the output of the Liquid email template for the
transaction type being sent is formatted.
• Port should normally be designated as 587, but Manager also supports port 25. (Manager will not support port 465 used as the
default by many email providers and applications.)
• Password is the one required for login with the Username above.
• Check the box to Show password to make your password visible. (This box appears only after content is entered in the Password
field.)
Click Update to save your settings. After settings have been updated, you can test them by clicking Test email settings . A test
message will be sent to your email address. A notice also appears if the test is successful.
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Notes
Your email application or provider may override content of the Name field, substituting whatever you have set up for your
general email. Therefore, you may want to create a separate email account for sending documents from Manager.
Paper size set for emails also controls paper size for printed documents throughout the program.
HTML should be set as the sending format if you plan to use HTML elements in email templates.
Some email providers have special requirements, mostly related to security. See, for example, these tutorials:
• Google Gmail
• Yahoo! Mail
Sending email
While viewing the document you want to send, click Email near the top of the window:
• To will be filled with any email address previously recorded for a customer, supplier, or employee if one is associated with the
document. Otherwise, this field will be blank. Enter or edit the address as needed. If more than one email address is entered, only
the first will be sent the document.
• Subject will be pre-filled with the title of the transaction or report you are emailing.
• Checkboxes will appear for any attachments to the transaction. If you check a box, that attachment will be sent with the email in
addition to the transaction itself.
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Caution
The email template will be interpreted by the program as Liquid coding and formatted as either HTML or plain-text output
according to the selection made for Email sending format.
In that tab, you can click View next to any email to display it. To delete an email, click Delete in the lower right corner of its window:
General procedures for emailing completed transaction forms and reports are described in another Guide. Read it first. Standardized email
templates can be defined for many common forms after selecting Email Templates in the Settings tab, as covered in a third Guide.
Add an attachment
Before a file can be attached to an email sent from within Manager, whether or not an email template is used, the file must be included in
the business data file as an attachment. Procedures for adding attachments are found in another Guide.
Example
Brilliant Industries is preparing a sales quote for new lighting at a hotel. It adds two attachments to the sales quote, one a
picture of the project design and the other a detailed list of proposed contract terms:
Note
While reports can be emailed, you cannot add attachments to them. Therefore, attachments cannot be included with
reports when they are emailed. Any supporting documentation must be separately emailed.
Select attachments
To include an attachment with a completed transaction, click Email while viewing it. Check boxes to indicate which attachment(s) you
want to send with the email.
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Example
Brilliant wants to email the sales quote to its customer with both attachments. So it chooses both files:
• Sales quotes
• Sales invoices
• Credit notes
• Delivery notes
• Purchase quotes
• Purchase orders
• Payslips
• Customer statements
Email templates are unique to forms and become available under Settings Email Templates as tabs are enabled within which
they can be used:
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You do not have to create email templates, but they are empty until you edit them:
• Subject should indicate the matter covered in the email. The code, {{reference}}, will insert the reference number from the
specific form being sent, if one exists, such as a quote number or invoice number.
• Message body should be a standard forwarding message. You can edit this before sending the email.
Click Update to save changes to the template. The subject line will be included in the email templates list:
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Caution
While templates will be interpreted as Liquid coding, their output will be formatted according to the Email sending
format selection made under Email Settings in the Settings tab.
The email will appear, using the email address set up for the intended recipient (customer, supplier, or employee):
All fields may be edited as necessary before clicking Send to deliver the email with the form as a PDF attachment. Remember to follow
Liquid templating language syntax, and take into account your Email sending format selection under Email Settings .
In that tab, you will see a listing of all emails sent from Manager and still stored within your accounting data file. Click View next to any
email to display the text of the email.
Note
Any attachments you added to forms in Manager will not be displayed, even if they were sent with the email. The best
method for ensuring you have a complete record of emails with all their attachments is to send a copy to your own email
address.
To delete an email, click Delete in the lower right corner of its window:
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If upgrading doesn’t solve the problem, we need to dive into your Email Settings under the Settings tab:
Currently, Manager doesn’t support port 465. So try a different port, preferably 587. Most SMTP servers will support both ports, so this is
generally not an issue.
Some email providers have special requirements, mostly related to security. See, for example, these tutorials:
• Google Gmail
• Yahoo! Mail
If you encounter other problems, post them in a new topic on the Forum. Be as specific as possible, including information on:
• Software version
• Your operating system and version
• A screen shot of your Email Settings page (Obscure only personal information. The more information you show, the easier it
will be to obtain help.)
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4.11 PDFs
4.11.1 Create PDF files of transactions and reports
PDF (Portable Document Format) files of transaction forms and reports can be generated directly by Manager. While viewing any
completed transaction or report, click on the PDF button near the top of the Manager window:
An internal PDF generator will create the PDF file. Standard operating system dialog options for naming and saving the file will be offered.
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Chapter 5: Cashbook
These Guides describe accounting techniques for physical cash, bank accounts, credit cards, and other forms of money.
• Cash tills
Before you can create a cash account, you must enable the Cash Accounts tab. Click below the left navigation pane, check the
box for , and click Update . You will see the Cash Accounts tab added to the left navigation pane.
• Name the account so it will be recognizable. The name could include a description, a store’s location, or a clerk’s name.
• Code allows you to set the order in which cash accounts are listed. Enter a number. If blank, accounts will display in alphabetical
order.
• Currency options will be available if you have set a base currency. By default, cash accounts are undenominated. That is, they are
assumed to be in your native currency, whatever that is. But if you plan to use multiple currencies, or just want your currency symbol
to appear on forms and reports, set a base currency. (Go to Settings Base Currency , select a base currency in the
dropdown box and click Update .) Cash accounts will then automatically be denominated in your base currency. Change the
selection for a specific cash account in its Currency dropdown box.
• The Inactive box appears only after an account is created. It can be checked if the account is closed. (Cash accounts cannot be
deleted from Manager if they have any past transactions, because doing so would eliminate the records of those transactions and
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affect active Balance Sheet accounts.) If the box is checked, the cash account will not appear in lists for transactions in the
Cash Transactions tab. The account will be greyed out in the Cash Accounts tab listing. Edit it to restore to active status.
Example
Brilliant Industries has one business bank account used to receive money from customers and pay suppliers and employees.
The business also holds cash on hand to pay for staff amenities and other petty cash expenses. Brilliant Industries creates
one bank account and one cash account. It names the cash account Petty cash:
Drill down by clicking the blue balance to see individual cash account transactions:
Of course, you can also view individual cash account balances directly in the Cash Accounts tab. Cash accounts can also be assigned to
custom control accounts.
Note
If you are migrating to Manager from another accounting system and have a balance in a cash account on your start date,
enter a starting balance as described in this Guide.
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• Bank accounts
• Credit cards
• PayPal accounts
Before you can create a bank account, you must enable the Bank Accounts tab. Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check
the box for Bank Accounts , and click Update . You will see the Bank Accounts tab added to the left navigation pane.
• Name the account so it will be recognizable. The name could include a description, a bank’s name, a credit card designation, or an
account number.
• Code allows you to set the order in which bank accounts are listed. Enter a number. If blank, accounts will display in alphabetical
order.
• Credit limit can be set, especially for credit cards. You can also use this field to indicate the amount of overdraft protection.
• Currency options will be available if you have set a base currency. By default, bank accounts are undenominated. That is, they are
assumed to be in your native currency, whatever that is. But if you plan to use multiple currencies, or just want your currency symbol
to appear on forms and reports, set a base currency. (Go to Settings Base Currency , select a base currency in the
dropdown box and click Update .) Bank accounts will then automatically be denominated in your base currency. Change the
selection for a specific bank account in its Currency dropdown box.
• The Inactive box appears after a bank account has been created. It can be checked if the account is closed. (Bank accounts cannot
be deleted from Manager if they have any past transactions, because doing so would eliminate the records of those transactions
and affect active Balance Sheet accounts.) If the box is checked, the bank account will not appear in lists for transactions in the
Bank Transactions tab. The account will be greyed out in the Bank Accounts tab listing. Edit it to restore to active status.
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Notes
You should only add bank accounts that belong to the business. Personal credit cards and personal bank accounts used
infrequently for business transactions should not be added as bank accounts. Transactions using such personal funds
should be entered as expense claims.
If you are migrating to Manager from another accounting system and have a balance in a bank account on your start date,
enter a starting balance as described in this Guide.
Example
Brilliant Industries, an Australian company, has one business bank account used to receive money from customers and pay
suppliers and employees. The business also maintains an account with a London bank for transactions in the United
Kingdom. The business owner occasionally uses a personal credit card for business expenses. Brilliant Industries creates two
bank accounts in different currencies:
Brilliant Industries does not create a bank account for the personal credit card of the owner because it is a personal
account. The owner’s use of the personal credit card will be recorded in the Expense Claims tab.
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Example
Northwind Traders maintains a primary bank account in Euros and another for transactions in the United Kingdom in British
Pounds. Its balance sheet shows both converted to Euros, the base currency:
Its Bank Accounts tab shows both accounts with greater detail in their denominated currencies, including pending
transactions and cleared balances, in their respective, denominated currencies:
Northwind can see individual bank account transactions by drilling down on any of the blue figures:
Note
In the Bank Accounts tab, you can find information about all bank accounts, even if you have modified your chart of
accounts so they are reported on the Balance Sheet under different control accounts.
• A contra asset account, meaning the credit card will be displayed under Assets on the Balance Sheet, but normally with a negative
value until paid off
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• A liability account, indicating the company owes money to the credit card issuer
The two approaches are financially equivalent, so both are equally correct. This choice is a matter of personal preference.
Enable the Bank Accounts tab and create the credit card account as described here. You may wish to add custom fields to your bank
accounts to record things like account numbers and financial institutions. You can also assign account code numbers to match them to an
overall numbering scheme for your chart of accounts.
The credit card will now be displayed in your Bank Accounts tab along with other bank accounts. Because most transactions will post to
this account from New Payment transactions, the account’s balance will usually be negative. Only refunds or payments to the credit card
will move its balance in a positive direction:
Note
If a credit card has a balance on your start date, enter the balance as a negative number under Starting Balances in
the Settings tab. See this Guide for more information about starting balances.
On your Balance Sheet, the balance of the credit card account will reduce the balance of the control account, Cash at bank.
The advantage of the contra asset option is your Summary page and Balance Sheet show at a glance how much cash you have to spend
that is not already obligated. The disadvantage is credit card balances are not so visible.
Liability option
To set up the credit card as a liability account, you must first create a custom control account in your chart of accounts. Give it a name like
Current liabilities if you want it to include other short-term obligations. Or just name it Credit cards. Indicate the custom control account is
made up of bank accounts:
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Go back to the Bank Accounts tab and Edit your credit card account by assigning it to the custom control account just created:
Now, the balance of your credit card account will show under Liabilities on your Balance Sheet:
Notice that while the credit card balance will still show in the Bank Accounts tab as negative, it will appear as a positive number under
Liabilities on the Summary page, because Liabilities are automatically subtracted from Assets on that display.
The advantage of the liability option is credit card balances show on your Summary page and Balance Sheet as amounts owed. This may
be more useful if you do not always pay off the full credit card statement balance. This option clearly separates what you have (assets) from
what you owe (liabilities). The disadvantage is a quick glance at the Summary may suggest you have more unobligated cash than you really
do.
Before a bank account can be reconciled, the Bank Reconciliations tab must be enabled. Click Customize below the left navigation
pane, check the box, and click Update :
Note
If you had bank reconciliation reports prior to the addition of the Bank Reconciliations tab to the program, the tab
will already be enabled. All past reconciliation reports will be present.
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• Set the From date to which you will reconcile transactions, usually the date of the statement.
Click Create to save the reconciliation. The reconciliation will appear in the Bank Reconciliations tab list:
Successful reconciliation
If Manager’s figures agree with the bank statement, the status will show as Reconciled. Click View to see the reconciliation:
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• Cleared balance
Unsuccessful reconciliation
If the figures disagree, the status will show as Not reconciled. Click on the blue figure in the Discrepancy column:
Manager will show you a screen to help with the bank reconciliation process. Exact contents of this screen may vary, depending on the
problem detected. You will first be asked to double-check closing balances as per the bank statements:
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If you make corrections, Manager’s suggestions may change. If the problem does not resolve, you may be presented with a list of
transactions since your last reconciliation:
Depending
on how often you reconcile, the list of transactions can be quite lengthy. Manager might break down the transactions into smaller segments
to make it easier to check against your bank statement. To do that, Manager may ask for interim closing balances as per your bank
statement.
It is usually most efficient to keep providing new closing balances as long as you are asked for them. Manager will use this information to
pinpoint the specific days you don’t reconcile. Instead of checking a whole month of transactions at once, you will only need to reconcile
one day at a time and only days that don’t reconcile.
When you compare transactions from the list to your bank statement, use the Edit button to correct or delete transactions as required. If
a transaction is included in your bank statement but not in Manager, use the applicable New Receipt or New Payment button to record
it.
Once you resolve all issues, Status of the bank reconciliation statement will indicate Reconciled when viewing the list of bank reconciliations.
You can also define and customize foreign currencies by following procedures in this Guide. When you have set up both a base currency and
at least one foreign currency, you will have the option to select a currency in the following tabs:
• Bank Accounts
• Cash Accounts
• Expense Claims
• Customers
• Suppliers
• Employees
• Journal Entries
• Special Accounts
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Note
When the first denomination in a second currency is set, an account named Foreign exchange gains (losses) is activated
automatically. Manager uses this account to record gains and losses due to fluctuations in exchange rates.
Example
Northwind Traders conducts its own business in Euros. But it has several customers operating in other currencies. It sets
Euros as its base currency. Its Balance Sheet is now denominated in Euros:
To handle its British customers, Northwind Traders maintains a bank account in London denominated in pounds. When
setting up this bank account in the Bank Accounts tab, it chooses a currency accordingly:
The Bank Accounts tab shows the main company checking account and the London bank account in their respective
currencies:
Meanwhile, the Summary tab converts everything to the base currency according to exchange rates entered in the
program so assets can be properly balanced against liabilities and equity in a single currency:
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Most transactions will adopt the currency applicable to the account or subaccount they relate to. For example, when you set a foreign
currency for a customer, all their invoices, credit notes and quotes will be denominated in that foreign currency.
Some tabs, such as Expense Claims or Journal Entries , allow you to specify the foreign currency on a transaction level. For example,
under Expense Claims this is useful when an employee is to be reimbursed in the base currency but the expense was incurred in a
foreign currency.
Some transactions also allow you to force the program to accept a manually entered foreign currency amount as being equivalent to a base
currency amount. Using this feature avoids changes to the Foreign exchange gains (losses) account as exchange rates fluctuate. If this is
possible for a particular transaction, an optional field appears for the alternate currency.
Example
Northwind receives money into a Euro-denominated bank account from a customer in England who was invoiced in British
pounds. The receipt form shows the amount received in Euros, but includes an optional field where the original invoice
amount in pounds can be entered:
• The account was miscategorized when first created prior to version 17.9.0. (All bank and cash accounts were handled under a single
Cash Accounts tab in earlier versions. The only distinction was a checkbox to indicate the account was maintained by a financial
institution.)
• The account was mistakenly categorized in version 17.9.0 or a later version and has had transactions entered, so it cannot be
deleted.
Convert an account
Select the home tab for the account you want to convert, either Bank Accounts or Cash Accounts :
OR
Select the account you want to convert and click the Convert… button:
OR
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Results of conversion
If the tab for the destination account type has not yet been enabled, Manager will enable it.
The converted account will appear in the listing for the destination tab. Manager will treat the converted account as though it had always
been the new type. Transactions previously entered in the converted account will now appear under the new destination account.
Finally, if the converted account is the last of its type, the tab for that type will disappear unless the tab has been separately enabled via the
Customize link.
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Example
Sample Manufacturing is beginning operations. It creates one bank account named Business bank account in the
Bank Accounts tab. But it mistakenly enters three petty cash transactions into that account. The Bank Accounts tab
shows the single bank account (red circle). The three transactions (blue arrow) are indicated for the
Receipts & Payments tab:
Sample realizes its mistake and decides to fix it by converting the bank account to a petty cash fund. When the conversion
is complete, everything has been transferred to the Cash Accounts tab. Notice that the counter for Bank Accounts is
now zero (blue arrow):
In this case, the Bank Accounts tab remains, because it was enabled via Customize .
Brilliant edits the new cash account to change its name to Petty cash. It creates a new bank account named Business bank
account. This way, Brilliant avoids having to delete and re-enter transactions or accounts. Results are visible in the two
accounts tabs:
AND
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Note
When bank accounts are converted to cash accounts, pending transaction information is no longer displayed, because all
cash account transactions, by definition, clear immediately. However, pending status information is not lost. If the account
is converted from cash back to bank, the pending information will once again be shown.
Basic receipts
Once at least one cash or bank account exists, receipts are recorded in the Receipts & Payments tab by clicking on New Receipt :
• Reference is optional and may be used for cheque numbers, bank confirmation numbers, or other internal sequences. If the box
within the field is checked, Manager will number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number
among all existing receipts and payments and add 1.
• Select the bank or cash Account to which the transaction is being entered.
• If a bank account is selected, a Status field appears, in which Cleared or Pending can be chosen. For Cleared transactions, the date
may be entered:
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Status is set to Cleared by default for bank transactions. Another Guide covers cleared and pending transactions in greater detail.
This field is absent for cash transactions.
• Payer is the person or entity from whom money is being received.
• Item field can be used to enter predefined inventory or non-inventory items. If you have no predefined items, this field will not
appear. Making a selection here will prefill several other fields on the line.
• Tax code and Tracking Code can be selected if any have been defined.
• Amounts are tax inclusive controls how taxes are calculated. Check the box if taxes are included in unit prices. Uncheck the box
if taxes are to be added to unit prices. This check box applies to the entire transaction.
• A Custom title can be entered to match local usage. Enter the title in the text field that appears if the box is checked.
• A Custom theme can be selected. Available themes are selected in a dropdown box that appears if the box is checked.
• As a basic receipt
As a basic receipt
To enter a receipt against a specific invoice, post it to Accounts receivable, the Customer, and the Invoice:
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Partial receipts
When receiving money for only part of the balance due on a sales invoice, post the transaction as above, but enter only the amount actually
received. Manager will credit the partial amount against the sales invoice and show a reduced balance due. No other special steps are
necessary.
When receiving money from a customer for multiple sales invoices, leave the Invoice dropdown field blank. Manager will allocate the
receipt against the sales invoice with a balance due with the oldest due date first, then the next oldest, etc. However, if the receipt is
designated for specific sales invoices, add lines and designate amounts for those invoices individually.
A receipt entry form will appear. Select a bank or cash account. The remainder of the form will be prefilled with information to enter the full
amount due on the sales invoice. If the receipt is for only part of the balance due, edit the amount received by adjusting quantity or unit
price.
Other situations
You are not restricted to using only simple income accounts to post receipts. For example, if money is received from a business owner set up
under the Capital Accounts tab, select the matching capital account and subaccount:
Inventory and non-inventory items can also be directly sold using receipts. For more information on selling without sales invoices see this
Guide.
Basic payments
Once at least one bank or cash account exists, payments are recorded in the Receipts & Payments tab by clicking on New Payment :
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• Reference is optional and may be used for cheque numbers, bank confirmation numbers, or other internal sequences. If the box
within the field is checked, Manager will number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number
among all existing receipts and payments and add 1.
• Select the bank or cash Account to which the transaction is being entered.
• If a bank account is selected, a Status field appears, in which Cleared or Pending can be chosen. For Cleared transactions, the date
may be entered:
Status is set to Cleared by default for bank transactions. Another Guide covers cleared and pending transactions in greater detail.
This field is absent for cash transactions.
• Item field can be used to enter predefined inventory or non-inventory items. If you have no predefined items, this field will not
appear. Making a selection here will prefill several other fields on the line.
• Tax code and Tracking Code can be selected if any have been defined.
• Amounts are tax inclusive controls how taxes are calculated. Check the box if taxes are included in unit prices. Uncheck the box
if taxes are to be added to unit prices. This check box applies to the entire transaction.
• A Custom title can be selected to match local usage. Enter the title in the text field that appears if the box is checked.
• A Custom theme can be selected. Available themes are selected in a dropdown box that appears if the box is checked.
Click Create to save the transaction. The completed form can be given to the Payee as a remittance or payment advice:
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• As a basic payment
As a basic payment
To enter a payment against a specific purchase invoice, post it to Accounts payable, the Supplier, and the Invoice:
Partial payments
When paying only part of the balance due on a purchase invoice, allocate the transaction exactly as above, but enter only the amount
actually paid. Manager will apply the partial amount against the purchase invoice and show a reduced balance due. No other special steps
are necessary.
When paying a supplier for multiple purchase invoices, leave the Invoice dropdown box blank. Manager will allocate the payment against
the purchase invoice with a balance due that has the oldest due date first, then the next oldest, etc. However, if the payment is designated
for specific purchase invoices, add lines and designate amounts for those invoices individually.
A payment entry form will appear. Select a bank or cash account. The remainder of the form will be prefilled with information to enter the
full amount due on the purchase invoice. If the payment is for only part of the balance due, edit the amount paid by adjusting quantity or
unit price.
Other situations
You are not restricted to using only simple expense accounts to post payments. For example, if money is paid to a business owner set up
under the Capital Accounts tab, select the matching capital account and subaccount:
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Inventory and non-inventory items can also be directly purchased using payment forms. For more information on buying without purchase
invoices, see this Guide.
Others involve delay before all financial activity is complete. Examples of these pending transactions include:
• Cheques written to suppliers or employees that have not yet been presented for payment
• Transfers between bank accounts in different institutions not yet finalized (whether by cheque, electronic or wire transfer, or other
means)
Manager can easily track status of bank account deposits and withdrawals, including dates of both initial transactions and eventual
clearance, in a Status field. Cash account transactions are, of course, always complete instantly, so status is not recorded. Using this feature,
you can quickly determine how much of your bank account funds are unobligated, that is, actually available to spend. Likewise, you can
determine whether or not money received is actually accessible.
Cleared transactions
By default, all new receipts and payments to bank accounts in the Receipts & Payments tab are Cleared. For example, a receipt from a
customer automatically shows Cleared in the Status field:
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All cleared transactions will appear under the Statement balance column for a bank account in the Bank Accounts tab:
Pending transactions
When money has been received, but perhaps not deposited in the bank, the transaction can be marked as Pending. Similarly, until a cheque
has been presented and paid by the bank or a credit card charge is posted to a statement, it can be shown as Pending:
Monitoring status
If any pending deposits or withdrawals exist, they will automatically be shown in separate columns in the Bank Accounts tab:
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A Bank Reconciliation Statement can be produced adjusting an account statement for pending deposits and withdrawals. This can help
ensure bank records match accounting records in Manager.
Change status to Cleared in the dropdown Status box and enter the clearance date. (See first illustration above.)
• *.qif
• *.ofx
• *.qfx
• *.qbo
• *.sta
• *.swi
• *.940
• *.iif
• *.csv
If your bank does not offer one of these formats, you may be able to import the statement into a spreadsheet program and convert it to
*.csv format. If you import a *.csv file, Manager will recognize only the following columns, so delete all others:
• Date (be sure format matches your selection in the Preferences tab)
• Reference
• Payee
• Description
• Amount
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Click Choose File to browse to the downloaded statement you want to import. Select the bank account for which you are importing the
statement:
Click Next . Review the summary of transactions to be imported and press the Import button.
Note
Manager has the ability to recognize most duplicate transactions, based on type, date, and amount. In the import illustrated
above, Manager does not recognize any duplicates and imports all transactions.
After the import is complete, Manager returns you to a list of uncategorized transactions. Here, imported transactions are displayed in one
of two ways:
• Those recognized according to an existing bank rule have their tentative posting Account listed in green.
• Transactions not recognized by a bank rule are assigned to the Suspense account, awaiting editing or creation of a new bank rule.
The illustration below shows a portion of the Uncategorized transactions list for the import shown above. Of transactions shown, only
one was recognized under a bank rule:
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Edit transactions to post them to proper accounts or add descriptions or other information. When a transaction has been allocated to an
account, it will disappear from the list. If the transaction is likely to be repeated in the future, click New Bank Rule to define a rule that will
recognize and categorize it automatically next time. The account assigned by the newly defined bank rule will be shown. When all
transactions have been allocated to desired accounts, check boxes for those you want to update and click Bulk Update . (In most
situations, this will include only those recognized by bank rules, because any that were edited by selecting accounts will no longer appear in
the list.)
Notes
Transactions categorized by bank rules are only tentatively assigned to accounts. Until they are selected and updated with
the Bulk Update button, the categorization is not final.
Many imported bank transactions will not contain entries in the Payer or Payee fields, as many banks include this
information in the Description field. Unless you edit such transactions manually, your transactions will be partially
incomplete. This can result in various reports being less informative than normal. Remedy this situation by editing the
transactions to manually copy payer/payee information to the correct fields.
Caution
Bank statement imports have the potential to duplicate transactions already entered either manually or by prior import.
They might also eliminate transactions erroneously as duplicates when dates and amounts are the same. (This could
happen, for example, when a frequent customer buys the same thing several times in one day and some transactions are
entered manually.)
Some import formats (or poor implementation of them by financial institutions) also have the potential for date
ambiguities when transactions are limited to early in a month (days 1 - 12) or represent years with only two digits.
To minimize problems, thoroughly review imported transactions when the process is complete. Edit manually, if necessary.
The bank statement import feature is meant to save time in data entry, not substitute for regular review and oversight.
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To define a new bank rule, click New Bank Rule and complete the description:
• Select the bank account you have imported under If bank account is:.
• Specify the posting account and tax and tracking codes to apply (if any) under …then allocate to:. (If no tax or tracking codes
exist, these fields are not visible)
Note
When a control account is selected, such as Accounts receivable or Billable expenses, an additional dropdown field will
appear beside the account field to select a subsidiary ledger, such as the customer. If a subsidiary ledger is not selected,
transactions fitting the search criteria will be posted to Suspense.
Click Create when finished. To edit or delete a bank rule, click the Edit button to the left of the rule. Edit as desired and click
Update or click Delete .
Example
Jose knows his domestic wire transfer charges are always described in his bank statements as ELECTRONIC XFER FEE. So he
creates a bank rule to automatically post any transaction in his main bank account with the words ELECTRONIC XFER FEE to
his Bank charges expense account. Jose also knows that bank charges are subject to a 10% goods and services tax (GST). He
tracks income and expenses for his branch offices separately using tracking codes. So he makes matching selections in
appropriate fields:
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• Those recognized according to an existing bank rule have their tentative posting Account listed in green.
• Transactions not recognized by a bank rule are assigned to the Suspense account, awaiting editing or creation of a new bank rule.
Example
Xuan imports a bank statement. All transactions are initially uncategorized because none matched existing bank rules:
Uncategorized transactions must be categorized, either by manual editing or with a new bank rule and bulk categorization.
Example
Xuan sees that international wire transfer fees always show the same way in her bank statements. So she creates a bank rule
for them by clicking the New Bank Rule button on the applicable transaction line:
She sets a description that Manager will recognize for such fees, directing all bank account transactions from the Business
bank account containing NAB INTL TRAN FEE in their descriptions to be categorized under her Bank charges expense
account. Such transactions are not taxable in Xuan’s jurisdiction:
After creating a bank rule, you are taken back to the uncategorized transactions screen, where you will notice the bank statement transaction
has successfully been matched by the new bank rule.
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Example
Xuan’s bank charge now has a tentative allocation:
You should create bank rules for all transactions likely to recur, being careful not to include in the bank rule any transaction details that are
unique, such as reference numbers, invoice numbers, or dates. Once-off transactions that are infrequent should be categorized individually
by clicking Edit rather than by creating bank rules. Transactions you edit will disappear from the bulk categorization screen.
Once you have added all your bank rules, select all transactions matched by new bank rules by checking their boxes. Click Bulk Update at
the bottom. All selected bank transactions with matching bank rules will be recategorized and taken off the list. Bank rules you created will
be saved, so when you import bank statements again, Manager will match new bank transactions to existing bank rules, reducing the time
needed to categorize them.
Example
Xuan defines additional bank rules, then checks all boxes for the bulk update:
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Example
Northwind Traders has three uncategorized transactions in its checking account:
From this screen, Northwind can define new bank rules or edit transactions the same way as when importing a bank
statement.
Caution
The possibility always exists that a bank rule will incorrectly categorize a transaction with unanticipated characteristics.
When you complete the categorization process, review the results.
Note
A cash sale does not need to involve receipt of physical cash. Money can be received via any form of exchange and
deposited into either a cash or bank account. The distinguishing feature is that credit is not extended by the seller to the
customer.
Cash sales are entered in exactly the same way as any other receipt. They should specifically list any inventory items sold. A copy of the
receipt can be given to the customer as evidence of the sale.
When a cash sale is entered, any available credits the customer may have from credit notes or returns will not be applied. This is because
such credits are recorded in customers’ subaccounts in Accounts receivable, which is not invoked for cash sales. To use such credits, a sales
invoice must be used instead.
When a customer statement is created, cash sales for that customer will not be included. If a complete record of sales to a specific customer
is desired, sales invoices must again be used.
When many cash sales are made, such as to walk-in customers in a retail shop, a single receipt summarizing the day’s sales can be entered
into Manager. A cash register or point-of-sale system can be used to record individual sales, issue customer receipts, and manage cash in a
till.
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Note
A cash purchase does not need to be paid in physical cash. It can be paid via any form of exchange. Its distinguishing
feature is that credit was not extended by the supplier.
Cash purchases are entered in exactly the same way as any other payment. They should specifically list any inventory items purchased.
When a cash purchase is entered, any available credits you may have with the supplier from debit notes or returns will not be applied. This is
because such credits are recorded in suppliers’ subaccounts in Accounts payable, which is not invoked for cash purchases. To use such
credits, a purchase invoice must be entered instead.
When a supplier statement is created, cash purchases from that supplier will not be included. If a complete record of purchases from a
specific supplier is desired, purchase invoices must again be used.
• Receipts from prepayments for services or utilities to be invoiced later to the customer
In Manager, both facts are recorded simultaneously when the deposit or advance is received. To receive a deposit, go to the
Receipts & Payments tab and click New Receipt :
Complete the receipt form as you would for any other receipt. Do not select anything in the Item field. Select Accounts receivable and the
customer’s subaccount. Leave the Invoice field blank. A quantity is not required, because no inventory items or billable items are involved
with a deposit. You may simply enter the total deposit in the Unit price field. However, if you wish, enter the quantity and unit price and
Manager will calculate a total amount:
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Note
Deposits, even those involving calculations with quantities and unit prices, have no impact on inventory values or quantities
because no inventory item is designated.
The deposit also reduces the total Accounts receivable balance, though the effect of a specific deposit may be obscured on the Balance Sheet
if there are other deposits from any customers:
To view specific information about customer deposits, you must first drill down by clicking the Accounts receivable balance and locating the
customer’s account Balance:
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Clicking on the balance, you can see transactions contributing to it, including the recent deposit:
You can do the same thing in the Customers tab, with identical results.
Whenever a sales invoice is created for a customer, any available net credit in that customer’s Accounts receivable balance will be
automatically applied, reducing the balance due on the new sales invoice.
Note
Deposits and advances cannot be applied on sales recorded only via cash receipts. Such transactions are not processed
through Accounts receivable, so Manager cannot apply any available balance. If you sell to a customer on a cash-and-carry
basis, but wish to apply an existing deposit or advance, you must create and receive money against a sales invoice in
separate transactions.
In Manager, both facts are recorded simultaneously when the deposit or advance is paid out. To record payment of a deposit, go to the
Receipts & Payments tab. Select New Payment :
Complete the payment form as you would for any other payment. Leave the Item field blank. Select Accounts payable and the supplier’s
subaccount. Leave the Invoice field blank. A quantity is not required, because no inventory items or billable items are involved with a
deposit. You may simply enter the total deposit in the Unit price field. However, if you wish, enter the quantity and unit price and Manager
will calculate a total amount:
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Note
Deposits, even those involving calculations with quantities and unit prices, have no impact on inventory values or quantities
because no inventory item is designated.
The deposit also reduces the total Accounts payable balance, though the impact of a specific deposit may be obscured on the Balance Sheet
if other amounts are owed to any supplier:
To view specific information about supplier deposits, you must first drill down by clicking the Accounts payable balance and locating the
supplier’s account Balance:
Clicking on the balance, you can see transactions contributing to it, including the recent deposit payment:
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You can do the same thing in the Suppliers tab, with identical results.
Whenever a purchase invoice is created for a supplier, any available net debit in that supplier’s Accounts payable balance will be
automatically applied, reducing the balance due on the new purchase invoice.
Note
Deposits and advances cannot be applied on purchases recorded only via cash payments. Such transactions are not
processed through Accounts payable, so Manager cannot apply any available balance. If you purchase from a supplier on a
cash-and-carry basis, but wish to apply an existing deposit or advance, you must create and pay off a purchase invoice in
separate transactions.
• A refund is being paid from a cash sale or without reference to the customer’s Accounts receivable balance.
• A customer defined under the Customers tab has paid in advance, paid more than was owed, or has been issued a credit note, so
a credit is being reported as a negative balance (or entry) in Accounts receivable.
A receipt entry screen will appear. Complete the form as you would for any other receipt, with one important difference. In particular,
complete a line item for the refund:
• If an inventory or non-inventory item was involved in the original purchase, choose it in the Item field. Most of the remaining fields
will fill automatically, but may be edited.
• Account will be filled automatically for inventory and non-inventory items. Otherwise, choose the same one to which the original
purchase was posted. Because you will enter a negative number in the Qty field (see below), Manager will deduct the appropriate
amount from an income account, add to Inventory on hand, reduce Inventory - cost, and reduce the appropriate tax liability account.
• Qty is the number of units being refunded. Enter the quantity as a negative number. This is the important difference
mentioned above. If an inventory item is not actually being returned, but only adjusted in price, enter zero or leave blank.
• Unit price is the amount being refunded per unit of return. If only a partial refund is being made, enter the actual amount being
refunded. If no quantity was entered in the Qty field, enter the unit price as a negative number. Otherwise, enter a positive
number.
• Choose the same Tax code used for the original transaction.
Click Create when the form is complete. Remember to pay the customer.
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Note
A receipt with a negative quantity or unit price is financially similar to a payment, which is what you are making to the
customer. But recording a refund with a payment form does not correctly reverse the original income and expense
postings. More importantly, doing so distorts the average cost of returned inventory items in the Inventory on hand
account. Think of the refund this way: you recorded the original sale with a receipt, so it is appropriate to reverse the sale
with a negative receipt.
But if the next invoice is unlikely to be issued soon or the customer has requested the credit be refunded, make a payment to reduce the
credit balance. Most procedures are identical to refunds from cash sales as described above. However, for Account, select Accounts
receivable, then select the Customer. If the refund is associated with a specific invoice, select it in the Invoice (optional) field. Otherwise,
leave that field blank:
On the payment form, all numbers should be positive. Click Create to save the transaction.
Caution
Refunding a credit balance only reduces the customer’s Accounts receivable balance. It does not adjust inventory or tax
accounts. To do that, you must issue a credit note first.
• A customer returns one or more previously sold inventory items to you and receives different inventory items from you, or
• You return one or more previously purchased inventory items to a supplier and receive different inventory items from the supplier,
• Neither Accounts receivable from a customer nor Accounts payable to a supplier is adjusted, and
In other words, an exchange occurs when all movement of funds and inventory is accomplished in a single transaction. If the items
exchanged are not of equal value, movement of funds can be via bank or cash transaction.
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On the payment form, list all inventory items the customer is returning and their quantities. Include any tax code that was applied to the
original sale.
Next, list all inventory items the customer is buying in the exchange and their quantities. Because you are effectively receiving money for
the replacement item(s) rather than paying, enter the replacement quantities as negative numbers. Again, include any applicable tax
code.
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Example
Brilliant Industries previously sold a ceramic table lamp to Bob’s Hardware on a cash basis. Bob’s Hardware realizes it
purchased the wrong product and wants to exchange the lamp for a lamp kit. Because these are wholesale transactions, no
tax is assessed on any portion of the transaction.
Prior to the exchange, Brilliant’s Balance Sheet shows 1,000 in Cash on hand and Inventory on hand worth 4,432.53:
Brilliant’s Inventory Items list reveals it owns 18 table lamps and 5 lamp kits:
The payment form is completed as shown below. Note the negative quantity for the replacement item:
Because the returned item is worth more than the replacement item, Brilliant owes Bob’s Hardware 108. When the
transaction is complete, the Balance Sheet has been adjusted, showing less Cash on hand and increased Inventory on hand:
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Inventory quantities have also been adjusted. Table lamps have increased by 1 and lamp kits have decreased by 1:
Note
If replacement items are worth more than returned items, the customer will owe additional money. This will be shown by a
negative total. (A negative payment is the same as a receipt.)
• Enter replacement item(s) you receive with negative quantities. (A negative receipt is a payment.)
• A positive receipt total means the supplier owes you money. A negative receipt total means you owe the supplier additional money.
This feature is often useful for posting transactions from imported bank statements to proper accounts when they are not handled
automatically by bank rules. It can also be used in other situations, including when new accounts are added.
Note
Transactions in cash accounts are not included in the Find & Recode function.
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Examples
Northwind Traders routinely contributes money to charities in return for acknowledgement in the charities’ publications.
The business believes local regulations allow a deduction from income for the donations. However, at the end of the fiscal
year, the company’s accountant determines that such contributions are not eligible for treatment as charitable donations,
but only as advertising expenses. So every donation recorded during the year must be recoded from a Donations account
to an Advertising and promotion expense account. This can be done very quickly using Find & recode .
Mariana begins using Manager for her catering business, posting all sales to a generic Sales income account. After several
months, she realizes she could make better marketing decisions if her sales were broken down into several categories. She
renames her existing Sales account as Business catering and adds Weddings and Private events to her chart of accounts.
Mariana then uses Find & recode to transfer wedding and private event sales to their new accounts, leaving her
remaining business sales in the original, renamed account.
Finding transactions
Select Find & recode . A list of receipts and payments appears:
From this list, select transactions to be recoded directly by checking boxes in the lefthand column. Or, use the search function to narrow the
list, in this example by entering the account name Donations and clicking Search :
Recoding transactions
From the narrowed list, select specific transactions to be recoded:
Scroll to the end of the list and select the new account. If a tax code applies, choose one:
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Click Bulk Update to recode all selected transactions to the new account:
Example
Brilliant Industries regularly extends credit to customers by issuing sales invoices net 30 days. In other words, the due date
on each new invoice is 30 days in the future. But it offers a 5% early payment discount if customers pay within 10 days.
Entering payment
When entering a receipt from a customer paying early, enter the amount actually paid, posting to Accounts receivable and the customer’s
subaccount and invoice number. Do not apply any tax code. Manager will automatically determine whether the payment qualifies for any
early payment discount. If so, the discount will be shown on the sales invoice.
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Example
Brilliant Industries raises a sales invoice to Bob’s Hardware for 300.00 for a lamp kit. 10% tax is added. A 5% early payment
discount is offered:
Bob’s Hardware pays 313.50 before the deadline. The receipt is entered as described:
Manager determines the payment qualifies for the early payment discount and applies the discount to the sales invoice:
Note
The label, “Balance due if paid by …,” and the accompanying zero amount serve as a reminder the transaction is not
complete. The format may seem unusual, but the sales invoice should never be sent to a customer at this stage.
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The next time the Sales Invoices tab is entered, a banner shows, indicating at least one sales invoice has a pending early payment
discount:
After the banner is clicked, any credit notes required from pending early payment discounts are listed for review. Click Create . The
Credit Notes tab is automatically enabled, if it is not already. Any necessary credit notes are created. Accounts receivable for the
customer(s) involved and the relevant income account(s) are adjusted.
Example
Brilliant Industries clicks the notification banner and sees that Invoice #8 for Bob’s Hardware has a pending early payment
discount:
It clicks Create and recording of the payment with early payment discount is complete. The final form of the sales
invoice eliminates the reminder text, displaying more conventional information:
Note
By default, discounts on the credit note are posted to the same accounts as corresponding, original line items, using the
same tax codes. These can be edited, though there is usually no need to do so. When the discount is a percentage, all line
items are discounted by that same percentage. When a fixed-amount discount is involved, line items are discounted by
proportionate amounts.
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Caution
In most jurisdictions, an early payment discount is considered a price reduction, because it was offered as a condition of
the sale. So tax is due only on the reduced price of goods or services. But in some jurisdictions, tax may be due on the
original sale price. In that case, remove the tax code on the discount line item(s) on the credit note. You will then be paying
the tax on behalf of your customer, a factor that should be considered when determining your early payment discount
offer. Check with a local accountant or tax authority to confirm which situation applies.
Note
An early payment discount is not an ordinary discount as that term is generally used throughout Manager. Normally, a
discount is a percentage or fixed-amount price reduction on an individual line item. An early payment discount applies to
an entire invoice.
Example
ACME Services Company regularly extends credit to customers by issuing sales invoices net 30 days. In other words, the
due date on each new invoice is 30 days in the future. But it offers a 5% early payment discount if customers pay within 10
days.
ACME is a supplier of Brilliant Industries. Whenever cash flow is satisfactory, Brilliant saves 5% on its purchases from ACME
by paying quickly.
• Debit note
• Adjusted payment
The debit note reduces the balance of Accounts payable for that supplier. Make payment with a bank or cash transaction equal to the
reduced balance due for the purchase invoice.
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Example
ACME Services Company raises a sales invoice to Brilliant Industries for 300.00 in services with a 10% tax added. A 5% early
payment discount is offered. Brilliant enters a corresponding purchase invoice:
Brilliant decides to pay early, qualifying for the discount. So it creates a debit note, allocating the debit note to the specific
purchase invoice. Since the discount applies to the entire purchase invoice, including tax, the Unit price is calculated as
5% of the total balance due of 330.00. The same 10% tax code is selected, and the debit note is marked as being tax-
inclusive:
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Notes
In the example above, Brilliant could have calculated the debit note amount on the subtotal of 300.00, applied the 10% tax
code, and not checked the tax-inclusive option. The result would have been identical.
The debit note posted the transaction to the same Advertising and promotion expense account used for the original
purchase invoice. The transaction could also have been posted to a dedicated contra expense account, such as Early
payment discounts (suppliers). That would make it easier to track total savings from such discounts. Either approach is
permissible.
If line items on the original purchase invoice are taxed at different rates, you must enter a discount line for each tax code
used, apportioning the total according to subtotals for individual tax rates.
Caution
In most jurisdictions, an early payment discount is considered a price reduction, because it was offered as a condition of
the sale. So tax is due only on the reduced price of goods or services. But in some jurisdictions, tax may be due on the
original sale price. In that case, do not apply the tax code to the discount line item(s). Your supplier will effectively be
paying your tax on the discounted portion of your purchase. Check with a local accountant or tax authority to confirm
which situation applies.
Add a second line to the payment form, posted to either the same expense account as the original purchase or a dedicated contra expense
account for discounts (see Notes above). Enter the early payment reduction as a negative number. Apply the relevant tax code (see
Caution above). If more than one tax code was used on the purchase invoice, add separate lines for the discount amounts subject to each
tax code. The payment total will be reduced to match funds you are paying to the supplier.
Example
Under the same scenario as before, Brilliant Industries decides not to enter a debit note. It enters its payment to ACME as a
tax-inclusive transaction, posting the discount to the same expense account as the original purchase invoice:
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• Insufficient funds
• Closed account
• Forgery
In most cases, a dishonored cheque has already been recorded in Manager. Frequently, the cheque was a receipt against an outstanding
sales invoice. Three courses of action are available. Which is most suitable depends on several factors, including:
After whatever problem preventing clearance of the cheque is resolved and the cheque is accepted by your bank, update Status to Cleared
and enter the optional date of clearance:
This situation is equivalent to entering a received cheque into Manager but waiting several days before actually depositing it into your bank.
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Notes
This option cannot be used if the cheque was presented for cash and received into a cash account. Cash accounts do not
include transaction status options in the Receipts & Payments tab.
• Your bank does not record the dishonored cheque before returning it or notifying you of the problem.
Example
Brilliant Industries receives and records a cheque from Lumen Lighting for a sales invoice. Brilliant immediately records and
deposits the cheque into its bank account. However, because of a bank holiday, earlier deposits by Lumen into its own bank
account were not processed as expected. By coincidence, Brilliant and Lumen use the same bank. The cheque is dishonored
due to insufficient funds. But the bank is able to determine the cheque is not good before processing it. So it returns the
dishonored cheque to Brilliant without recording it.
Brilliant and Lumen have a long business relationship, and Lumen assures Brilliant’s accounting staff that funds are now
available. Brilliant leaves status for the receipt as Pending and resubmits the cheque to the bank. When the cheque clears
successfully, Brilliant updates the status.
Delete transaction
Receiving an invalid cheque is like receiving no payment at all. You might decide to delete the receipt recording such a dishonored cheque
entirely. This will leave any balance in Accounts receivable as it was before the receipt was recorded.
Notes
This option can safely be used for cheques presented for cash.
This option can be used for a cheque deposited to your bank only if the cheque has not been recorded by your bank.
This option is most attractive when using cash basis accounting, because you will not want to recognize income you have
not collected.
Example
Brilliant Industries receives and records a cheque from a new customer. But when the cheque is presented to the bank for
deposit, the bank detects it as a forgery. The cheque is not processed. Bank regulations require the bank to destroy it.
Brilliant deletes the receipt from its records. Further investigation reveals the customer is bankrupt and no longer in
business. Brilliant writes off the associated sales invoice as a bad debt.
Caution
This option cannot be used when the cheque was received in a non-credit sale (in other words, when no sales invoice was
issued). The original receipt in such cases is the mechanism for recording not only sales income, in general, but inventory
movement, in particular. If the receipt is deleted, income figures will be incorrect and inventory counts will be off. Unlike a
credit sale via sales invoice, a non-credit sale leaves no other record besides the receipt.
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Reverse transaction
The most complex and, unfortunately, the most common option is reversing the transaction.
Caution
Reversal is required whenever your bank records a cheque before dishonoring and reversing it. Unless you reverse the
original transaction, your records will not match your bank statement, leading to potential reconciliation and audit
problems.
To reverse receipt of a dishonored cheque received against a sales invoice, go to the Receipts & Payments tab. Select New Receipt :
Complete the receipt form exactly as you would for an incoming receipt in the amount of the cheque, but enter the Unit price as a
negative number. Post the reversal to the same customer subaccount and sales invoice under Accounts receivable as the original receipt.
Notes
A convenient short cut is to View and Clone the original receipt, but edit the unit price to be negative before clicking
Create .
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Example
Brilliant Industries deposits a cheque from Bob’s Hardware for sales invoice #6, recording the receipt as below:
After the deposit is recorded to Brilliant’s account by the bank, the cheque is dishonored for insufficient funds. Brilliant’s
bank subtracts the deposited amount from Brilliant’s account. The bank does not return the dishonored cheque, following
its standard practices.
Brilliant clones the original bank receipt and edits the clone by making the unit price negative and adjusting dates. It also
edits the description to explain the transaction:
The customer’s Accounts receivable balance is restored to what it was prior to entry of the dishonored cheque:
When reversing a non-credit sale for which there is no sales invoice, a customer must first be created in the Customers tab. Then, a new
receipt with negative Unit price equal to the amount of the cheque can be entered and posted to that subaccount of Accounts receivable.
No invoice number needs to be entered. This action creates an account receivable for the customer, just as would have been the case if a
sales invoice had originally been issued.
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In this way, inventory and income figures are correctly preserved. If satisfactory payment is subsequently received, it should be recorded
against Accounts receivable for the customer. If satisfactory payment is never received, that receivable must be written off as a bad debt.
If you are able to charge the issuer of the dishonored cheque for the fees, issue a separate sales invoice. Do not attempt to combine the new
transaction with the original sales transaction or a reversal.
To record a receipt against several sales invoices from one customer, click Customer Statements (Unpaid invoices) :
To record payment for purchase invoices from one supplier, click Supplier Statements (Unpaid invoices) :
and choose between Today and Custom (then entering the desired date):
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Copy to a transaction
When the statement appears, click Copy to and select the type of transaction you are entering:
A transaction form will appear, listing all invoices for the customer or supplier that were included on the statement. The entry form may be
edited as necessary before being saved by clicking Create .
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Example
Northwind Traders has been struggling to collect on sales invoices from a customer for more than two years. A cheque
finally arrives. To simplify recording the receipt against various sales invoices and verify that all delinquent invoices have
been paid, Northwind generates a customer statement:
The total balance due on the statement matches the cheque, so Northwind copies the statement to a new receipt. Accounts
receivable and the customer’s name are automatically filled, as are invoice numbers and amounts:
• Paying off a business credit card from a company bank account (remembering that, technically, money left the business when the
credit card was used to pay an expense)
Note
Inter account transfers can be instantaneous, as when moving money online between accounts in the same bank. Or they
may remain pending for several days, as when mailing a cheque to pay a credit card statement.
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Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box to enable Inter Account Transfers , and click Update at the bottom
of the page:
• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external reference numbers. If the box within the field is checked, Manager
will number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing inter account transfers
and add 1.
• Amount records the value of the transaction in the currency of the account.
• Amount received will automatically match the amount transferred if the two accounts are denominated in the same currency. If
this is edited, the Amount for the origin account automatically changes to match. But if the account receiving the transfer is
denominated in a different currency, the figure must be input manually.
• Status options are the same for the destination account as the origin account.
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Note
Inter account transfers do not appear in the Receipts & Payments tab. They do, however, appear in drill-down listings
of individual account transactions accessed from the Summary , Bank Accounts , or Cash Accounts tabs.
Caution
Remember, an inter account transfer only records a transfer. It does not actually move any money. You must take action to
withdraw and deposit, make the online transfer, or send the cheque.
When a transfer is recorded in Manager’s Inter Account Transfers tab, the program combines the two transactions on a single entry
screen, then invisibly records them to their separate bank accounts. But when transactions are imported via an electronic bank statement,
the imported statement includes only one or the other transaction, never both.
Moreover, whether posting any bank transaction to an account manually or by bank rule, receipts and payments cannot be posted to Cash
at bank and a specific bank account. (Without explaining all the details here, that would result in duplication of transactions.) Therefore,
receipts and payments that are part of an inter account transfer must be processed via a clearing account.
Note
Clearing accounts are used to temporarily lodge transactions that will eventually be posted to regular accounts. Amounts
are debited and credited in offset to one another, sometimes almost simultaneously, but other times days apart, after some
aspect of a transaction is cleared or appears on a statement. Normally, the debits and credits cancel each other, so the
balance of the clearing account returns to zero when all activity is complete. Using a clearing account is like temporarily
storing cash in your pocket until you can transfer it to your wallet.
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Likewise, if a clearing account exists for some other purpose, it could be used. But good accounting practice uses separate clearing accounts
for different purposes so their histories show distinct types of transactions.
The imported statement entry relating to transfers between financial accounts needs to be processed with a Bank Rule via a clearing
account. (Or edit the entry to the clearing account)
Under Chart of Accounts in the Settings tab, add the clearing account. Assign it to the Assets group on the balance sheet.
Note
Technically, the clearing account could also be assigned to the Liabilities group. The choice makes no long-term accounting
difference. However, since a transfer deposit cannot clear before the corresponding transfer withdrawal, funds posted to
the clearing account while in transit are better thought of as assets than liabilities.
Example
Brilliant Industries imports bank transactions, including inter account transfers between its various banks. It adds a new
account to its chart of accounts:
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Example
Brilliant transfers 7,500 from its checking account to a dedicated payroll account. It imports the statement for the checking
account and categorizes the withdrawal to Transfer clearing. On the balance sheet, Cash at bank declines, and Transfer
clearing increases by the same amount:
Example
Brilliant downloads and imports a statement for the payroll account. It categorizes the incoming receipt for the transfer to
Transfer clearing. Cash at bank increases and Transfer clearing declines to zero. The balance sheet now looks the same as
before the transfer:
• Manual: During the import process, click Edit next to the receipt or payment. Select the clearing account and click Update .
• Bank rule: Click New Bank Rule and define a bank rule that will recognize future transfer receipts and/or payments. Exact
definition of the bank rule will depend on the format and terminology used by your financial institution on its statements. Be careful
to choose criteria that are common to all transfer transactions rather than unique to one. You may need to define separate rules for
withdrawals and deposits, but only if terminology used is different. Manager is able to distinguish between withdrawals and
deposits (payments and receipts) when importing and will treat the transactions correctly.
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Example
Looking at past statements from its main checking account bank, Brilliant discovers that outgoing transfers to its payroll
bank are always described as “XFER TO FIRST GENERAL BANK” plus various other data. Likewise, statements for the payroll
account always note “INCOMING CONSOLIDATED BANK.” It creates two bank rules to handle transfers of payroll funds
between its accounts at the two banks:
and
Caution
You should use the Inter Account Transfers tab or import bank statements in the Bank Accounts tab, but not
both. Using both will result in duplication of transfers. Correction of duplicates requires deleting either (a) the inter account
transfer entry or (b) both the corresponding payment and receipt from imports from the two banks.
If you want to enter transfers in the Inter Account Transfers tab, yet import statements to capture other transactions,
click Edit , then Delete for transfer payments and receipts during the import process.
1. Actual expenses paid with personal funds that, in other circumstances, could have been paid directly with company funds and
posted to appropriate accounts. Examples include: travel expenses for company business charged to an individual’s credit card, cash
purchases of office supplies, or materials bought locally out of pocket on an emergency basis to finish work at a customer’s site.
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2. Allowances based on rates rather than actual expenditures but deductible from income under local law. Often, allowance rates
are officially established. They represent real costs to the business, even though explicit monetary transactions do not occur.
Examples include: motor vehicle usage based on distance or daily meal or lodging stipends earned regardless of actual costs.
Enable the Expense Claims tab by clicking Customize below the left navigation pane, ticking the box for Expense Claims, and clicking
Update at the bottom of the list:
1. Members created in the Capital Accounts tab, including partners and sole traders/proprietors using capital accounts
3. Expense Claims Payers defined under Settings , including directors, proprietors not using capital accounts, and all other
persons
Individuals may be of more than one type. For example, partners might define themselves as Expense Claims Payers to avoid complicating
their capital accounts with expense claims. Or a business might authorize only certain employees to file expense claims, defining those
employees as Expense Claims Payers and prohibiting expense claims from other employees.
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• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing expense claims and add 1.
• Select the Payer from the proper group in the dropdown list:
• Payee is the entity to which money was paid by the Payer. For allowance claims, you may either leave the Payee field blank or enter
Allowance.
• Complete line items with details of expenses, allocating them to appropriate accounts. ( Tax and Tracking Code fields appear only if
applicable selections have been made in the Settings tab.)
• A Custom theme can be chosen if any theme besides the built-in Plain theme is active.
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Line items from the expense claim will be posted to allocated expense accounts. Or, if the Billable Expenses tab is enabled and the
expense is allocated there, it will add to the balance of the Billable expenses asset account for the selected customer.
Member’s capital accounts require no adjustment, as an expense claim is equivalent to a contribution of capital.
Expense claims showing in the Employee clearing account are reimbursed to the employee via a New Payment transaction from any bank
or cash account:
The Expense claims account can be cleared by direct reimbursement of the Payer. Enter the payment under the Receipts & Payments tab,
allocating the payment to Expense claims and the correct Payer:
In the case of a sole trader/proprietor or director who is an Expense Claim Payer, claims can also be cleared by journal entry, debiting
Expense claims and crediting Owner’s equity or Directors’ loans:
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Claims of Members (capital account owners) show on the Capital Accounts Summary, also under Reports :
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Claims of Employees add to the Employees’ subaccounts of the Employee clearing account. These balances are visible in the Employees
tab:
Note that employee balances are blue, meaning you can drill down by clicking on them to see included transactions:
Individual expense claims and reimbursements also show in the Employee clearing account ledger:
Final thoughts
Remember that creating an expense claim never includes paying, receiving, or transferring money in the Receipts & Payments or
Inter Account Transfers tabs. The exchange of money took place between Payer and Payee and did not involve the business. Or, an
allowance may have been earned without the exchange of money.
Paying or clearing an expense claim is a separate, second transaction. When directly reimbursing a Payer, payment from a bank or cash
account is required.
Lastly, if you need a report showing how much the business owes and has paid to everyone who has filed an expense claim, you must define
all Payers in the Expense Claims Payers category, even though they may already be defined as Members or Employees. Otherwise, status
information will be scattered in different reports.
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Note
Members and Employees can also be defined as Expense Claim Payers, especially if consolidated reporting is desired. See
this Guide for further information.
To set up an Expense Claim Payer, go to the Settings tab and click on Expense Claim Payers :
Enter a name:
Click Create . The Payer will appear in the Expense Claim Payers list:
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Accounts receivable functions relate to quoting and selling goods and services to customers on credit. They include accounting for billable
time and expenses.
6.1 Customers
6.1.1 Enter customers
A Customer in Manager is an entity (person, business, or other organization) with whom you have or plan to have an Accounts receivable
relationship. Customers in Manager are actually subaccounts of Accounts receivable. You must first create a Customer before you can:
• Track your complete sales and receipts history with the entity
Not everyone to whom you sell must necessarily be defined as a Customer. You can make a cash sale involving immediate payment without
creating a Customer simply by entering a name as Payer when receiving money into a cash account. But such transactions will not be
recorded in a history for that Payer, even if the Payer is already defined as a Customer.
To enable the Customers tab, click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box for Customers , and click Update
below the list:
Create a Customer
Select the Customers tab, then click the New Customer button:
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Complete the entry. This information will appear on sales invoices and similar documents:
• Code is a short alphabetic or numeric designation of your customer. If used, the code will appear after the customer’s name on
transactions.
• Currency in which the customer operates can be selected if a base currency has been set for the business. Transactions for the
customer will be denominated in the designated currency.
• Deliver address is optional. This field appears only when the Delivery Notes tab is enabled and will be used on delivery
notes.
• Email address is where documents will be emailed from within the program.
• Credit limit is informational. If used, the Customers tab listing will show available credit.
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Your Customer will now appear in the Customers tab. Customers are listed in alphabetical order according to their names. Use scrolling,
paging, and search functions to find them. The listing shows the number of sales invoices issued to a Customer, value of any uninvoiced
items (billable time and expenses), and the Customer’s Accounts receivable balance. Other columns may appear, depending on which tabs
are enabled and the setup of any custom fields. Click on blue numbers for more details of any column.
Codes can also appear on completed forms after the Customer’s name. To see codes on forms, follow instructions in another Guide.
More information can also be placed into the Address field, remembering that anything there will appear on invoices.
Example
Bottom-Dollar Markets has different billing and delivery addresses. These can both be shown by including them in the
Address field (scroll, if necessary, to see all content):
You can also add custom fields for other information about your Customers. Under Settings , click Custom Fields and locate the list
for Customers. Click New Custom Field :
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Define your custom field. Checkboxes allow you to determine whether the custom field will show as a column in the Customers tab list
and on documents. The Position field controls the order in which custom fields appear. Enter a number there, if desired. Click Create at
the bottom of the entry screen when finished.
Example
You can add a dropdown list for delivery routes.
The results of all these changes (including default suppression of the customer code) appear as below:
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General procedures for entering starting balances are found in another Guide. Read it first. Before you can enter any type of starting balance,
your customers must be created. Follow these procedures to enter them.
Click the blue balance for Accounts receivable, then Edit beside the customer’s name:
Click Update .
To enter a starting-balance invoice, go the Settings tab and click Starting Balances :
Click the blue balance for Accounts receivable, then the blue figure for Unpaid invoices on the line for the customer:
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Complete the unpaid sales invoice in the same manner as a regular sales invoice. See this Guide for sales invoice instructions. The Issue
date field will, by default, be prefilled with the date one day before your start date. Edit this to match the original issue date from your old
accounting system. Only sales invoices with issue dates before your start date will be treated as starting balance invoices.
If a customer has already partially paid a sales invoice as of your start date, check the box for Partial payment :
A field will appear in which to enter the amount already paid by the customer against the total sales invoice amount.
Note
The Partial payment option is only available when the invoice date precedes your start date.
When finished, click Create to save the invoice. Repeat for all open sales invoices preceding your start date.
Note
Starting balance sales invoices affect only the monetary balance of customers’ subaccounts in Accounts receivable. They do
not affect starting balances of inventory items. Those should be set to match the physical count on the start date. See this
Guide for more information.
• Annotating different departments or cost centers at a single customer (with each department being created as a distinct customer)
The code will also show in the Customers listing and can be entered as a search parameter in other tabs:
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Example
To show the customer’s code on printed documents after the customer’s name, insert {{ recipient.code }} in the line
containing {{ recipient.name }} as below:
But if you have entered any transactions, Manager will not allow you to delete a Customer, because doing so would also delete all related,
historical transactions. Instead, you can make a Customer inactive. Edit the Customer and check the Inactive box. Click Update , and
the Customer will no longer appear in the active portion of lists.
If the Customer ever returns to active status, scroll to the end of the customer list, where you will see inactive customers in light grey text
with strike-through marking. Click Edit next to the customer’s name:
If a sales quote is accepted by the customer, it can be converted to a purchase invoice, purchase order, sales order, sales invoice, or delivery
note.
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Before creating a sales quote, enable the Sales Quotes tab. Below the left navigation pane, click Customize , check the box for
Sales Quotes , and click Update :
• Standard method
• By cloning
Standard method
In the Sales Quotes tab, select New Sales Quote :
• Issue date will be prepopulated with today’s date. This may be edited.
• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing sales quotes and add 1.
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• Line items can be entered semi-automatically by selecting inventory or non-inventory items in the Item field. Or they can be
entered manually. Tax codes can be selected.
Near the bottom of the screen are checkboxes for various options. Additional fields appear when some options are checked; likewise, some
options disappear when others are selected:
• When the Discount box is checked, options appear for Percentage or Exact amount. The discount entry must be made line item by
line item.
• The Hide total amount box allows you to include several options in a quote without displaying a total higher than any option the
customer might choose. When this option is checked, all tax codes will be ignored.
• A box can be checked to indicate Amounts are tax inclusive. This box disappears if the preceding box is checked.
• You can Round off the total, choosing Round to nearest or Round down.
• A Custom title can be entered. Possible alternatives include: Pro Forma Invoice, Proposal, Sales Quotation, Bid Sheet, or Sales Offer.
To change the title, check the box and enter your preferred choice. (Alternate titles set under Form Defaults will appear on new
sales quotes, but may also be edited.)
• A Custom theme can be selected if any theme besides the default is active.
Notes
While sales quotes can be prepared for customers already defined in the Customers tab, they can also be created
without first defining a customer. This is helpful when acceptance of the quote is doubtful, preventing unnecessary clutter
in the customer database.
To create a sales quote for an entity not in your customer list, leave the Customer field blank. Enter the potential customer’s
name as the first line in the Billing address field. It will appear on the finished sales quote in the same position as if a
defined customer had been selected.
Be aware, however, that if the sales quote is copied to a sales order or sales invoice, no customer or address will carry
forward. You will have to define the customer before other transaction forms can be created.
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Example
Northwind Traders sends a sales quote to Bottom-Dollar Markets for crab meat. No taxes are indicated. (These can be
added, if necessary, to any resulting sales invoice.) Nor is a discount offered. But the amount is rounded down. Northwind
has also added a custom field to its sales quotes, named Notes:
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By cloning
Repeat sales quotes can be easily prepared by cloning previous ones. While viewing a similar sales quote, click Clone . The new sales
quote need not be identical to the previous one or even to the same customer. Anything can be edited or added:
backwards from the normal workflow of sales quote sales order sales invoice, but perfect for a situation where the customer
wants updated pricing for the same thing purchased last time.
While viewing the prior sales invoice, select New Sales Quote from the Copy to dropdown box:
While viewing the existing sales order, select New Sales Quote from the Copy to dropdown box:
• Customer communication
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Before creating a sales order, enable the Sales Orders tab. Below the left navigation pane, click Customize , check the box for
Sales Orders , and click Update :
Next, be sure the customer for whom the sales order is being entered has been defined in the Customers tab. Manager allows sales
orders to be created in four different ways:
• Standard method
• By cloning
Standard method
In the Sales Orders tab, select New Sales Order :
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• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing sales orders and add 1.
• Line items can be entered semi-automatically by selecting inventory or non-inventory items in the Item field. Or they can be
entered manually.
• Qty is where you enter the number of items being sold. One is assumed if nothing is entered.
Near the bottom of the screen are checkboxes for various options. Additional fields appear when some options are checked:
• When the Discount box is checked, options appear for Percentage or Exact amount . The discount entry must be made line item by
line item.
• A Custom theme can be selected if any theme besides the default is active.
By cloning
Repeat sales orders can be entered by cloning previous ones. While viewing a similar sales order, click Clone . The new sales order need
not be identical to the previous one. Anything can be edited or added:
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Before a sales invoice can be created, enable the Sales Invoices tab. Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box
for Sales Invoices , and click Update below the list:
• Standard method
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• By cloning
Standard method
In the Sales Invoices tab, click on New Sales Invoice :
• An optional Due date can be entered, either as a calendar date or as a number of days after the issue date. If a Due date is not
entered, Manager will automatically use the Invoice date as the Due date.
• Invoice number is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing sales invoices and add 1.
• The Order number field can be used to enter a customer’s purchase order number or an internal reference number. Completion of
this field is optional.
• If the Sales Quotes tab is enabled, the Quote number field appears. Completion of this field is optional.
• If inventory locations have been defined and the Delivery Notes tab is not enabled, a field for Inventory location appears
below the Description field when the first inventory item is added to the sales invoice:
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Inventory items sold are then assumed to be immediately removed from the designated inventory location. However, if
Delivery Notes is enabled, the field does not appear, and removal of inventory items from inventory locations occurs via the
delivery note.
• Line items can be completed semi-automatically by selecting a predefined inventory or non-inventory Item and entering quantities.
Or, they may be entered manually. Additional lines can be added 1, 5, 10, or 20 at a time.
• If tracking codes have been created, the Tracking Code field appears.
Near the bottom of the screen are checkboxes for various options. Additional fields appear when some options are checked:
• If the option to indicate a Discount is being applied is checked, further options appear for percentage or fixed amount discounts.
• Another option lets you indicate Amounts are tax inclusive. If this box is checked, tax amounts are deducted from the unit price;
otherwise they are added to the invoiced amount.
• Withholding of tax can also be selected by checking the box to Deduct withholding tax and entering the Rate or Amount.
• The Total amount in words can be shown near the bottom of the invoice. (This feature is only available if the language preference
is set to English.)
• If the customer is denominated in a foreign currency, you can check the box to show the Total amount in [base currency]. This
amount is also shown near the bottom of the completed form.
• A Custom title can be entered, such as when local regulations require a sales invoice to be titled as a tax invoice.
• The due date can be suppressed on the completed invoice by checking the box to Hide due date.
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Note
Because of the specific tax code selected, this sales invoice’s heading has been changed to Tax Invoice. This happens when
such a title is known to be required by local law. Automatic changes do not occur with custom tax codes. But titles can
always be changed manually, invoice by invoice, or set permanently using Form Defaults.
By cloning
For repeat sales, an existing sales invoice can be duplicated by cloning. While viewing the existing sales invoice, click Clone , edit as
required, and click Create :
If the Billable Time or Billable Expenses tabs are being used, sales invoices can be created from the Customers tab:
Drill down by clicking the blue balance in the Uninvoiced column for a customer:
Select any uninvoiced billable time or billable expenses to be invoiced and click New Sales Invoice :
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A sales invoice is created, which can be edited or added to. See this Guide for more information.
A sales invoice entry screen appears, carrying forward necessary information, including the quote number. This can be edited as needed.
When Create is clicked, a sales invoice is generated. For this illustration, no tax code was used, so the default Invoice title appears:
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• Customer subscriptions
• Insurance premiums
• Rent
• Utilities payments
First method
The first method for creating a new recurring invoice is to go to the Settings tab and click Recurring Sales Invoices or
Recurring Purchase Invoices :
OR
OR
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Second method
The second method is to use the Copy to function while viewing an existing invoice you want to make recurring:
OR
Whichever way you begin, enter Next issue date to establish when the first recurring invoice will be created:
If desired, enter how the optional Due Date should be calculated. If nothing is entered, Manager will assign the issue date as the due date:
Select an Interval to control how often this recurring invoice will be created:
Select whether the recurring invoice will be good Until further notice or Until a specific date:
Enter remaining information as if creating a regular sales invoice or purchase invoice and click Create . On the
Recurring Sales Invoices or Recurring Purchase Invoices screen, Next issue date will be updated based on the selected
Interval. Termination date (if set) will also be shown:
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Caution
Recurring invoices in Manager are templates from which actual invoices will be generated later. Setting up a recurring
invoice does not affect your customer or supplier balances, customer or supplier statements, inventory, income, or
expenses. In fact, while Manager will notify you recurring invoices are pending, it will not automatically generate them for
you. This avoids problems if you need to edit an invoice before issuing it or you forget to enter a service modification.
Generate invoices
When one or more recurring invoices are due (or past due) to be issued, two notifications are provided. The first is a yellow counter window
in the left navigation pane showing the number of recurring invoices for which invoices are pending (not the number of pending invoices,
which could be higher if you have not kept up by creating invoices that are due).
Example
One recurring sales invoice has generated pending invoices. The left navigation pane shows:
The second notification occurs any time you go to the Sales Invoices or Purchase Invoices tabs. You will see a yellow notice that at
least one recurring invoice is pending:
Click on the yellow bar to review invoices to be generated, then press Create :
All pending invoices will be immediately created under the Sales Invoices or Purchase Invoices tab, depending on which you are
in. You can further Edit or View them without affecting future recurring invoices:
The recurring invoice will be removed from the list and no new invoices will be created from it. Cancelled recurring invoices cannot be
restored. They must be recreated from scratch.
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Skip an invoice
If recurring invoices must be skipped, but routine invoicing will resume in the future, click Edit for the recurring invoice in Settings .
Set a new Next issue date, then click Update to save the change.
Example
Your customer’s next recurring sales invoice for monthly service should be generated on 24 September 2015:
Your customer pauses the service subscription for one month; therefore, no invoice should be issued on 24 September. The
next invoice should be issued on 24 October, so you edit the recurring sales invoice in Settings :
So let’s say you are running a computer repair business. Before you can starting issuing invoices to customers, you need to set yourself up as
a business in Manager.
Create a business
In the Businesses tab, click Add Business and select Create New Business:
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Your business will be created, but it will look nearly empty, with only a few tabs showing at the left:
Click Customize below the left navigation pane and enable these two tabs:
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Now you are getting somewhere. Your left navigation pane will contain two new tabs, Customers and Sales Invoices :
Adding a customer
Before you can issue your first invoice, you must add at least one customer. Click on the Customers tab, then click New Customer :
Click Create . Your customer is now saved and can be seen in the list of customers:
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Issuing an invoice
In the Sales Invoices tab, click New Sales Invoice :
A sales invoice form will open, where you need to fill in at least three fields:
• Customer, which causes previously entered customer details to populate the form
• Unit price
Click Create to save the invoice. You will be instantly taken to a preview of your invoice:
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Notes
• Unit price doesn’t show on the completed invoice because you didn’t enter any Qty. Manager will always try to
make the invoice as simple as possible. If you are not using the Qty field, Manager won’t show Qty and Unit
price columns on the invoice. It will show only the Amount column.
• By default, your business address will be fictional. You should click on Settings , then Business Details to
provide your real business address so it will be shown on the invoice.
• If you are charging tax, such as GST, VAT, sales tax, or similar, go to the Settings tab, then Tax Codes , and
create relevant tax codes. Then Edit this invoice to select the right tax code.
• If you want to show payment terms on the invoice, you can create a Notes or Terms custom field.
• If you would like to show your business logo, go to Settings , then Business Logo .
To change the overall look of your invoice, read about themes, which allow you to vary the appearance of your invoice and other forms.
After providing your real business address, applying tax codes, and changing the theme, your invoice could look like this:
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Then use the Email button to email the invoice to your customer or use the PDF button to generate a PDF image to be saved or
printed.
Note
An early payment discount is not an ordinary discount as that term is generally used throughout Manager. Normally, a
discount is a percentage or fixed amount price reduction on an individual line item. An early payment discount applies to
an entire invoice.
Example
Brilliant Industries regularly extends credit to customers by issuing sales invoices net 30 days. In other words, the due date
on each new invoice is 30 days in the future. But it offers a 5% early payment discount if customers pay within 10 days.
As issuer of a sales invoice, you cannot know in advance whether a customer will take advantage of your early payment discount or wait until
the due date to pay the full amount. So your sales invoice cannot adjust prices in anticipation. Nor is it good practice to edit the sales invoice
after the fact if the customer pays early. Yet when a customer pays early and reduces payment, you still must clear the full balance due for
the sales invoice in Accounts receivable. Therefore, you must offer the early payment discount on the sales invoice, but adjust your
accounting only if the customer pays early.
To offer an early payment discount, check the Early payment discount box near the bottom of the sales invoice entry screen. A dropdown
box for Rate or Amount and a field for If paid within __ days will appear:
Choose a method; fill in the percentage discount rate or fixed amount, as appropriate; and enter the number of days until the payment
deadline. The resulting sales invoice will include the early payment discount amount, the payment deadline, and the reduced balance due if
payment is received by the deadline.
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Example
Brilliant issues a sales invoice to Bob’s Hardware for a lamp kit, offering its standard early payment discount described
above. The sales invoice entry is completed as below:
Caution
Early payment deadlines will override due dates entered elsewhere on the sales invoice. So, if sales invoices are not
properly reviewed, a customer may qualify for an early payment discount when paying after the due date.
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• A receipt or payment is posted to a correct invoice to which Manager has already distributed money automatically because an
invoice was not selected during a previous transaction entry.
Overpaid invoices are considered bookkeeping errors. Manager will display overpaid invoices at the top of Sales Invoices or
Purchase Invoices tab listings so you can see and can resolve them. You should resolve overpaid status before sending out customer
statements.
This will reveal all transactions posted against the specific invoice (including the invoice itself) and a running balance:
Example
Brilliant Industries was issued a sales invoice for 1,000. By mistake, Brilliant paid 1,100, resulting in overpayment of 100 on
the invoice:
To resolve this issue, you edit the transaction where you recorded the receipt of 1,100 and split the amount so only 1,000 is
allocated to the invoice and 100 remains unallocated:
After the transaction is updated, the invoice status shows Paid in full:
The unallocated 100 is applied to any unpaid invoices Brilliant has, oldest due date first, or remains as a credit to be applied
to future invoices.
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Sometimes overpayment on invoices can be due to mixing automatic and explicit allocations. When you record a receipt from a customer or
payment to a supplier, but do not specify the invoice, Manager will automatically allocate the transaction to the unpaid invoice with the
oldest due date. But if the transaction was intended for a specific invoice, it should be recorded that way.
Example
Brilliant Industries has two unpaid sales invoices. The first is for 5,000 and the second for 150:
They pay 150 and you record this receipt without specifying an invoice. Manager allocates 150 to the oldest invoice,
decreasing its balance due from 5,000 down to 4,850, while keeping the balance due on the second invoice unchanged:
Then you receive 5,000 with a remittance advice specifying the payment is for the earlier invoice. If you allocate 5,000 to the
first invoice, you would end up with over-payment of 150 on first invoice and the balance due still being 150 on the second
invoice:
Obviously, Brilliant doesn’t owe you anything. So you should click on the negative Balance due amount, find the payment
of 150 that was automatically allocated to the bigger invoice and reallocate it to the smaller invoice. Now all invoices are
shown correctly and the customer’s Accounts receivable balance is correct:
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Example
You have issued a sales invoice to Antonio Moreno Taquería for $3,370.00 and Manager has automatically applied credit
of $2,345.30, leaving a balance due of $1,024.70:
This automatic credit allocation happens when the customer or supplier has a pre-existing credit balance. In other words, you owe a
customer money or a supplier owes you money. Normally this is the desired outcome. You want any credits to be automatically applied to
invoices, so you are not trying to collect from a customer more than is really owed to you and you don’t pay suppliers more than you really
owe them. For example, if a customer has a credit balance of $100 due to a credit note, Manager will remember this until the next invoice is
issued to that customer and will automatically apply the $100 credit to it without your having to keep track of it. But if you are certain the
customer or supplier didn’t have a credit balance, such an automatic credit allocation indicates something has been recorded incorrectly.
In the example above, the problem is easy to diagnose. A bank receipt was applied to the sales invoice. You can look up that receipt in
Manager, determine who it was from, and decide whether an error was made. Or, the customer may have simply overpaid its account, in
which case everything is as it should be.
But suppose you know this customer didn’t have any credit with your company, and the mini-statement on the invoice refers to something
like a starting balance or a credit note. So you want to discover the origin of this credit. The best way is to view the customer ledger by
going to the Customers tab:
Locate the customer and click the balance in the Accounts Receivable column.
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Example
To track down more information about the sales invoice in the first example, click the customer’s balance:
There, you see invoice 2650 for $1,284.60 and a receipt for the same amount on 08/05/2017, which was payment for that
invoice. However, you also see another receipt for $2,345.30 on 26/04/2017, which you suspect was not paid by this
customer. After looking at your bank statement, you discover this amount was actually paid by different customer and
attributed to Antonio Moreno Taquería in error. You can Edit the receipt to fix the error and attribute the receipt to
correct customer. Any other source would have been revealed in the same manner.
You take one final look at customer ledger to verify all transactions belong to this customer:
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Some bookkeeping errors can be discovered immediately; some can take weeks or even months to discover. Used properly, Manager’s
double-entry accounting system ensures all errors will be eventually discovered.
In the example above, even if you didn’t notice the bookkeeping error, eventually the customer who actually paid $2,345.30 on 26/04/2017
would complain that its customer statements did not reflect the payment. Or your Aged Receivables report would show that customer’s
account becoming more and more overdue. Sooner or later, you would discover the payment having been attributed to the wrong
customer.
Note
While the example illustrates an erroneous credit being automatically applied to a sales invoice because of incorrect
attribution of a receipt from a customer, similar mistakes can happen with purchase invoices and payments to suppliers.
Detection and correction procedures are the same.
Withholding tax may be a form of advance payment of income taxes, value added taxes, goods and service taxes, or some combination of
these and other types of tax. Because the entire process involves both buyers and sellers, Manager supports withholding tax accounting
through both its sales invoice and purchase invoice processes, though procedures are somewhat different.
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Notes
As implemented in Manager, withholding tax does not refer to deductions on payslips of taxes due from employees. These
are referred to as Payslip Deduction Items and are explained in another Guide.
Withholding tax cannot be applied on cash receipts or payments, because the full amount of the transaction must be
recorded. Further, cash receipts cannot be associated with individual customers’ subaccounts as withholding tax must.
Withholding tax functionality for sales invoices does not require activation of any new tabs. Nor do you need to create any new accounts. All
necessary accounts are added automatically to your chart of accounts the first time you check the Deduct withholding tax box on a sales
invoice:
Two accounts are created in the Assets group, because the money they represent technically belongs to the business until it is eventually
used to pay taxes owed. They are:
• Withholding tax - This account records amounts your customers have paid to the tax authority that are available to offset your tax
bill.
• Withholding tax receivable - This account records amounts your customers owe to the tax authority on your behalf but have not
yet paid. If withholding tax had not been deducted from sales invoice balances, amounts in this account would be included in
Accounts receivable.
When the Deduct withholding tax box is checked on a sales invoice, two options appear in a dropdown box, Rate and Amount:
OR
Because withholding tax is independent of any other tax code that may be applied, percentage amounts are calculated on the total due,
including other taxes. (Remember, withholding tax is not an additional tax, only a way for the tax authority to collect prospective taxes
earlier.)
Notes
If various line items on the sales invoice are subject to different withholding rates, calculate the total amount to be withheld
manually and enter as an Amount. You may wish to explain the calculation in the Notes field of the sales invoice.
If withholding tax in your jurisdiction is not calculated on the total amount of an invoice, either (a) calculate the withholding
tax manually and enter an Amount or (b) lower the withholding percentage to offset any tax codes applied. Option (a) is
usually easier.
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Example
Sample Consulting invoices Brilliant Industries for advertising design services worth 1,000. (For clarity of illustration, all
other transactions have been removed.) In this case, no tax is due directly on the design services, but 10% must be withheld
by the customer against expected income tax. So the Deduct withholding tax box on the sales invoice is checked, and a
Rate of 10% is entered. The resulting sales invoice shows the customer how much to withhold from payment:
In the Customers tab, a new column appears showing Withholding tax receivable:
When the customer remits the withheld tax, either the customer or the tax authority will send you some form of “proof” of the remittance (a
certificate, account statement, voucher, etc.). This “proof” can be recorded in Manager by clicking on the Withholding tax receivable
figure in the Customers tab, then on New Receipt :
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Click Create to record the transaction. The transaction amount will move from Withholding tax receivable to Withholding tax .
Example
Sample Consulting receives proof of remittance by Brilliant Industries. It enters a transaction for 100. The balance sheet
shows the movement between the two accounts:
When a tax filing is made, the balance of Withholding tax is available to offset your tax due. Indicate the amount being applied on the
appropriate forms of the tax authority and submit with your filing. This step in the process does not occur in Manager, only in your tax
filing.
To record your application of available withholding tax credits in Manager, use a journal entry. Credit Withholding tax and debit either:
• An appropriate expense account, such as Taxes paid, if the tax is an obligation of the business, or
• An equity account, such as Owner’s equity or Capital accounts, depending on your form of organization, if the tax is an obligation of
the owner or partners.
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Example
When it submits its tax filing, Sample Consulting applies the 100 from Withholding tax to its total bill. Sample Consulting is
a sole proprietorship, so its income is taxed on the owner’s tax return. Therefore, it makes a journal entry debiting Owner’s
equity and crediting Withholding tax. That account is zeroed out on the Balance Sheet.
Tax you withhold from payments to suppliers is a liability of your company, because you owe that tax to the tax authority. So you must add a
Withholding tax payable account to the Liabilities group of your chart of accounts. Follow procedures in another Guide to add the account:
When entering a purchase invoice to which tax withholding applies, you have two concerns:
• Posting the full amount of purchases to the appropriate asset or expense accounts. This ensures fixed assets, inventory, and
operating expenses are reflected at their actual costs. (Remember, withholding tax is not an expense of your company, so it should
not affect other financial results. You are only acting as collection agent for the tax authority of amounts that will eventually be due
from the supplier.)
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These two goals mean you need at least two line items on the purchase invoice. First, record purchased line items at their full costs, using as
many lines as necessary, just as though no withholding tax was involved. Post these line items to the same accounts you normally would.
Second, add a line item for withholding tax at the amount indicated on your supplier’s sales invoice. Enter the withholding tax as a
negative quantity so it reduces the balance due on the purchase invoice. Post this line item to Withholding tax payable, the account you
created for this purpose.
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Example
Sample Consulting purchases stationery worth 500 from Summit Supplies. Summit’s sales invoice shows a 10% deduction
for withholding tax is necessary. Sample enters the following information in its purchase invoice:
450 is posted to Accounts payable and 50 to the Withholding tax payable liability account:
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When withheld tax is remitted to the tax authority, a payment is posted to the Withholding tax payable account.
Example
Sample Consulting remits the 50 withheld from its payment to Summit Supplies via a bank payment:
The liability is cleared, but the reduced Accounts payable balance remains unchanged. The expense account where the
purchase was originally posted is also not affected:
Submitting notifications
• File necessary information with the tax authority to indicate which suppliers’ withheld tax you are remitting.
For assistance preparing notifications, drill down on the balance (or dash, if the balance is zero) of Withholding tax payable. All relevant
transactions will be listed.
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Example
Sample Consulting drills down on its Withholding tax payable account balance and obtains the following list:
Late payment fees are recorded in a separate tab, Late Payment Fees . For fees determined automatically, Manager will enable this tab
when the first late payment fee is assessed. No action by the user is necessary.
If late payment fees will be added, deleted, or edited manually, but the tab is not yet enabled, click on Customize below the left
navigation pane. Check the box for Late payment fees. Then click Update :
The Due date field is blank by default, but offers two choices, a fixed calendar date or net payment days:
OR
If no date is entered, Manager will assign the Invoice date as the Due date when you create the sales invoice.
By default, late payment fees are not charged. To determine them automatically, check the Late payment fees box in the list of options. An
auxiliary rate field will appear. Enter the percentage to be used for determining the late fee:
Manager will now automatically generate a notice that a late fee is due on the first day after the due date. If the sales invoice remains
overdue, additional late payment fees will be determined on the same day of each following month until the invoice is paid in full. The fee is
compounded by being calculated on the total balance due of the unpaid invoice, including any prior late fees.
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Note
If a late payment fee would become due on a day of the month that does not occur, such as the 31st of a 30-day month,
Manager will determine the fee on the latest day that does occur. So, for example, a late fee due on October 31st will next
be determined on November 30th. Subsequent fees will be determined December 30th and January 30th, then on February
28th (or 29th in leap years), March 28th, etc. This is done so one late payment fee falls in every calendar month.
When one or more sales invoices are eligible to be charged late payment fees, a notice appears when the Sales Invoices tab is entered:
Click on the yellow banner to see a list of sales invoices with pending late payment fees:
Click Create to assess the fee(s) for the first month of eligibility. If additional late payment fees are pending, the list of sales invoices and
the notice will appear again. Repeat the process until all pending late payment fees have been assessed and the notice no longer appears.
This repetitive approach is necessary because every monthly determination of late payment fees depends on the prior assessments.
Note
If more than one sales invoice is shown, a late payment fee will be generated for each one every time you click Create .
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Example
On June 1, 2018, a sales invoice is raised for 100.00 with payment terms of net 30 days and a monthly late payment fee of
1.5%:
The day the invoice becomes overdue, the pending late payment fee notice appears. A late payment fee is assessed, and
1.5% of the total is added. The invoice is sent to the customer again with a new balance due of 101.50. One month later, the
invoice remains unpaid, so another late payment fee is assessed, adding 1.5% of 101.50 (1.52), for total late fees of 3.02:
Late payment fees can be added manually on any desired schedule (daily, weekly, etc.). To add a fee, click New Late Payment Fee :
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Example
The sales invoice from the previous example continues to accrue late payment fees for eight months, accruing 12.65 in late
fees. Eventually, the customer asks whether the invoice can be settled for 10.00 in total late fees if payment is made within 3
days. The business agrees on the condition that 20.00 will be assessed if payment is late again. A manual late payment fee
is entered:
Note
When a late payment fee is added manually, it will be shown on the sales invoice whether or not the Late payment fees
box is checked.
To delete a late payment fee, go to the Late Payment Fees tab and click Edit beside the fee to be deleted. Click the Delete
button.
Example
Because all the automatically determined late payment fees in the previous examples will be replaced by the agreed 10.00
fee, they are deleted as described above. (Note that Batch Delete can be used.) Only the manually entered late
payment fee remains:
To edit a late payment fee, go to the Late Payment Fees tab and click Edit beside the relevant transaction. Modify any field and click
Update .
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Example
The payment in the previous example is late. So the 10.00 late payment fee that was entered manually is edited to 20.00:
Caution
If the first late payment fee is manually entered, Manager will not determine or notify you of subsequent automatic late
payment fees.
If a late payment fee is deleted after subsequent fees have been automatically determined and assessed, Manager will not
redetermine the deleted fee. However, if the latest fee is deleted, Manager will redetermine it automatically and notify you
it is pending.
No action on your part is required unless you wish to rename the account or place it into an existing group. Both steps are accomplished by
When cloning an existing sales invoice, everything is cloned into the new invoice, including quantity, unit price and discount:
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This may not be completely desirable if your prices have changed since you issued the prior invoice. But there is a quick way to remedy the
problem. If you need to refresh the unit price of an inventory or non-inventory item, click the X inside the Item field to clear it. Then select
the same item again:
This refreshes the Unit price field to the current sale price. Qty and Discount fields will not change:
As always, any aspect of the new invoice can be edited before clicking Create . And the same procedure works when editing an invoice
that has already been created.
Example
You have a customer who owes you 1,000 from a sales invoice:
At the same time you have made a credit purchase for 200 from this same business (as a supplier):
Instead of paying your customer 200 while receiving 1000, you can make a contra entry decreasing the balance due on your
sales invoice by the amount of the purchase invoice.
It makes no difference whether the sales or purchase invoice is larger; the procedure is identical. To make an offsetting contra entry, go to
the Journal Entries tab and click New Journal Entry :
In your journal entry, debit Accounts payable for the supplier by the smaller of the sales or purchase invoice balances. If the purchase
invoice has a reference number, it can be selected. Otherwise, leave the Invoice field blank. Credit Accounts receivable for the customer
and the sales invoice by the same amount.
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Example
The smaller amount in the example above is the 200 purchase invoice. So a journal entry is created:
If there are more invoices, do not select invoice numbers. Instead, enter as the contra amount the smaller of the total Accounts payable or
Accounts receivable balances for the business. (Check these in the Customers and Suppliers tabs.) Manager will automatically offset
outstanding sales and purchase invoices on the basis of oldest due dates. But still debit Accounts payable and credit Accounts receivable.
Example
After making the journal entry illustrated above, your purchase invoice will be marked as paid in full, even though your
payment was actually via contra entry:
NOTE
A credit note should not normally be used if the original transaction was a cash sale, because the sale will not have been
recorded in the customer’s subaccount in Accounts receivable. In such situations, a direct refund should usually be made via
a bank or cash payment under the Receipts & Payments tab. However, if the cash buyer has also been defined as a
customer and prefers an account credit rather than a cash refund, a credit note may be used.
Before credit notes can be created, the Credit Notes tab must be enabled. Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the
box for Credit Notes , and click Update below the list:
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• Manual method
Click the View button alongside the sales invoice issued for the goods or services being returned or adjusted:
Then click the Copy to button and select New Credit Note to open a credit note from the existing sales invoice:
A credit note entry screen will open, prefilled with information from the sales invoice. This avoids re-entering information manually. If the
customer is to receive a full refund, no changes to the credit note are required, because the credit note will match the original sales invoice:
If a customer is to receive a partial refund or credit, reduce quantities or amounts on the credit note to match. Remove line items for goods
or services not being adjusted. (If the price of an inventory item is being partially or fully refunded, but the item itself will not be returned,
enter the refund amount and change the quantity to be blank.)
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When finished editing, click Create to issue the credit note. Manager can automatically apply a sequential Reference number to the
credit note. (See below.)
The credit amount will be applied to the original sales invoice. If the customer has not paid or only partially paid the invoice, the balance due
on the invoice will be reduced by the credit note amount. If a credit note is applied to a fully paid sales invoice, the credit note amount will
be credited to the customer’s subaccount in Accounts receivable. Any credit balance will be automatically applied to the next (or the oldest
existing) sales invoice for that customer.
Manual method
If no sales invoice exists or can be found, create a credit note manually. In the Credit Notes tab, click on New Credit Note :
)
• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing credit notes and add 1.
• After a customer is selected, an optional Invoice field appears. If the credit note applies to a specific invoice, select it there:
• By default, a manually created credit note will show as Custom on the Description line. This option is correct for most situations.
The other option is Early payment discount, but should only be used when such a discount was offered on the the corresponding
sales invoice. General information about the credit note can be entered in the other field on the Description line.
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• Line items can be completed semi-automatically by selecting predefined inventory or non-inventory items in the Item field and
entering quantities. Or, they may be entered manually.
• Checkboxes at the bottom of the form offer some of the same options as when creating sales invoices.
• Lawyers who charge different rates for research than for courtroom time
• Repair technicians billing for time and materials
Billable Time is not a time clock. It does not record start or stop times of tasks. It cannot be used to monitor employee attendance or
directly support payslip generation.
Enable the Billable Time tab by clicking Customize below the left navigation pane, ticking the Billable Time box, and clicking
Update below the list:
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These accounts can be renamed under Settings Chart of Accounts , but cannot be deleted while the tab is in use. You can
assign them to Groups of your choosing and give them numerical Codes to indicate their positions on your Balance Sheet or Profit and Loss
Statement.
Note
The Billable Time tab can be used under cash basis accounting. But balances of these automatic accounts will never
show. Therefore, your financial position and performance will not be completely represented on your financial statements.
• A Customer must be selected from the dropdown list of predefined customers. If you do not select a customer, you will not be able
to invoice the billable time.
• Description allows you to record the nature of work performed during the billable time.
• Choose a Tracking Code (if enabled and desired). In the illustration above, this field is not visible because no tracking codes have
been defined.
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Example
Brilliant Consulting records billable time worked for Consolidated Holdings:
The entry is visible in the Billable Time tab. Its status shows as Uninvoiced:
Brilliant Consulting’s Summary (stripped of all other transactions) shows the result of the entry:
However, this field is not used for normal invoicing. Ignore it for now. Remember to click Update to save any changes. Invoicing of billable
time is described in another Guide.
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30%20AM
Define your custom field. This first example adds a single, free-text line for a staff member’s name. It is positioned to be first among custom
fields. A check mark indicates the field will show as a column in the Billable Time listing:
Additional fields can be added in the same way as the first. The second example adds a service type from a dropdown list, assigned to the
second position. Such lists help standardize time entries. More options are available, including paragraph text and images:
Now the Billable Time listing provides more useful information that can be used for searching and sorting:
Note
Entries made before defining custom fields must be edited if you want them to show the new information.
Note
This Guide uses an example from another Guide, in which Brilliant Consulting has recorded billable time for services to its
customer, Consolidated Holdings. Read that Guide first.
When you first record an instance of billable time, its status will be set to Uninvoiced.
Example
In the Billable Time tab, Brilliant Consulting sees the uninvoiced billable time amount of 250 for Consolidated
Holdings:
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Under the Uninvoiced column, click the amount for the customer you are invoicing.
Example
Brilliant searches for Consolidated Holdings, then clicks the uninvoiced balance:
Select the items you want to bill to the customer, then click New Sales Invoice .
Note
If you have also entered billable expenses for the customer, these will appear in the same list and can be selected for
invoicing along with billable time.
Example
Brilliant selects the billable time entry for 250 and clicks the button:
Example
Brilliant’s sales invoice lists the date and description for the billable time, the hours spent, and rate (as unit price):
If you wish to modify the invoice, especially to add additional line items, offer discounts, or mark up the billed time for extra profit, click
Edit , make any changes, and click Update . When you go back to the Billable Time tab, you will see the status of your uninvoiced
items has changed to Invoiced.
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Note
Discounts and markups of billable time on a sales invoice have no effect on the Profit and Loss Statement besides changing
the balance of Billable time - invoiced. This is because billable time does not represent an actual financial transaction until it
is invoiced. It is carried in Billable time - movement as imputed income, which can be modified during invoicing without
affecting any other account except Accounts receivable. This is distinctly different from billable expenses, which have real
costs, and for which discounts or markups mean reduced or increased profit.
Example
Brilliant verifies the status:
If you click the Edit button for the time entry in Billable Time , you will see the newly created sales invoice has been automatically
added to the Status field.
Example
Brilliant clicks to see the original time entry, which shows both the change of status and the relevant sales invoice:
Creating a sales invoice with billable time transfers the value of the time from the Billable time asset account to the Billable time - invoiced
account.
Example
Brilliant Consulting’s financial statements show the result of invoicing:
Note
You cannot add billable time to an existing sales invoice. Generate a sales invoice from the Customers tab first, then add
any other necessary line items.
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Before invoicing
Complete write-off
To abandon any attempt at billing the time the customer, go to the Billable Time tab:
From an accounting point of view, the billable time was a recoverable asset from the date it was recorded until you decided it should be
written off because it was imputed income. When it is written off, it becomes worthless. The amount will be removed from the Billable time
asset and Billable time - movement accounts. The record will, however, remain in the Billable Time tab.
If, for some reason, you decide to eventually invoice the customer for only part of the billable time, you can simply Edit the time entry.
Reduce either the time spent or rate by an appropriate amount.
During invoicing
While creating a sales invoice with billable time from the Customers tab, you can write off or write down any billable time line item. First,
follow the invoicing procedures described in another Guide. When the new sales invoice appears, immediately click the Edit button at
the top of its view screen:
Check the Discount box. Select Percentage or Exact amount and enter the discount, 20% in this example:
A 100% discount is financially equivalent to a complete write-off. A lower percentage means you are absorbing some of the customer’s
expense, but not all. Either way, the sales invoice will indicate the discount you are providing the customer:
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After invoicing
After invoicing, billable time is no different financially from any other invoice line item. If it cannot be recovered from the customer, it must
eventually be written off or written down. This can be done by writing it off as a bad debt with a journal entry or by reducing the customer’s
obligation with a credit note.
Writing off billable time converts it from an asset in Accounts receivable to an expense in your bad debts account. See another Guide for
instructions on writing off bad debts. Note, in particular, that the journal entry will not write off billable time explicitly. Instead, it will write off
all or a portion of Accounts receivable to the bad debts account.
You can however, use more than one expense account to post bad debts. If desired, you could add an account specifically for unrecoverable
time billing and post billable time there as you write it off or down. Or, you could post it to ordinary expense accounts according to the
nature of the time. For example, an unrecoverable travel time entry could be written off to your own wages account.
You can use credit notes to reduce specific amounts owed on sales invoices for unrecoverable billable time. The income from billable time
was moved from the Billable time - movement income account to the Billable time - invoiced income account when the sales invoice was
created. Manager will allow you post a credit note line item to Billable time - invoiced:
Such an entry reduces the balance in Accounts receivable for the customer selected. If the sales invoice number is selected on the credit note,
the write-down will be applied to that specific invoice. Otherwise, it will be available for general application to amounts owed by the
customer:
Enable the Billable Expenses tab by clicking Customize below the left navigation pane, ticking the Billable Expenses box, and
clicking Update below the list:
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These accounts can be renamed under Settings Chart of Accounts , but cannot be deleted while the tab is in use. You can
assign them to Groups of your choosing and give them numerical Codes to indicate their positions on your Balance Sheet or Profit and Loss
Statement.
Notes
Prior to version 19.12.5, Manager used two different automatic accounts. Billable expenses - markup is converted by
version 19.12.5 (or later) to Billable expenses - invoiced. Any assigned code and group are retained. Billable expenses -
unrecoverable, was replaced by Billable expenses - cost. That new account must be edited in the Settings tab to add a
code or assign it to any group or subgroup other than Expenses.
The Billable Expenses tab can be used under cash basis accounting. But balances of some automatic accounts will not
show until a receipt is entered against the relevant sales invoice. Therefore, your financial position and performance will not
be completely represented on your financial statements.
• Expense Claims
• Purchase Invoices
• Journal Entries
• Debit Notes
Note
Enter a debit note when you receive a credit note (or equivalent) from a supplier for goods or services originally posted to
Billable expenses on a purchase invoice. The result will be a negative billable expense.
To enter a billable expense, post the applicable line item to the Billable expenses asset account. Two additional fields will appear:
• Select the Customer from the dropdown list. A customer must be defined under the Customers tab before a billable expense can
be entered on its behalf.
Line items categorized this way will appear as disbursements under the Billable Expenses tab.
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Example
Sample Manufacturing Company buys materials on behalf of its customer, Consolidated Holdings, entering a purchase
invoice:
Any expense categorized this way will appear on the Balance Sheet in the Billable expenses asset account instead of inflating your expenses.
Example
Stripped of other transactions, Sample Manufacturing’s balance sheet shows the billable expense asset:
Amounts under Billable expenses are cleared by invoicing them to the customer, as described in another Guide.
Note
You have two options when taxes apply to recording of billable expenses:
(1) If a tax is nonrecoverable, such as a sales tax, include it in the unit price of the billable expense and do not apply a tax
code. The tax will be passed directly to the customer for reimbursement and will not affect your tax liability. You (and your
customer) will lose separate visibility of the tax. However, that will not matter, because neither of you can claim the tax to
offset tax liabilities. The tax is effectively part of the price of whatever was purchased.
(2) If a tax is recoverable, such as a value-added tax, apply the tax code to the line item. The unit price can be either tax-
exclusive or tax-inclusive, but, when tax-inclusive, you must check the box indicating Amounts are tax-inclusive. In
either case, only the tax-exclusive billable expense will be passed to the customer. The tax amount will be posted to your
own tax liability account, where it will offset taxes payable to the tax authority.
Note
This Guide uses an example from another Guide, in which Sample Manufacturing has purchased materials worth 350 on
behalf of its customer, Consolidated Holdings. Read that Guide first.
When you first record a billable expense, its status will be set to Uninvoiced.
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Example
In the Billable Expenses tab, Sample Manufacturing sees the uninvoiced expense of 350 for Consolidated Holdings:
Under the Uninvoiced column, click the amount for the customer you are invoicing.
Example
Sample Manufacturing searches for Consolidated Holdings, then clicks the uninvoiced balance:
Select the items you want to bill to the customer, then click New Sales Invoice .
Example
Sample selects the billable expense entry for 350 and clicks the button:
Notes
If a debit note was posted to Billable expenses covering any of the billable expenses to be invoiced, be sure to check the
box for its negative entry, too. Otherwise, you will be overbilling your customer.
If you have also entered billable time for the customer, those entries will appear in the same list and can be selected for
invoicing along with billable expenses.
A sales invoice will be created instantly. The billable expense amount on the sales invoice is posted to Billable expenses - invoiced. The asset
in Billable expenses is transferred to the Billable expenses - cost expense account.
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Example
Samples’ sales invoice lists the date and amount of the billable expense:
If you wish to modify the sales invoice—adding other line items, applying a discount, marking the expenses up for additional profit or down
to forego expense recovery, or applying a tax code—click Edit . Make the changes, then click Update . Changing billable expense
amounts on a sales invoice affects only the amount posted to Billable expenses - invoiced. The asset transfer to Billable expenses - cost
remains the same. Any difference between the original cost and the invoiced amount will be reflected in net profit.
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Example
Sample Manufacturing decides to mark up the billable expense to 400. So it edits the sales invoice. The financial statements
show the result:
When you go back to the Billable Expenses tab after invoicing, you will see the status of your billable expenses has changed to
Invoiced.
Example
Sample verifies the status (without the markup in this illustration):
If you click the Edit button for the transaction in Billable Expenses , you will see the newly created sales invoice has been
automatically added to the source transaction.
Example
Sample clicks to see the original purchase invoice, which now shows the line item linked to the relevant sales invoice (again
without the markup):
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You cannot post directly to Billable expenses on a sales invoice. Instead, post the line item to Billable expenses - invoiced. This bypasses the
Billable expenses account and posts the billable expense directly to the Billable expenses - invoiced income account and Accounts receivable.
If no purchase has yet been recorded, the invoiced billable expense will be pure revenue.
Example
Sample knows it will pay a 500 meeting expense on behalf of Consolidated Holdings, so it adds that billable expense onto
the sales invoice for 350 just created. Financial statements reveal higher income, but not higher costs:
Later, when recording the purchase for the billable expense, post the line item to Billable expenses Customer Invoice. The cost of
the billable expense will appear in the Billable expenses - cost expense account.
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Example
Sample Manufacturing later pays the meeting expenses, allocating the payment as described above. The financial
statements reflect the change to Billable expenses - cost. And Cash at bank shows the offsetting credit:
If a billable expense has already been recorded, but is added to a sales invoice directly rather than through the normal process, revisit the
original purchase transaction and select the sales invoice to which it was added. The expense will then be removed from Billable expenses
and posted to *Accounts receivable, Billable expenses - invoiced, and Billable expenses - cost.
Caution
If the pre-existing purchase transaction is not revisited and edited as described above, the billable expense will remain in
the Billable expenses account. This will erroneously inflate your net income and overstate your assets.
For this reason, it is always best practice to enter billable expenses before creating a sales invoice in the Customers tab.
Then, be sure to select all desired billable expenses before creating the sales invoice.
Note
Prior to Manager version 19.11.91, billable expense write-offs were recorded within the Billable Expenses tab with a
distinct entry form. Write-downs were not possible. Version 19.11.91 simplified the billable expense functions and
eliminated that form. All billable expense write-offs and write-downs are now possible with ordinary features of the
program, providing more flexibility.
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Before invoicing
To abandon any attempt at recovering the expense from the customer, go to the Billable Expenses tab:
Simply change the posting account for the transaction to some expense account. The transaction ceases to record a billable expense and
instead records an ordinary expense that appears on your Profit and Loss Statement.
From an accounting point of view, the billable expense was a recoverable asset from the date it was incurred until you decided it should be
written off. Therefore, it was not truly an expense of your business, but of your customer’s. When it is written off, it becomes your expense.
The amount will be transferred from the Billable expenses asset account to the expense account you choose. Click Update to save the
change.
During invoicing
While creating a sales invoice with billable expenses from the Customers tab, you can write off or write down any billable expenses. First,
follow the invoicing procedures described in another Guide. When the new sales invoice appears, immediately click the Edit button at
the top of its view screen:
Check the Discount box. Select Percentage or Exact amount and enter the discount, 20% in this example:
A 100% discount is financially equivalent to a complete write-off. A lower percentage means you are absorbing some of the customer’s
expense, but not all. Either way, the sales invoice will indicate the discount you are providing the customer:
The discount will reduce the amount posted to the Billable expenses - invoiced account.
After invoicing
After invoicing, billable expenses are no different financially from any other invoice line item. If they cannot be recovered from the customer,
they can be written off or written down as bad debts. This converts them from assets in Accounts receivable to expenses in your bad debts
account. See another Guide for instructions on writing off bad debts.
You can use more than one expense account to post bad debts. If desired, you could add an account specifically for unrecoverable expenses
and post billable expenses there as you write them off or down. Or, you could post them to ordinary expense accounts according to the
nature of the expense. For example, an unrecoverable travel expense could be written off to your own travel expense account.
Billable expenses can also be credited to the customer with credit notes to reduce amounts owed on sales invoices. But Manager will not let
you post a credit note line item to Billable expenses. Unlike prices for regular goods and services, billable expenses are actual purchases you
made on behalf of the customer. Their value was fixed when you paid for them. Instead, post the credit note line item to Billable expenses -
invoiced. This will reduce Accounts receivable for the customer without affecting the cost you paid.
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Guides in this group cover ordering and buying goods or services on credit from suppliers.
7.1 Suppliers
7.1.1 Enter suppliers
A Supplier in Manager is an entity (person, business, or other organization) with whom you have or plan to have an Accounts payable
relationship. Suppliers in Manager are actually subaccounts of Accounts payable. You must first create a Supplier before you can:
• Make a deposit or advance against future work or delivery of goods by someone else
• Track your complete purchase and payment history with another entity
Not everyone from whom you buy must necessarily be a Supplier. You can make a cash purchase involving immediate payment without
creating a Supplier simply by entering a name as Payee when spending money from a cash account. But such transactions will not be
recorded in a history for that Payee, even if the Payee is already defined as a Supplier. Examples of purchases where a Supplier might not be
needed include:
To enable the Suppliers tab, click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box for Suppliers , and click Update
below the list.
Create a Supplier
Select the Suppliers tab, then click the New Supplier button:
Complete the entry. This information will appear on purchase invoices and similar documents:
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• Code is a short alphabetic or numeric designation of your supplier. If used, the code will appear after the supplier’s name on
transactions.
• Currency in which the supplier operates can be selected if a base currency has been set for the business. Transactions for the
supplier will be denominated in the designated currency.
• Email address is where documents will be emailed from within the program.
• Credit limit is informational. If used, the Suppliers tab listing will show available credit.
Your Supplier will now appear in the Suppliers tab. Suppliers are listed in alphabetical order according to their names. Use scrolling,
paging, and search functions to find them. The listing shows the number of purchase invoices created for a Supplier and the Supplier’s
Accounts payable balance. Other columns may appear, depending on tabs in use and setup of custom fields. Click on blue numbers for more
details of any column.
Codes can appear on completed forms after the Supplier’s name. To see codes on forms, follow instructions in this Guide.
You can also add custom fields for other information about your Suppliers. Under Settings , click Custom Fields and locate the list for
Suppliers. Click New Custom Field :
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Define your custom field. A checkbox allows you to determine whether the custom field will show as a column in the Suppliers tab list.
The Position field controls the order in which custom fields appear. Enter a number there, if desired. Click Create when finished.
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Example
You can add a custom field for a point of contact at your Supplier:
When the custom field is completed on a purchase invoice, the results (including a customer code) appear as below:
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General procedures for entering starting balances are found in another Guide. Read it first. Before you can enter any type of starting balance,
your suppliers must be created. Follow these procedures to enter them.
Click the blue balance for Accounts payable, then Edit beside the supplier’s name:
Click Update to save the change. The available supplier credit shows as a negative amount under the Accounts payable column in the
Suppliers tab:
Repeat for all suppliers with whom you have credit balances.
To enter a starting-balance invoice, go the Settings tab and click Starting Balances :
Click the blue balance for Accounts payable, then the blue figure for Unpaid invoices on the line for the supplier:
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Complete the unpaid purchase invoice in the same manner as a regular purchase invoice. See this Guide for purchase invoice instructions.
The Invoice date field will, by default, be prefilled with the date one day before your start date. Edit this to match the original invoice date
from your old accounting system. Only purchase invoices with invoice dates before your start date will be treated as starting balance
invoices.
If you have already partially paid a purchase invoice as of your start date, check the box for Partial payment:
A field will appear in which to enter the amount already paid to the supplier against the total purchase invoice amount.
Note
The Partial payment option is only available when the invoice date precedes your start date.
When finished, click Create to save the invoice. Repeat for all open purchase invoices preceding your start date.
Note
Starting balance purchase invoices affect only the monetary balance of suppliers’ subaccounts in Accounts payable. They do
not affect starting balances of inventory items. Those should be set to match the physical count on the start date. See this
Guide for more information.
• Annotating different departments or ordering centers at a single supplier (with each department being created as a distinct
supplier)
The code will, however, show in the Suppliers listing and can be entered as a search parameter in other tabs:
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Example
To show the supplier’s code on printed documents after the supplier’s name, insert {{ recipient.code }} in the line
containing {{ recipient.name }} as below:
But if you have entered any transactions, Manager will not allow you to delete a Supplier, because doing so would also delete all related
transactions. Instead, you can make a Supplier inactive. Edit the Supplier and check the Inactive box. Click Update and the Supplier
will no longer appear in active lists:
If the Supplier ever returns to active status, scroll to the bottom of the suppliers list, where you will see the Supplier’s name in light grey text
with strike-through markings. Click Edit next to the Supplier’s name:
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• Soliciting price quotes in advance of issuing a purchase order when suppliers’ current prices are unknown
If you accept a purchase quote from a supplier, it can be copied to a purchase order, purchase invoice, or goods receipt.
Before creating a purchase quote, enable the Purchase Quotes tab. Below the left navigation pane, click Customize , check the box for
Purchase Quotes , and click Update :
• Standard method
• By cloning
Standard method
In the Purchase Quotes tab, select New Purchase Quote :
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• Issue date will be prepopulated with today’s date. This may be edited.
• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing sales quotes and add 1.
• Line items can be entered semi-automatically by selecting inventory or non-inventory items in the Item field. Or they can be
entered manually. Tax codes can be selected.
Near the bottom of the screen are checkboxes for various options. Additional fields appear when some options are checked:
• When the Discount box is checked, options appear for Percentage or Exact amount. The discount entry must be made line item by
line item. Discounts would normally only be indicated if you have a prearranged agreement with the supplier.
• A Custom theme can be selected if any theme besides the default is active.
Note
While purchase quotes can be prepared for suppliers already defined in the Suppliers tab, they can also be created
without first defining a supplier. This is helpful when your acceptance of the purchase quote is doubtful, preventing
unnecessary clutter in your supplier database.
To create a purchase quote without specifying an entity in your supplier list, leave the Supplier field blank. Be aware,
however, if the purchase quote is copied to another transaction, no supplier name or address will carry forward. You will
have to define the supplier before other transaction forms can be completed.
By cloning
Repeat purchase quotes can be easily prepared by cloning previous ones. While viewing a similar purchase quote, click Clone . The new
purchase quote need not be identical to the previous one or even to the same supplier. Anything can be edited or added:
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When unit prices are not entered into a purchase quote, a form titled as a request for quotation is returned.
Example
Northwind Traders sends a purchase quote to Leka Trading for aniseed syrup. No taxes are indicated. (These can be added,
if necessary, to any resulting purchase invoice.) Nor is a discount entered, because Leka’s terms are unknown. Most
importantly, the Unit price field is left blank. The completed purchase quote looks like this, with the title changed:
The only difference between an unpriced request for quotation and a priced purchase quote is that unit prices are entered for the latter.
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Example
Northwind receives a sales quote from Leka Trading for the aniseed syrup at 13 each. Leka’s sales quote also includes the
VAT it will add to the order. Northwind edits the request for quotation from the previous example for its records, and the
title changes along with other information:
Unlike most records in Manager, purchase orders have no financial or inventory impact. They do not involve actual provision of services,
movement of inventory, or payment of money. Accordingly, they can be used for a variety of purposes:
• Inventory planning
• Supplier communication
Before creating a purchase order, enable the Purchase Orders tab. Below the left navigation pane, click Customize , check the box for
Purchase Orders , and click Update :
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Next, be sure the supplier to whom the purchase order will be sent has been defined in the Suppliers tab. Because of their wide
applicability, Manager allows purchase orders to be created in five different ways:
• Standard method
• By cloning
• From sales quotes
Standard method
In the Purchase Orders tab, select New Purchase Order :
• Issue date will be prefilled with today’s date, which may be edited.
• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing purchase orders and add
1.
• Line items can be entered semi-automatically by selecting inventory or non-inventory items in the Item field. Or they can be
entered manually. **Description**, Qty, and Unit price for each line item are entered in their fields.
Near the bottom of the screen are checkboxes for various options. Additional fields appear when some options are checked:
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• When the Discount box is checked, options appear for Percentage or Exact amount . The discount entry must be made line item by
line item.
• A Custom theme can be selected if any theme besides the default is active.
By cloning
Repeat purchase orders can be entered by cloning previous ones. While viewing a similar purchase order, click Clone . The new purchase
order need not be identical to the previous one. Anything can be edited or added:
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When items on the sales quote are purchased from several suppliers, several copies can be made and inapplicable line items deleted from
each supplier’s purchase order.
To enable the Purchase Invoices tab, click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box for Purchase Invoices , and
click Update below the list:
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• By cloning
Standard method
In the Purchase Invoices tab, click on New Purchase Invoice :
• A Due date can be entered from the supplier’s invoice. The date can be entered as By a certain date or Net in days:
If a date is not entered, Manager will automatically use the Invoice date as the Due date.
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• Invoice number can be the supplier’s sales invoice number or an internally assigned reference. If the box within the field is
checked, Manager will automatically assign a sequence number. The program will find the highest number among all existing
purchase invoices and add 1.
Caution
If automatic sequencing is used, the number assigned will be higher than any previously assigned number,
including suppliers’ numbers. Therefore, best practice is to use either all suppliers’ numbers or all automatic
numbers.
• The Order number field can be used to record your own purchase order number, if you issued one.
• If inventory locations have been defined and the Goods Receipts tab is not enabled, a field for Inventory location appears
below the Description field when the first inventory item is added to the purchase invoice:
Purchased inventory items are then assumed to be immediately available at the designated inventory location. However, if
Goods Receipts is enabled, the field does not appear, and assignment of purchased inventory items to inventory locations
occurs via the goods receipt.
• Line items can be completed semi-automatically by selecting predefined inventory or non-inventory items in the Item field. If they
are, Account, Description, and Unit price will fill automatically.
Near the bottom of the screen are checkboxes for various options. Additional fields appear when some options are checked:
• A checkbox allows you to indicate whether a Discount was applied. When checked, further options of Percentage or Exact amount
discounts appear.
• Note the option to indicate Amounts are tax inclusive. If this box is checked, tax amounts are deducted from the unit price;
otherwise they are added.
Click Create to generate the finished purchase invoice. (Note that in the illustration below, no discount has been applied.):
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It can also be located by drilling down in the Suppliers tab and clicking on the number of invoices for a particular supplier:
By cloning
For a repeat purchase, an existing purchase invoice can be duplicated by cloning. While viewing the existing purchase invoice, click Clone :
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The resulting purchase invoice can be edited, if necessary, in case of differences from the purchase order.
A purchase invoice entry screen appears. After the actual supplier is selected, a purchase invoice is created, carrying forward relevant
information.
Exactly as when creating a purchase invoice from a sales quote, select New Purchase Invoice from the Copy to dropdown box:
Again, select New Purchase Invoice from the Copy to dropdown box on the sales invoice:
As with other methods, select New Purchase Invoice from the Copy to dropdown box on the goods receipt:
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• Customer subscriptions
• Insurance premiums
• Rent
• Utilities payments
First method
The first method for creating a new recurring invoice is to go to the Settings tab and click Recurring Sales Invoices or
Recurring Purchase Invoices :
OR
OR
Second method
The second method is to use the Copy to function while viewing an existing invoice you want to make recurring:
OR
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Whichever way you begin, enter Next issue date to establish when the first recurring invoice will be created:
If desired, enter how the optional Due Date should be calculated. If nothing is entered, Manager will assign the issue date as the due date:
Select an Interval to control how often this recurring invoice will be created:
Select whether the recurring invoice will be good Until further notice or Until a specific date:
Enter remaining information as if creating a regular sales invoice or purchase invoice and click Create . On the
Recurring Sales Invoices or Recurring Purchase Invoices screen, Next issue date will be updated based on the selected
Interval. Termination date (if set) will also be shown:
Caution
Recurring invoices in Manager are templates from which actual invoices will be generated later. Setting up a recurring
invoice does not affect your customer or supplier balances, customer or supplier statements, inventory, income, or
expenses. In fact, while Manager will notify you recurring invoices are pending, it will not automatically generate them for
you. This avoids problems if you need to edit an invoice before issuing it or you forget to enter a service modification.
Generate invoices
When one or more recurring invoices are due (or past due) to be issued, two notifications are provided. The first is a yellow counter window
in the left navigation pane showing the number of recurring invoices for which invoices are pending (not the number of pending invoices,
which could be higher if you have not kept up by creating invoices that are due).
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Example
One recurring sales invoice has generated pending invoices. The left navigation pane shows:
The second notification occurs any time you go to the Sales Invoices or Purchase Invoices tabs. You will see a yellow notice that at
least one recurring invoice is pending:
Click on the yellow bar to review invoices to be generated, then press Create :
All pending invoices will be immediately created under the Sales Invoices or Purchase Invoices tab, depending on which you are
in. You can further Edit or View them without affecting future recurring invoices:
The recurring invoice will be removed from the list and no new invoices will be created from it. Cancelled recurring invoices cannot be
restored. They must be recreated from scratch.
Skip an invoice
If recurring invoices must be skipped, but routine invoicing will resume in the future, click Edit for the recurring invoice in Settings .
Set a new Next issue date, then click Update to save the change.
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Example
Your customer’s next recurring sales invoice for monthly service should be generated on 24 September 2015:
Your customer pauses the service subscription for one month; therefore, no invoice should be issued on 24 September. The
next invoice should be issued on 24 October, so you edit the recurring sales invoice in Settings :
Example
Northwind Traders purchases 100 units of an inventory item at a unit price of 4.00. Northwind’s supplier adds a shipping
charge of 20.00. The fully delivered average cost of the items is not 4.00, but 4.20.
• Manual allocation
Manual allocation
To manually allocate freight-in costs to an inventory item, add a separate line item to a purchase invoice or cash payment form. Choose the
same inventory item, but leave the Qty field blank. Edit the Description field to describe the freight-in costs.
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Example
Northwind’s purchase and related freight-in cost are manually entered as below:
The freight-in cost is added to the average cost of the item without affecting the quantity on hand:
Notes
Manual allocation is the only method available for cash payments (non-credit purchases).
It should be used whenever freight-in costs of separate inventory items can be determined independently, such as from
separate line items on shipping invoices.
Manual allocation should also be used when freight-in costs are not proportional to line item amounts, such as when
inexpensive but heavy items cost more to ship than lighter but more expensive items. Just add multiple line items and
allocate the separate freight-in costs to their appropriate inventory items. Of course, to use this method, freight-in costs
attributable to different inventory items must be separately determinable.
When recording purchases with purchase invoices, freight-in can be added to inventory cost by adding a line item and selecting Freight-in in
the Item field. As for manual allocation, the Qty field can be left blank. Or it can be used to force Manager to calculate an Amount:
Example
In the same situation as the previous example, Northwind Traders enters a purchase invoice and selects Freight-in in the
Item field:
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If you record the purchase of multiple inventory items on the same purchase invoice, you do not need to manually calculate the freight-in
cost per inventory item. Instead, add a line item and select Freight-in in the Item field. Leave the Qty field blank or use it to force calculation
of a Freight-in Amount. Manager will distribute the freight-in Amount proportionally (based on total amounts) to all inventory items
purchased. This is exactly the same process described above for automatic distribution to a single item. But in the prior case, all freight-in
cost went to the single item because it constituted 100 percent of the purchase.
Example
Northwind purchases two items from the same supplier and wants to distribute freight-in costs proportionally. It enters the
following purchase invoice:
• Customs charges
For these situations, both manual allocation and automatic distribution are available. Manual allocation can be used in all cases. Automatic
distribution can be used under limited circumstances and includes drawbacks some users (or their accountants or auditors) may not like.
Manual allocation is most convenient when only one or very few inventory items are involved. (But see the Note below on a simple way to
enter data for many items.) It is required when freight-in costs are not proportionally distributed according to line item totals.
To use the manual allocation method, choose the inventory item to which a freight-in charge applies when entering the payment or
purchase invoice to the freight-in supplier, but leave Qty blank. Edit the description to describe the freight-in charge. Enter the freight-in
amount in the Unit price field. Repeat this process for every inventory item to which freight-in charges are being allocated. Dates on forms
for the purchase and freight-in do not need to match. Average costs will be correctly adjusted as of the transaction date for the freight-in
charge.
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Example
Northwind purchases the same two inventory items from the same supplier as in the last example. They are shipped by a
separate shipping company at different times. The freight-in charges are billed by the shipping company on the same sales
invoice, broken out by inventory item. The freight-in charges are not proportional, so manual allocation is mandatory. The
payment form or purchase invoice is completed as below:
Freight-in charges are allocated differently to inventory item average costs than in the previous automatic distribution
example:
Note
Entering freight-in charges manually for purchases involving many inventory items may seem tedious. But there is a simple
shortcut that can streamline the process. View the payment or purchase invoice by which the items were purchased. Click
Clone to generate a purchase form of the same type (payment or purchase invoice) listing all the same inventory items.
Edit the form for the different Payee or Supplier. Delete quantities and enter the desired freight-in allocations in
appropriate Unit price fields. Click Create .
A shortcoming of this method is that payments can only be cloned to payments and purchase invoices to purchase
invoices. So you cannot generate a freight-in purchase invoice in this way if the original purchase was by cash payment. Nor
can you create a payment form if the original purchase was by purchase invoice. In practical application, however, these
restrictions are usually not limiting.
Automatic distribution is most convenient when there are many inventory items affected by the same freight-in charge. But it can only be
used when all these circumstances exist:
• Inventory items to which freight-in charges apply were all purchased via the same purchase invoice. (Automatic distribution cannot
be used if they were purchased via cash payment.)
• The purchase invoice does not predate a lock date set to prevent alteration of prior account periods’ records.
• Both the original supplier and the separate freight-in supplier are denominated in the same currency.
• A separate balance sheet clearing account must be created and used. This account can be an asset or liability account, since its
normal balance will be zero.
• Prior purchase invoices for inventory items must be modified with line items not on the original supplier’s sales invoices. This could
cause confusion if disputes arise or lead to adverse findings by auditors.
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The automatic distribution method requires two separate transactions. First, create a payment or purchase invoice for the freight-in supplier.
Post the freight-in amount to Freight clearing or a similarly named balance sheet account. Second, reopen the original purchase invoice on
which affected inventory items were purchased. Add two line items to it. On the first, select Freight-in in the Item field. Make sure Qty is
blank (not zero). Enter the freight-in charge as the Unit price. On the second added line, leave Item blank. Select the freight clearing
account. Enter the freight-in charge as a negative number in Unit price.
Example
Northwind Traders buys the same two inventory items. They are shipped by a separate shipping company. Northwind
enters the purchase invoice with no freight-in charges. When the sales invoice for shipping charges arrives, Northwind
enters another purchase invoice for the shipping supplier, posting the charge to Freight clearing.
Northwind then reopens the original purchase invoice for the inventory items, adds the Freight-in line and a second
reversing line:
The clearing account is zeroed and average costs are adjusted as below. The result is identical to entering Freight-in using
the automatic distribution method when freight-in charges are invoiced by the supplier of the inventory items (as in the
example two above):
Note
Whether using manual allocation or automatic distribution, if there are additional suppliers, such as for customs fees or
warehouse charges, the same process must be repeated for each one.
Withholding tax may be a form of advance payment of income taxes, value added taxes, goods and service taxes, or some combination of
these and other types of tax. Because the entire process involves both buyers and sellers, Manager supports withholding tax accounting
through both its sales invoice and purchase invoice processes, though procedures are somewhat different.
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Notes
As implemented in Manager, withholding tax does not refer to deductions on payslips of taxes due from employees. These
are referred to as Payslip Deduction Items and are explained in another Guide.
Withholding tax cannot be applied on cash receipts or payments, because the full amount of the transaction must be
recorded. Further, cash receipts cannot be associated with individual customers’ subaccounts as withholding tax must.
Withholding tax functionality for sales invoices does not require activation of any new tabs. Nor do you need to create any new accounts. All
necessary accounts are added automatically to your chart of accounts the first time you check the Deduct withholding tax box on a sales
invoice:
Two accounts are created in the Assets group, because the money they represent technically belongs to the business until it is eventually
used to pay taxes owed. They are:
• Withholding tax - This account records amounts your customers have paid to the tax authority that are available to offset your tax
bill.
• Withholding tax receivable - This account records amounts your customers owe to the tax authority on your behalf but have not
yet paid. If withholding tax had not been deducted from sales invoice balances, amounts in this account would be included in
Accounts receivable.
When the Deduct withholding tax box is checked on a sales invoice, two options appear in a dropdown box, Rate and Amount:
OR
Because withholding tax is independent of any other tax code that may be applied, percentage amounts are calculated on the total due,
including other taxes. (Remember, withholding tax is not an additional tax, only a way for the tax authority to collect prospective taxes
earlier.)
Notes
If various line items on the sales invoice are subject to different withholding rates, calculate the total amount to be withheld
manually and enter as an Amount. You may wish to explain the calculation in the Notes field of the sales invoice.
If withholding tax in your jurisdiction is not calculated on the total amount of an invoice, either (a) calculate the withholding
tax manually and enter an Amount or (b) lower the withholding percentage to offset any tax codes applied. Option (a) is
usually easier.
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Example
Sample Consulting invoices Brilliant Industries for advertising design services worth 1,000. (For clarity of illustration, all
other transactions have been removed.) In this case, no tax is due directly on the design services, but 10% must be withheld
by the customer against expected income tax. So the Deduct withholding tax box on the sales invoice is checked, and a
Rate of 10% is entered. The resulting sales invoice shows the customer how much to withhold from payment:
In the Customers tab, a new column appears showing Withholding tax receivable:
When the customer remits the withheld tax, either the customer or the tax authority will send you some form of “proof” of the remittance (a
certificate, account statement, voucher, etc.). This “proof” can be recorded in Manager by clicking on the Withholding tax receivable
figure in the Customers tab, then on New Receipt :
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Click Create to record the transaction. The transaction amount will move from Withholding tax receivable to Withholding tax .
Example
Sample Consulting receives proof of remittance by Brilliant Industries. It enters a transaction for 100. The balance sheet
shows the movement between the two accounts:
When a tax filing is made, the balance of Withholding tax is available to offset your tax due. Indicate the amount being applied on the
appropriate forms of the tax authority and submit with your filing. This step in the process does not occur in Manager, only in your tax
filing.
To record your application of available withholding tax credits in Manager, use a journal entry. Credit Withholding tax and debit either:
• An appropriate expense account, such as Taxes paid, if the tax is an obligation of the business, or
• An equity account, such as Owner’s equity or Capital accounts, depending on your form of organization, if the tax is an obligation of
the owner or partners.
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Example
When it submits its tax filing, Sample Consulting applies the 100 from Withholding tax to its total bill. Sample Consulting is
a sole proprietorship, so its income is taxed on the owner’s tax return. Therefore, it makes a journal entry debiting Owner’s
equity and crediting Withholding tax. That account is zeroed out on the Balance Sheet.
Tax you withhold from payments to suppliers is a liability of your company, because you owe that tax to the tax authority. So you must add a
Withholding tax payable account to the Liabilities group of your chart of accounts. Follow procedures in another Guide to add the account:
When entering a purchase invoice to which tax withholding applies, you have two concerns:
• Posting the full amount of purchases to the appropriate asset or expense accounts. This ensures fixed assets, inventory, and
operating expenses are reflected at their actual costs. (Remember, withholding tax is not an expense of your company, so it should
not affect other financial results. You are only acting as collection agent for the tax authority of amounts that will eventually be due
from the supplier.)
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These two goals mean you need at least two line items on the purchase invoice. First, record purchased line items at their full costs, using as
many lines as necessary, just as though no withholding tax was involved. Post these line items to the same accounts you normally would.
Second, add a line item for withholding tax at the amount indicated on your supplier’s sales invoice. Enter the withholding tax as a
negative quantity so it reduces the balance due on the purchase invoice. Post this line item to Withholding tax payable, the account you
created for this purpose.
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Example
Sample Consulting purchases stationery worth 500 from Summit Supplies. Summit’s sales invoice shows a 10% deduction
for withholding tax is necessary. Sample enters the following information in its purchase invoice:
450 is posted to Accounts payable and 50 to the Withholding tax payable liability account:
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When withheld tax is remitted to the tax authority, a payment is posted to the Withholding tax payable account.
Example
Sample Consulting remits the 50 withheld from its payment to Summit Supplies via a bank payment:
The liability is cleared, but the reduced Accounts payable balance remains unchanged. The expense account where the
purchase was originally posted is also not affected:
Submitting notifications
• File necessary information with the tax authority to indicate which suppliers’ withheld tax you are remitting.
For assistance preparing notifications, drill down on the balance (or dash, if the balance is zero) of Withholding tax payable. All relevant
transactions will be listed.
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Example
Sample Consulting drills down on its Withholding tax payable account balance and obtains the following list:
Example
Derek purchases 2 items for $100 each. The transaction would normally be recorded as follows:
The problem
A problem can arise if you are charged tax or when a discount is applied. Your supplier might use either of two methods for calculating taxes
and discounts:
1. Calculate tax and discount on each line item individually, round the amounts, then total them.
Most automated accounting systems (including Manager) use the first method, because individual line items are often posted to different
accounts and it is necessary that rounding be applied to each line item. The second method is typically used when invoices are prepared
manually, because fewer calculations are needed when taxes and discounts are calculated on the total invoice amount rather than each line
item. If your supplier uses the second method, the calculated total in Manager may be different from the total on the supplier’s invoice.
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Example
Derek buys two different items from his supplier for $11.55 and $24.59 and receives a 3% discount. No tax is assessed.
Derek creates a purchase invoice in Manager (using the first method), so the discount is applied to individual amounts, the
line figures are rounded, then the two discounted prices are totaled. $11.55 is discounted to $11.2035 and rounded to
$11.20. $24.59 is discounted to $23.8523 and rounded to $23.85. The total using the first method is $35.05, shown on his
purchase invoice as below:
But Derek’s supplier used the second method. Both prices were added before any discount, that is:
So there is a small difference between Manager and Derek’s supplier. Derek is tempted to ignore it. But if he wants his
accounting for Accounts payable and Tax payable (if tax codes are used) to be correct, he must resolve the difference.
Note
The example shown above used discounts to illustrate the problem. Similar discrepancies can occur when tax codes are
used.
The solution
If a rounding discrepancy like this occurs, do not enter any amount in the Discount column on your purchase invoice. Instead, calculate
discounted unit prices manually and enter those in the Unit price fields. This gives you complete freedom to adjust the discounted,
rounded amounts manually so they add up to the total amount charged on the sales invoice received from the supplier. The selection of
which line item price to adjust is arbitrary and will generally have negligible impact on average unit cost of any inventory items involved.
Regardless, the difference must be taken up somewhere so your purchase invoice total matches the supplier’s sales invoice.
Example
Derek manually calculates discounted unit prices. He rounds and enters them in his purchase invoice. But he notices his
total is $0.01 low compared to the supplier’s invoice. So he adds one cent to the first unit price:
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If a discrepancy occurs due to tax calculations, enter into the Unit price field the tax-inclusive price and check the box on the purchase
invoice form to make the amounts tax-inclusive:
• A receipt or payment is posted to a correct invoice to which Manager has already distributed money automatically because an
invoice was not selected during a previous transaction entry.
Overpaid invoices are considered bookkeeping errors. Manager will display overpaid invoices at the top of Sales Invoices or
Purchase Invoices tab listings so you can see and can resolve them. You should resolve overpaid status before sending out customer
statements.
This will reveal all transactions posted against the specific invoice (including the invoice itself) and a running balance:
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Example
Brilliant Industries was issued a sales invoice for 1,000. By mistake, Brilliant paid 1,100, resulting in overpayment of 100 on
the invoice:
To resolve this issue, you edit the transaction where you recorded the receipt of 1,100 and split the amount so only 1,000 is
allocated to the invoice and 100 remains unallocated:
After the transaction is updated, the invoice status shows Paid in full:
The unallocated 100 is applied to any unpaid invoices Brilliant has, oldest due date first, or remains as a credit to be applied
to future invoices.
Sometimes overpayment on invoices can be due to mixing automatic and explicit allocations. When you record a receipt from a customer or
payment to a supplier, but do not specify the invoice, Manager will automatically allocate the transaction to the unpaid invoice with the
oldest due date. But if the transaction was intended for a specific invoice, it should be recorded that way.
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Example
Brilliant Industries has two unpaid sales invoices. The first is for 5,000 and the second for 150:
They pay 150 and you record this receipt without specifying an invoice. Manager allocates 150 to the oldest invoice,
decreasing its balance due from 5,000 down to 4,850, while keeping the balance due on the second invoice unchanged:
Then you receive 5,000 with a remittance advice specifying the payment is for the earlier invoice. If you allocate 5,000 to the
first invoice, you would end up with over-payment of 150 on first invoice and the balance due still being 150 on the second
invoice:
Obviously, Brilliant doesn’t owe you anything. So you should click on the negative Balance due amount, find the payment
of 150 that was automatically allocated to the bigger invoice and reallocate it to the smaller invoice. Now all invoices are
shown correctly and the customer’s Accounts receivable balance is correct:
Example
You have issued a sales invoice to Antonio Moreno Taquería for $3,370.00 and Manager has automatically applied credit
of $2,345.30, leaving a balance due of $1,024.70:
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This automatic credit allocation happens when the customer or supplier has a pre-existing credit balance. In other words, you owe a
customer money or a supplier owes you money. Normally this is the desired outcome. You want any credits to be automatically applied to
invoices, so you are not trying to collect from a customer more than is really owed to you and you don’t pay suppliers more than you really
owe them. For example, if a customer has a credit balance of $100 due to a credit note, Manager will remember this until the next invoice is
issued to that customer and will automatically apply the $100 credit to it without your having to keep track of it. But if you are certain the
customer or supplier didn’t have a credit balance, such an automatic credit allocation indicates something has been recorded incorrectly.
In the example above, the problem is easy to diagnose. A bank receipt was applied to the sales invoice. You can look up that receipt in
Manager, determine who it was from, and decide whether an error was made. Or, the customer may have simply overpaid its account, in
which case everything is as it should be.
But suppose you know this customer didn’t have any credit with your company, and the mini-statement on the invoice refers to something
like a starting balance or a credit note. So you want to discover the origin of this credit. The best way is to view the customer ledger by
going to the Customers tab:
Locate the customer and click the balance in the Accounts Receivable column.
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Example
To track down more information about the sales invoice in the first example, click the customer’s balance:
There, you see invoice 2650 for $1,284.60 and a receipt for the same amount on 08/05/2017, which was payment for that
invoice. However, you also see another receipt for $2,345.30 on 26/04/2017, which you suspect was not paid by this
customer. After looking at your bank statement, you discover this amount was actually paid by different customer and
attributed to Antonio Moreno Taquería in error. You can Edit the receipt to fix the error and attribute the receipt to
correct customer. Any other source would have been revealed in the same manner.
You take one final look at customer ledger to verify all transactions belong to this customer:
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Some bookkeeping errors can be discovered immediately; some can take weeks or even months to discover. Used properly, Manager’s
double-entry accounting system ensures all errors will be eventually discovered.
In the example above, even if you didn’t notice the bookkeeping error, eventually the customer who actually paid $2,345.30 on 26/04/2017
would complain that its customer statements did not reflect the payment. Or your Aged Receivables report would show that customer’s
account becoming more and more overdue. Sooner or later, you would discover the payment having been attributed to the wrong
customer.
Note
While the example illustrates an erroneous credit being automatically applied to a sales invoice because of incorrect
attribution of a receipt from a customer, similar mistakes can happen with purchase invoices and payments to suppliers.
Detection and correction procedures are the same.
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Example
You have a customer who owes you 1,000 from a sales invoice:
At the same time you have made a credit purchase for 200 from this same business (as a supplier):
Instead of paying your customer 200 while receiving 1000, you can make a contra entry decreasing the balance due on your
sales invoice by the amount of the purchase invoice.
It makes no difference whether the sales or purchase invoice is larger; the procedure is identical. To make an offsetting contra entry, go to
the Journal Entries tab and click New Journal Entry :
In your journal entry, debit Accounts payable for the supplier by the smaller of the sales or purchase invoice balances. If the purchase
invoice has a reference number, it can be selected. Otherwise, leave the Invoice field blank. Credit Accounts receivable for the customer
and the sales invoice by the same amount.
Example
The smaller amount in the example above is the 200 purchase invoice. So a journal entry is created:
If there are more invoices, do not select invoice numbers. Instead, enter as the contra amount the smaller of the total Accounts payable or
Accounts receivable balances for the business. (Check these in the Customers and Suppliers tabs.) Manager will automatically offset
outstanding sales and purchase invoices on the basis of oldest due dates. But still debit Accounts payable and credit Accounts receivable.
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Example
After making the journal entry illustrated above, your purchase invoice will be marked as paid in full, even though your
payment was actually via contra entry:
• Return of goods
A debit note makes all necessary corrections to inventory, expense, and tax accounts. It does not record actual receipt of money from the
supplier, but only adjusts the supplier’s balance in Accounts payable. A debit note can be created regardless of whether the supplier has yet
been paid for the goods or services.
NOTE
A debit note should not normally be used if the original transaction was a cash purchase, because the purchase will not
have been recorded in the supplier’s subaccount in Accounts payable. In such situations, a direct receipt should usually be
entered in the Receipts & Payments tab. In these cases, enter quantities returned to the supplier as negative numbers.
However, if the cash seller has also been defined as a supplier and offers an account credit rather than a cash refund, a
debit note may be used.
Before debit notes can be created, the Debit Notes tab must be enabled. Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the
box for Debit Notes , and click Update below the list:
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• By default, today’s Issue date is prepopulated. Normally, this date is edited to match the date of the supplier’s credit note.
• Reference can be used to enter the supplier’s credit note number. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will assign a
number automatically. The program will find the highest number among all existing debit notes and add 1.
Caution
If automatic sequencing is used, the number assigned will be higher than any previously assigned number,
including suppliers’ numbers. Therefore, best practice is to use either all suppliers’ numbers or all automatic
numbers.
• After a supplier has been selected, an optional Invoice field appears. If the debit note applies to a specific invoice, select it from the
dropdown list:
• Line items being returned or adjusted can be completed semi-automatically by selecting predefined inventory or non-inventory
items in the Item field and entering quantities. Or, they may be entered manually.
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Receiving a refund
If a supplier refunds the credit balance, receive money into a bank or cash account, allocating the refund to Accounts payable and the
supplier’s subaccount. When a receipt is recorded, the balance of Accounts payable to the supplier will move in the positive direction:
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Chapter 8: Inventory
Inventory includes tangible goods held for sale or production. Inventory management can be complex, and Manager’s behavior changes,
depending on which functional tabs are enabled. Read Guides in the Overview section first to see which capabilities you want to use.
8.1 Overview
8.1.1 Manage inventory - Part 1 Introduction
Inventory comprises goods held by a business for sale or production. It does not include fixed assets, such as equipment or buildings. Nor
does it include tools or consumable supplies used during operations. The value of inventory is an asset, because it can generate future
income. Therefore, it appears on a company’s balance sheet.
So inventory must be counted and valued. It must be tracked as it is produced, bought, or sold. Manager includes many features to help
manage inventory. Some are essential; others are optional. Program behavior changes, depending on which tools are used. This Guide
explains how various tools and capabilities interact so you can decide which to use in your situation. It is divided into three parts:
Introduction, Continuation, and Conclusion. You are reading Part 1 Introduction.
The three parts of this Guide do not furnish detailed, step-by-step instructions for enabling functional tabs, completing transaction forms, or
generating reports. Those can be found in other Guides, to which hyperlinks are provided. Instead, they focus on relationships between the
inventory management features of the program:
• Inventory items are defined elements by which inventory is managed. They can have purchase and sales prices, specified tax codes
to be applied, and individual units of measure. Their costs and revenues can be assigned to custom accounts. Most importantly,
they have standard item codes, names, and descriptions by which they can be referenced.
• Cash receipts and payments record transactions of inventory items paid at the time.
• Production orders record in-house manufacture of inventory items from other inventory items and non-inventory cost inputs.
• Inventory kits are data entry shortcuts for combinations of inventory items stocked individually but sold together under a single
identification. (The items may also be sold individually in other transactions.)
• Inventory locations are discrete places where inventory items are physically stored, such as different warehouses or shops.
• Inventory write-offs document the loss, damage, or other non-revenue-producing reduction of inventory.
• Inventory reports provide information on changes in quantities, values, or locations of inventory. They also list profitability and
price of inventory items.
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Note
Purchase orders and sales orders are not included in this discussion because they are not actual financial transactions and
have no impact on inventory. They are convenient shortcuts for recording orders to suppliers or from customers. And they
can by copied to other transactions that affect inventory. But in the current version of Manager, purchase orders do not
adjust inventory availability or backorder status. Nor do sales orders commit inventory to a particular customer or future
sales transaction.
Example
All three parts of this Guide illustrate various aspects of inventory management using an example company, Brilliant
Industries. Brilliant Industries sells electric lamps and lamp parts at wholesale. It is not required to collect or pay any taxes
on sales or purchases in its jurisdiction. Brilliant has 6 different items in inventory and assigns 3-digit item codes:
AND
So far, Brilliant Industries has enabled just three tabs related to inventory management ( Reports is always enabled for all
businesses):
• Customers
• Suppliers
• Inventory Items
Purchasing inventory
Inventory can be purchased with purchase invoices or cash payments.
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Example
Brilliant Industries buys an initial stock of inventory via a combination of purchase invoice and cash payment. ACME
Distributing presents its sales invoice upon delivery of the merchandise. So as soon as Brilliant enters the corresponding
purchase invoice, the items are considered to be in stock. Edison Electrical Supply sells only over the counter. So Brilliant’s
owner leaves Edison’s warehouse with purchased items in hand, having written a check on the spot.
Brilliant enables the Purchase Invoices tab. The Bank Accounts and Receipts & Payments tabs were enabled
when the company’s bank account was established. (As Brilliant enables tabs, it sets up all forms for automatic sequential
reference numbers under Form Defaults.) The two transactions are entered as below:
Since all transactions were complete when they were entered, there is no need for Brilliant Industries to enable the
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Goods Receipts tab. The Inventory Items list shows the results of the two purchases:
Average cost
Manager employs the perpetual average cost method for inventory valuation. This method divides the total acquisition cost of units of an
inventory item in stock by the number of that item in stock. Thus, if more units are acquired at a cost higher than the current average cost,
the average cost of all units will go up, no matter how many units are acquired or in stock or what their individual costs were.
When items are produced, the cost of inventory consumed is transferred to the new finished goods at the average cost of each input item.
Any non-inventory costs are also apportioned among the finished goods.
Producing inventory
When inventory items are produced in-house, production orders record consumption of resources and output of new finished goods.
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Example
Brilliant Industries can buy finished table lamps from ACME Distributing. But it can also produce them from parts purchased
from various suppliers. It decides to manufacture a batch of 3 table lamps. So it enables the Production Orders tab and
enters the following production order:
The inventory listing shows the increase in finished table lamps, as well as reductions in the three items that went into
production. Also notice that average cost of table lamps has declined because of the production order. The cost of input
items for a lamp (87.00 + 24.35 + 3.25 = 114.60) plus labor (75.00 / 3 = 25.00) is less (139.60) than the purchase cost of a
finished lamp (195.00). In other words, Brilliant Industries can assemble table lamps itself for less than it can buy them,
potentially allowing more profit:
Also note that total value of inventory has risen because of the 75.00 labor cost to manufacture 3 lamps. The company now
has more invested in its inventory. But it can also sell that same inventory for much more because of the value added
through manufacturing operations.
Selling inventory
Inventory can be sold with sales invoices or cash receipts.
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Example
Brilliant Industries sells products to Bob’s Hardware. It enables the Sales Invoices tab and records the sale on the
following sales invoice:
It also sells 1 case of LED bulbs to Lumen Lighting for cash, and enters that transaction as a receipt:
Quantities on hand have decreased for table lamps, 60 Watt bulbs, and LED bulbs:
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Because the goods were delivered immediately and either accompanied by a sales invoice or a cash receipt, Brilliant
Industries did not use the Delivery Notes tab. Manager treated all inventory movements as having happened
immediately.
Understanding backorders
When you have sold more inventory items than you own (have on hand) the situation is described as a backorder. That term is somewhat
misleading, because additional stock has not necessarily been ordered. This situation shows up in Manager as negative inventory quantities.
The negative quantity indicates how many units of the inventory item must be purchased or produced to satisfy existing sales.
Example
If Brilliant Industries had sold 3 cases of LEDs to Lumen Lighting in the previous example, a backorder situation would exist,
because only 2 had been purchased and were on hand. The inventory list would show a quantity on hand of -1:
Notice that total cost of this item has dropped to zero, and average cost is non-existent because there is no inventory.
Inventory reports
Four reports became available when the Inventory Items tab was enabled:
• Inventory Value Summary lists opening balances, value added through purchases or production orders, cost (on an average cost
basis) of inventory sold, adjustments, and closing balances. The report can be generated for any defined period of time. An
inventory item that is out of stock for the entire period will not be listed, because there will be neither value nor value movement at
any time during the period. But an item that is in stock but has no movement will be included.
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Example
Brilliant Industries began the year with no inventory, made initial purchases, produced some lamps, and made sales. Its
Inventory Value Movement report is shown below. Notice that only the 2 cases of LEDs actually delivered are included; the
backordered merchandise will not appear until more are purchased and delivered:
• Inventory Quantity Summary corresponds closely with the previous report, but lists quantities instead of values.
Example
Brilliant Industries’ matching Inventory Quantity Movement report is below. Note the backordered LEDs second from the
bottom of the list:
• Inventory Profit Margin tabulates profits and margin rates on inventory items sold during a period. Items not sold during the
period are omitted.
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Example
Brilliant Industries sold only 3 different items during the reporting period, so only those show on the Inventory Profit
Margin report:
• Inventory Price List includes all current sales prices of inventory items. If a sales price is not defined, the item will not appear on
the list. If a custom field has been defined for inventory items, the report can be filtered by content of the custom field.
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Example
Brilliant Industries’ full current price list is show below:
Brilliant adds a custom field for inventory categories. It filters the report for Finished lamps, with a corresponding title:
Note
Because Inventory Value Summary and Inventory Quantity Summary reports are related to transactions within a specified
time period, they will not necessarily reflect total value or quantities of inventory on hand. That information can be
obtained by drilling down on the Inventory on hand account in the Summary tab or by clicking on the
Inventory Items tab. Both resulting lists can be exported to a spreadsheet program.
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This Part 2 covers more advanced features, including credit and debit notes, inventory kits, delivery notes, and goods receipts. It describes
how the program’s behavior changes when these additional functions are used. Information in Part 1 is not repeated here.
Part 3 describes additional capabilities: inventory locations, transfers, and write-offs. You will need to understand information in Parts 1 and
2 before you can use the capabilities discussed in Part 3.
Credit Notes
In one sense, credit notes can be thought of as an aspect of managing Accounts receivable. They reduce how much a customer owes your
business. But they can also impact inventory records when they record return of goods. Their effects are opposite those of a sales invoice, as
described in Part 1 of this Guide.
Example
Brilliant Industries’ customer, Bob’s Hardware, returns one of the four white table lamps (Item code 101) it purchased in Part
1 due to a manufacturing defect. Brilliant creates a credit note:
The lamp is taken back at the same unit price as it was sold. If a tax code had been applicable upon sale, the same tax code
would be applied to the return. Brilliant will deal with issues of repair, replacement, or write-off later. These have nothing to
do directly with the credit note.
Note
When an inventory item is returned via credit note, its cost is transferred from the Inventory - cost expense account to the
Inventory on hand asset account according to the cost(s) posted to Inventory - cost for the most recent sales of that
quantity of the item (whether by sales invoice or receipt). Manager does not use the specific average cost applied when it
was sold to the customer returning it.
Debit notes
Debit notes are parallels of credit notes, but for returning goods to suppliers instead of taking them back from customers. Their effects on
inventory reverse those of purchase invoices.
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Example
Brilliant Industries realizes it will probably not be able to sell as many silk lamp shades (Item code 388) as it purchased. So it
returns four to ACME Distributing for account credit. ACME sends a credit note, which Brilliant enters in Manager as a debit
note:
Again, had a tax code applied to the original purchase, the same tax code would be applied to the debit note. Overall
inventory status after both the credit and debit note from the last two examples are entered is shown in the
Inventory Items tab:
Note
Because there is no cost of goods calculation for purchases analogous to what occurs when inventory items are sold, there
is no transfer of costs back into the Inventory on hand account with a debit note. The full purchase price of the item(s)
returned is subtracted directly from Inventory on hand.
Inventory kits
The simplest enhancement of inventory management is use of inventory kits. These are not additional inventory items, but rather groups of
already-defined items that are sold together. The items that make them up may also be sold separately. They are defined in the Settings
tab.
Inventory kits are not pre-assembled, but are grouped together only as sold. They are not counted during physical inventory verification,
because they do not exist until sold, so they have no value in Inventory on hand. When an inventory kit is sold, its constituent items are
subtracted from inventory quantities on hand (quantities owned) as though they had been sold individually, at their existing average cost.
Prices for inventory kits can be different from the sum of constituent prices.
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Example
Brilliant Industries sells table lamps. It also sells a complete parts kit from which an end user can assemble a finished lamp.
It sells the kit for more than it would sell the individual components, making additional profit from the confidence a
consumer gains that all parts are compatible. Brilliant defines the following inventory kit:
Brilliant sells one of these kits to Lumen Lighting on the sales invoice below:
The quantities and values of all four constituent items go down by 1, as shown by the Inventory Items list. Note that
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Delivery notes
A major step up in complexity comes by using delivery notes. These document delivery of goods to a location or customer. Their use implies
that physical delivery of goods does not always occur simultaneously with issuance of a sales invoice or cash receipt. Possible reasons
include:
• Customer credit is not approved, so goods will not be delivered until payment is received.
• Sales invoices are issued immediately, with delivery notes serving as packing lists.
When the Delivery Notes tab is enabled, the Inventory Items list immediately changes. Two additional columns are added for
quantity to be delivered and quantity owned. The original quantity on hand column now shows what should be found on premises, while
quantity owned represents what is available to sell.
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Example
Brilliant Industries enables the Delivery Notes tab. Its Inventory Items list changes, even though no new
transactions have been entered. Notice that net quantities of everything previously sold by sales invoice (3 table lamps, 6
packs of 60 W bulbs, and 1 complete parts inventory kit) now show as still to be delivered, including those items sold as
part of an inventory kit. Only items sold by cash receipt are considered to have been delivered. However, the backorder
situation with LEDs still exists. Because that sale of 3 cases exceeded stock on hand of 2 cases, Brilliant Industries still owes 1
case to Lumen Lighting:
Brilliant Industries enters delivery notes by copying from previous sales invoices and credit notes. It also purchases 5
additional cases of LEDs from Edison Electrical for cash. The backorder is cleared and all quantities to be delivered are zero:
Note
Since credit notes are effectively reverse sales invoices, Manager assumes movement of goods is not automatic once the
Delivery Notes tab is enabled. So delivery notes are required for credit notes, too, indicating that the credited goods
have been delivered to your business. If a delivery note is created by copying a credit note, quantities will automatically be
negative. If you create a delivery note manually, enter negative quantities.
Caution
Manager does not alert you to deliver backordered items sold by cash receipt when stock is replenished. Because the
program assumes all cash sales are delivered at the time of transaction, it does not designate unfulfilled quantities as still
needing to be delivered. Therefore, if you accept cash payment for inventory you do not have on hand, you will need a
separate method to remind yourself to deliver the remaining quantity. You can, however, drill down on a negative quantity
in the Inventory Items list to see transactions responsible for the backorder situation. And if a single transaction was
responsible, it is easy to confirm who the backordered quantity (shown by a negative balance) should be delivered to.
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Goods Receipts
Goods receipts provide capability that is a mirror image of delivery notes. That is, they record receipt of goods at a location or from a
supplier. When the Goods Receipts tab is enabled, another column is added to the Inventory Items list showing quantity to be
received. Now, the inventory picture is complete. Quantities purchased but not yet received are displayed, as are quantities on hand, which
should be verifiable by checking stock. Quantities committed to delivery from previous sales and not available to sell to others are listed.
Quantities still owned and available for sale without additional purchases or production are visible, too.
Example
Brilliant Industries is worried that some inventory may not be delivered immediately in the future. So it enables the
Goods Receipts tab to track goods it is awaiting from suppliers. All its prior purchase invoice quantities now show as to
be received. Quantities purchased with cash payments are assumed to have been delivered immediately:
Brilliant copies past purchase invoices and debit notes to goods receipts, and the quantities to be received are zeroed out.
Quantities on hand now match quantities owned:
Note
Just as credit notes require delivery notes, debit notes require goods receipts. In like fashion, quantities entered through
copying will automatically be negative.
Manager tracks partial receipts (and, for that matter, partial deliveries) as well as complete ones.
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Example
Lumen Lighting orders another 6 cases of LED bulbs. But Brilliant has only 4 cases in stock, but thinks it can obtain more
stock quickly and enters the sales invoice. That produces a backorder of 2 cases:
So Brilliant buys 5 more cases from ACME Distributing on credit, entering a purchase invoice, only to find out delivery will
be delayed several weeks:
Hoping to keep a customer happy, Brilliant delivers the 4 cases it has on hand, entering a delivery note:
ACME surprises Brilliant, making a partial delivery of 3 cases, so Brilliant enters a goods receipt for that quantity:
Now Brilliant Industries can fulfill the remaining balance of 2 cases on its sales invoice to Lumen Lighting. It enters a
delivery note for the final 2 cases:
Brilliant now has 1 case in its warehouse and awaits receipt of 2 more. When they arrive, it enters a final goods receipt for 2
cases and sanity is restored:
Note
Delivery notes and goods receipts are insensitive to workflow. Manager will allow you to receive or deliver goods before
you have purchased or sold them. Negative quantities to be received or delivered may show in the Inventory Items list
until covered by purchase or sales transactions. Quantities on hand and owned will be correct.
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Caution
Think carefully before enabling the Delivery Notes or Goods Receipts tabs. Once you have started using them, you
must continue. Manager will not allow you to disable the tabs after the first delivery note or goods receipt exists. All
delivery notes and goods receipts would need to be deleted before the tabs could be disabled. The functionality these
tabs provide can be very important for some businesses. But they also entail extra work every time an inventory item is
purchased or sold or goods are returned. Consider creating a test company to explore whether they are truly necessary for
your business. They can always be added later.
The effects of credit and debit notes are shown in the Adjustments column on the Inventory Value Summary. They appear in dedicated
columns in Inventory Quantity Summary reports.
Inventory kits are not included in the Inventory Price List report. A list of inventory kit descriptions and prices can be obtained by exporting
the Inventory Kits page in the Settings tab.
Part 2 covers more advanced features, including credit and debit notes, inventory kits, delivery notes, and goods receipts. It describes how
the program’s behavior changes when these additional functions are used. If you have not read Part 2, you should read it after Part 1.
This Part 3 describes additional capabilities: inventory locations, transfers, and write-offs. You will need to understand information in Parts 1
and 2 before you can use the capabilities discussed here. To begin, here is the complete status of inventory after all transactions described in
the ongoing story of Parts 1 and 2:
Inventory locations
Inventory locations are separate places where physical inventory is held, such as warehouses, retail shops, and workrooms. They are defined
under Settings . By default, all inventory is held at a location named Unspecified location until transferred elsewhere.
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Example
Brilliant Industries decides to open a second warehouse for inventory storage and shipment. It names the original
warehouse North warehouse and the new one South warehouse:
If inventory locations have been defined, a field appears on cash receipt and payment forms whenever an inventory item is added to select
which Inventory location the items will be delivered from or received into:
A cash sale or purchase is presumed to involve immediate delivery or receipt of goods from or to a location that can be specified at the time
of the transaction.
The same field will appear on sales and purchase invoices unless the Delivery Notes and Goods Receipts tabs are enabled. Then,
location must be selected on the corresponding delivery note or goods receipt. This is because a credit sale or purchase may involve
delivering or receiving goods from or to different locations at different times.
Example
Brilliant Industries must now make a location selection on every cash receipt or payment and every delivery note or goods
receipt:
Inventory transfers
To move inventory between locations, enable the Inventory Transfers tab. Transfers can shift one or more inventory items in any
quantities between locations, regardless of whether the stock is owned by the business or already committed in a sales transaction. Manager
will correctly track which stock is owned, to be delivered, etc.
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Example
Brilliant Industries uses an inventory transfer to move about half its inventory from the Unspecified location to North
warehouse. In our example, this transaction only assigns inventory to the new location name, since the physical location has
not changed:
Brilliant transfers the remaining inventory to South warehouse with a similar inventory transfer. A new report, Inventory
Quantity by Location, became available when the new locations were created. That report now shows where all Brilliant’s
stock is stored:
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Inventory write-offs
Inventory is sometimes lost, stolen, damaged, or spoiled and no longer available for sale. Or, it may be consumed for internal company
purposes, given away for marketing reasons, and so forth. In these situations, the value of inventory must be transferred to an appropriate
expense account. Inventory write-offs accomplish such transfers and correct quantity counts. To write off inventory, first enable the
Inventory Write-offs tab.
Example
Brilliant Industries uses several 60 W light bulbs from its inventory when moving into the new south warehouse. So it writes
them off to a Repairs and maintenance expense account:
The procedure would have been identical if those light bulbs had been broken during the move, but a different expense
account might have been chosen. The Inventory Quantity Summary report reflects the adjustment:
The Inventory Value Summary report likewise shows an adjustment to value and average cost. And the Inventory Quantity
by Location report shows a reduction in quantity on hand at the south warehouse.
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• Inventory on hand, an asset account, reports the value of all inventory items owned but not yet sold. Recorded inventory value can
generate future income.
• Inventory – sales, an income account, records revenue earned from sales of inventory items.
• Inventory – cost, an expense account, records the cost (at average cost) of inventory items sold.
Additionally, expense accounts are typically created to collect non-inventory costs of production orders, write-off expenses for advertising,
breakage and loss, and internal consumption.
Note
You can assign inventory items to custom control accounts. You can also designate accounts of your choosing for posting
of inventory sales and cost of sales on an item-by-item basis. See another Guide for instructions.
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Example
Brilliant Industries’ Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Statement for the year encompassing all example transactions in the
three parts of this Guide are shown below. (The business began the year with 10,000 in the bank. Zero balances are
suppressed. Accrual basis accounting is selected.) For purposes of illustration, no other transactions are included:
Caution
If cash basis accounting is employed, inventory transactions on open sales and purchase invoices are ignored. This can
result in large differences between the main financial statements and inventory reports, making it very difficult to reconcile
and verify accounting records. A more complete and accurate representation of business position and performance is
provided by accrual basis accounting. For this reason, most accountants strongly prefer accrual basis accounting. And in
some tax jurisdictions, companies selling inventory are legally required to use it.
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• Improve accounting accuracy by always posting similar income or expense items to the same accounts
Note
Inventory items are used for sale, purchase, and management of physical goods, because they support counting quantities
on hand, monitoring stock movement, and calculating profitability. For commonly sold or purchased goods or services that
are not managed in this way, use non-inventory items.
To use any inventory-related function in Manager, enable the Inventory Items tab. At the bottom of the left navigation pane, click
Customize , check the box for Inventory Items, and click Update below the list:
• Item code can be anything that helps find, sort, or categorize the item. This could be a stock-keeping unit (SKU) code, a model
number, or a simple memory aid. It must be unique and should be short. Codes will appear on forms if they are used. Serial
numbers are not acceptable item codes, because every unit of inventory would be treated as a separate product.
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• Item name should be a relatively brief, informative name for the inventory item. It will appear when searching for an inventory item
to complete a line item. It will also appear on various management reports. If no further description of the item is entered, Item
name will appear in the Description field on completed forms, such as sales invoices.
• Unit Name is optional, but can be used to specify units by which the item will be sold, purchased, and counted. Only one unit name
is allowed; if materials are purchased and sold in different units, either apply conversions before making entries or create separate
inventory items and use production orders or inventory kits to handle the differences.
• Purchase price is the price at which the item is usually purchased. This can remain blank if prices vary from purchase to purchase.
If a purchase price is entered, it will be automatically populated into purchase-related forms, but can be edited.
• Sales price is the price at which the item will be sold. Leave blank if the sales price frequently changes. If a sales price is entered, it
will appear automatically on sales-related forms, but can also be edited.
• The Description field is for more comprehensive information. Its contents, if present, will appear on finished forms in place of Item
name, so it should also adequately identify the item, not simply add detail. Anything a customer or supplier should see can be
placed into this field.
• Production stage appears only when the Production Orders tab is enabled and the first production order has been entered.
The default entry is 1. Higher integer numbers can be entered when a finished item requires other items to be produced or
purchased first.
Notes
Production stages ensure final inventory item costs added to Inventory on hand properly include the current average costs
of all input inventory items by executing production orders in the correct sequence. They also help prevent confusing
automatic entries when production orders drawing on the same inventory item are entered on the same day.
Click Create to save the inventory item (or continue by adding additional detail as described below). The inventory item will be visible in
the Inventory Items tab:
• If at least one Tax Code has been created under Settings , the one usually applicable to the inventory item may be selected in a
dropdown box. This choice can be edited on forms.
• If at least one Tracking Code has been created under Settings , one usually applicable to the inventory item may be selected.
This choice can also be edited on forms.
Several accounts are activated automatically when the Inventory Items tab is enabled and the first inventory item is created. By default,
inventory transactions will post to these:
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For many businesses, these are sufficient. But for businesses wishing to further divide inventory accounts, two checkboxes indicate whether
sales prices or costs of the inventory item should be posted to custom accounts created by the user. When these are checked, fields appear
for non-standard account designation. Such custom accounts must be created first in the chart of accounts:
A custom income account is where sales prices will be posted when an inventory item is sold, either through a sales invoice or receipt. A
custom expense account is where the current average cost of an item will be posted when it is sold, transferring its cost from the Inventory
on hand asset account.
• Expense claims
• Delivery notes
• Goods receipts
• Production orders
• Journal entries
When completing most of these forms, an Item field will appear at the left end of line items whenever any applicable inventory or non-
inventory items have been defined. To use an inventory item, click on the dropdown box of the Item field. Or, begin typing the Item Code or
Item Name in the field to take advantage of the autosearch capability. When an inventory item has been selected, all its parameters will
automatically be filled for the line. Either cost price or sales price will be used, depending on the type of form. Anything can be edited except
specified accounts:
Edit the item as desired and click Update . Existing forms using the inventory item will not be modified. Only future forms will be
affected.
If the inventory item is no longer needed, it can be deleted as long as it has never been used. But Manager will not allow inventory items to
be deleted if they have been used. In that case, check the box, and the inventory item will no longer be available.
If an inactive inventory item becomes useful again, scroll to the bottom of the inventory item list, where you will see the item’s name in light
grey text with strike-through markings. Click Edit next to the item’s name:
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Uncheck the box and the item will once again be available. Remember to click Update when finished editing.
Example
Northwind Traders sells a wide range of individual food products from around the world. Each is stocked and sold
individually as an inventory item with its own price. Three items could be entered on a cash receipt or sales invoice as
below:
But Northwind has found it can sell more by also advertising the same three products as the “Cajun cuisine pack.” So it
creates an inventory kit, offering the three items together, at a discount.
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• Item code can be anything that helps find, sort, or categorize the item. This could be a stock-keeping unit (SKU) code, a model
number, or a simple memory aid. It must be unique and should be short. Codes will appear on forms if they are used.
• Item name should be a relatively brief, informative name for the inventory kit. It will appear when searching for an inventory kit to
complete a line item. If no further description of the item is entered, Item name will appear in the Description field on completed
forms, such as sales invoices.
• Unit Name is optional, but can be used to specify units by which the kit will be sold.
• The Description field is for more comprehensive information. Its contents, if present, will appear on finished forms in place of Item
name, so it should also adequately identify the kit, not simply add detail. Anything a customer should see can be placed into this
field.
• Sales price is the price at which the kit will be sold. The price can be higher or lower than the sum of component prices. Leave
blank if the sale price frequently changes. If a sale price is entered, it will appear automatically on sales-related forms, but can also
be edited.
• Under Bill of materials, enter quantities and inventory items making up the kit.
• A Tracking code can be specified if sales of the inventory are always associated with a certain business profit center or project.
• A Custom income account can be specified if the kit’s revenue is to be posted somewhere besides the default Inventory - sales
account.
• An Inactive box can later be checked if the kit is no longer sold. Inactive kits do not appear when searching for items on
transaction forms.
Click Create to save the inventory kit. The completed definition is available for printing, emailing, or other purposes by clicking View .
Inventory kits can also be cloned as the starting point for defining other inventory kits with similar, but not identical, components:
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Note
No quantities on hand can be specified for inventory kits, because they do not exist as separate items in inventory.
Example
Northwind sells the inventory kit illustrated above, saving time and ensuring pricing accuracy:
An inventory kit does not appear on the Inventory Quantity Summary or Inventory Value Summary reports. But its sale contributes to those
reports through component items. In the case of the Inventory Value Summary report, component costs defined for the inventory items are
used. Sale price of the kit has no effect on that report. Kits are not included in the Inventory Profit Margin report.
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Example
Brilliant Industries has six different inventory items in stock on the day it begins using Manager. It sets a start date and
defines those six items:
But when you must enter starting balances, go to the Settings tab and click Starting Balances :
General procedures for entering starting balances are found in this Guide. More specific procedures for inventory items are given below.
When the Starting Balances list appears, click on the blue balance figure for the Inventory on hand account under the Debit column. The
balance should be zero until you have entered your starting balances:
Click Edit for an inventory item and enter the starting quantity and average purchase cost per unit.
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Example
Brilliant Industries had 10 of its lamp kits on hand on the start date. So it clicks that item’s Edit button:
It enters the starting locations (if inventory locations are being used), quantities at each location, and average cost from the
prior accounting system:
Notes
Starting balances should match the physical count on the start date. If unpaid sales or purchase invoices issued prior to the
start date are entered to establish starting balances in Accounts receivable or Accounts payable, do not adjust the inventory
item starting balance quantities for items on unpaid sales or purchase invoices. Manager ignores inventory item quantities
on starting balance invoices, only using price information.
If you have many inventory items with starting balances, you can use the Batch Update function in the bottom-right
corner of the Inventory Items tab, as described in another Guide:
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The program alerts you to potential duplicates whenever you are in the Inventory Items tab by displaying an alert:
Finding duplicates
Click Find & merge to see a list of potential duplicate items. This search looks first for matches in the Item code field. If found, these
override any other matches or differences. It then looks for matches in the Item name field. These also override other matching content
except for item codes. No other fields are considered.
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Example
Brilliant Industries has a new inventory clerk who mistakenly creates three different inventory items for the same table lamp
without checking the existing list. To make matters worse, the clerk does not follow consistent practices when defining the
new items. So inventory of one item is spread among three. Fortunately, an alert appears:
Brilliant’s inventory manager notices the problem and clicks Find & merge . Manager returns a list of matches. In this
case, because item codes were used correctly, all three duplicates are found, even though names and descriptions do not
match:
But what if item codes had not been used consistently or at all? If the item code had been left off the third item, only the
first two would have been found, because their item codes match:
If no item codes had been used, the same two items would have been found, because their names match. The third would
have been excluded because its name differs:
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Note
Item codes are the most useful identifiers for inventory items because they override all other search criteria. Both code and
name assignment, though, should be performed according to a consistent method to maximize the chance of finding
duplicates.
Merging duplicates
To merge duplicates, click the circle to the left of the item you wish to keep. Then click Merge . All other items found in the search will be
combined with this item. Their quantities will be merged with those of the kept item.
Caution
Only one item’s circle can be selected at a time. Selecting another will unselect the first. You are not selecting those items
to be combined. Instead, you are selecting the one item into which all items listed will be merged. Therefore, if you want
an item to remain separate, edit it in the Inventory Items tab by changing its item code or name before initiating the
Find & merge process.
To establish locations, go to Settings and click Inventory Locations , then New Inventory Location :
Note
By default, all inventory items in Manager are in an automatic location named Unspecified. This location cannot be edited or
deleted and does not appear in the list of inventory locations. But inventory items can be transferred from it to other
locations in the Inventory Transfers tab.
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A field for Location will appear in sales and purchase transaction forms:
Use this field to select the location from or to which the inventory item will be shipped or received.
Note
If the Delivery Notes or Goods Receipts tabs are enabled, the Location field will be disabled. Goods shipments and
receipts must then be entered with delivery notes and goods receipts to track inventory item quantities to their correct
locations. Think carefully before enabling those tabs, because they impose considerable additional work.
Example
Sanjay’s Drum and Guitar Shop has a small retail display showroom. Because of limited space, Sanjay also rents a
warehouse in a nearby industrial park where he stores most of his inventory. Sanjay creates two inventory locations: Retail
store and Warehouse. As he sells items from the showroom, he brings inventory from the warehouse to replace them. He
uses inventory transfers to record the movements.
Now, if a customer wants more of an item than he has in the showroom, Sanjay can look up his full stock level and see not
just how many he has in total, but how many are at each location. He can avoid ordering more until he really needs to, and
can make the sale immediately (arranging to deliver from the warehouse), even though he cannot physically see his
inventory.
Notes
One location automatically exists for all businesses with inventory: Unspecified location. Until transfers or purchases add
inventory to other locations, all inventory items will be located at Unspecified location. Therefore, when inventory locations
are first implemented, items must be counted and assigned to their correct locations. Make these assignments using
inventory transfers.
Inventory items themselves are not associated with any specific inventory location, because they can be moved from one to
another. Quantities at various locations are determined by the net result of purchases, sales, write-offs, and transfers, not
according to item identity.
To use inventory transfers, enable the Inventory Transfers tab. Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box for
Inventory Transfers , and click Update below the list:
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• Reference can be used for any internal or external sequence. If the box within the field is checked, Manager locates the highest-
numbered existing inventory transfer and adds 1 to its Reference number.
• The first, summary Description is optional, allowing you to describe the transfer in general terms.
• Item allows you to select the inventory item by item code or item name.
• The second and all subsequent Description fields will prefill from inventory items’ definitions, if they exist. Or descriptions can be
entered manually.
Click Create to record the transfer. Inventory quantities at both locations will be adjusted automatically.
Caution
Remember that the inventory transfer form only records the movement of inventory. Unless you move the proper number
of items from one location to another, and unless those locations are correct, physical inventory counts will be off and
reconciliation may be very difficult.
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Example
ACME Distributing gives away samples of its products at trade shows. To keep inventory records accurate, it writes off the
items, allocating the expense to a Trade show advertising account. The balance of Inventory on hand declines.
Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box to enable Inventory Write-offs , and click Update :
Complete the form. Some fields appear only when relevant selections have been made in the Settings tab:
• Reference can be used for any internal or external sequence. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will assign a number
automatically. The program will find the highest existing number among all inventory write-offs and add 1. This field can be edited.
• Inventory item is where you select the item being written off. Both item codes and item names show in the dropdown box.
• Location (if any are defined under Settings ) lets you select where the write-off is occurring.
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• Allocation is where you select the account to be debited. Only expense accounts and certain balance sheet accounts can be
chosen.
• Tax allows you to select a tax code if the disposition of the inventory item is subject to tax. Normally, this will only be the case under
value-added tax schemes when tax paid to a supplier was claimed when the item was purchased and conversion for non-revenue
usage is considered taxable by your tax authority. Consult a local accountant if you are unsure about this.
• Tracking code lets you choose an applicable code.
Click Create to write off the inventory item(s) and make all necessary accounting adjustments.
When inventory items are written on, they are available for sale or production, so they must be added as assets in the Inventory on hand
account. Their value must also be added to some income account or subtracted from some expense account to offset the increase to
Inventory on hand.
• Average cost. One convenient approach is to look up the current average cost of the inventory item in the Inventory Items tab
and use that. This approach may not be absolutely correct, but it is reasonable and will generally be accepted by an auditor. It
assumes that newly found inventory items are as valuable as the ones already in stock.
• Write-off cost. Upward adjustments sometimes result from locating misplaced inventory that was previously written off. If an
inventory write-off record for the specific item exists, use the average cost from that transaction. This ensures the amount formerly
written off is exactly reversed, even if average cost has since changed.
• Purchase price. When an inventory item has not been purchased recently, prices may have changed, making average cost a poor
indicator of current value. In that case, a recent price quote from a supplier may be a better representation of an item’s value.
Note
Local law or accounting standards may dictate how write-ons should be valued. Be sure to follow any such guidance.
However you determine unit cost, multiply by the number of units being added and enter the product as the debit amount of the journal
entry. (Manager will not perform this calculation automatically as it does in many other transactions. However, you can enter the calculation
into the Debit field to avoid manual calculation.) The credit amount, of course, must balance. Multiple inventory items can be adjusted with
a single journal entry by including additional debit line items. Only one credit line for the total amount is necessary.
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Example
Brilliant Industries conducts a year-end physical count of stock on hand and discovers two more table lamps than its
records show. The listing in the Inventory Items tab initially looks like this:
Brilliant creates a journal entry, debiting Inventory on hand and selecting the table lamp. It uses the average cost method,
multiplying 196.06 by the two units, for a total debit of 392.12:
The two units are added to the quantity on hand (and owned) without altering average cost. But the total cost of table
lamps in Inventory on hand goes up:
The credit from the journal entry appears in the Inventory adjustments account. Because Brilliant expected most inventory
adjustments to be write-offs rather than write-ons, it set this account up as an expense account. So the 392.12 became a
contra entry, moving the balance of the account in a negative direction:
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Note
If a different costing method had been used in the example above, average cost of table lamps would have changed.
• Packing lists
They have no financial impact. Indeed, they include no financial information. Delivery notes are completely optional. Without them, that is,
when the Delivery Notes tab is not enabled, delivery of goods is assumed to occur as soon as the sales invoice or receipt form is
created.
To use delivery notes, first enable the Delivery Notes tab. Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box for
Delivery Notes , and click Update below the list:
• Standard method
Standard method
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• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing delivery notes and add 1.
• Customer is a predefined customer from the Customers tab. Delivery notes cannot be created for “walk-in” buyers.
• Delivery address will be filled automatically if the customer has a predefined delivery address. If no delivery address exists in the
customer’s profile, Manager will not use the customer’s billing address. The Delivery address must be filled in manually.
• The second and all subsequent Description fields describe individual line items. If this field is defined for an inventory or non-
inventory item, that definition will automatically be carried over. The field may be edited.
• Qty is the quantity of the line item being delivered at this time.
• Add line allows you to add more line items 1, 5, 10, or 20 at a time.
• Location appears if inventory locations are defined under Settings . Choose which location goods are delivered from.
Click Create to issue the delivery note. All necessary adjustments to inventory quantities and status by location occur automatically.
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Example
Northwind Traders has sold 5 boxes of frozen blue crab meat to Great Lakes Food Market. Northwind issued sales invoice
#46224. It issues delivery note #311 as a packing list for the shipment:
Other methods
All other methods of delivery note creation use the Copy to function. This is available from:
• Sales quotes
• Sales orders
• Sales invoices
• Credit notes
When viewing an eligible form, click Copy to … and select New Delivery Note:
A completed delivery note entry screen will appear. Edit as required and click Create .
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Caution
Think carefully before enabling the Goods Receipts or Delivery Notes tabs. Once you have started using them, you
must continue. Manager will not allow you to disable the tabs after the first goods receipt or delivery note is created. The
functionality these tabs provide can be very important for some businesses. But they also entail extra work every time an
inventory item is purchased or sold. Consider creating a test company to explore whether they are truly necessary for your
business. They can always be added later.
They have no financial impact. Indeed, they include no financial information. Goods receipts are completely optional. Without them, that is,
when the Goods Receipts tab is not enabled, receipt of goods is assumed to occur as soon as the purchase invoice or payment form is
created.
To use goods receipts, first enable the Goods Receipts tab. Click Customize below the left navigation pane, check the box for
Goods Receipts , and click Update below the list:
• Standard method
Standard method
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• Reference can be used for any internal or external sequence. If the box within the field is checked, a number will be assigned
automatically. Manager will locate the highest-numbered existing goods receipt and add 1 to its reference number.
• Supplier is a predefined supplier from the Suppliers tab. Goods receipts cannot be created for cash purchases, because the
goods are presumed to have been received upon payment.
• The second and all subsequent Description fields describe individual line items. If this field is defined for an inventory or non-
inventory item, that definition will automatically be carried over. The field may be edited.
• Qty is the quantity of the line item being received at this time.
• Add line allows you to add more line items 1, 5, 10, or 20 at a time.
• Location appears if inventory locations are defined under Settings . Choose the location where goods are being received.
Click Create to issue the goods receipt. All necessary adjustments to inventory quantities and status by location occur automatically.
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Example
Northwind Traders has purchased 18 jars of marmalade from Specialty Biscuits. Northwind entered purchase invoice
#27484. It issues goods receipt #2315 when the product arrives:
Other methods
All other methods of goods receipt creation use the Copy to … function. This is available from:
• Purchase orders
• Purchase invoices
• Debit notes
When viewing an eligible form, click Copy to and select New Goods Receipt:
A completed goods receipt entry screen will appear. Edit as required and click Create .
Caution
Think carefully before enabling the Goods Receipts or Delivery Notes tabs. Once you have started using them, you
must continue. Manager will not allow you to disable the tabs after the first goods receipt or delivery note is created. The
functionality these tabs provide can be very important for some businesses. But they also entail extra work every time an
inventory item is purchased or sold. Consider creating a test company to explore whether they are truly necessary for your
business. They can always be added later.
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Notes
Finished goods must be created as separate inventory items before they can be entered on production orders.
When the first production order is created, a Production stage field appears for every inventory item under the
Inventory Items tab. By default, all items will be preset to production stage 1. Production stages can be adjusted as
described in this Guide to ensure costs of later-stage items in Inventory on hand correctly include costs of earlier-stage
items.
Multiple stages are possible, as described in another Guide. Inventory items always purchased from suppliers should be left
at the default production stage 1. Items produced from only stage 1 items should normally be designated as stage 2.
Finished goods that use stage 2 items should be stage 3, and so on.
• Reference can be used for any form of identifier. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will assign a number automatically.
The program find the highest Reference number among existing production orders and add 1.
• Description can be any text useful for describing the production order.
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• Select quantity and Inventory item for the first raw material to be used for production under Bill of materials. If more than one
inventory item is used, click Add line to add more line items.
• Location of the finished item(s) can be selected if inventory locations have been defined.
Manager will add the non-inventory costs to the current average cost of inventory item(s) consumed by the production order to calculate
the cost of the produced inventory item(s).
In the Inventory Items tab, the quantity of the manufactured inventory item will increase while the quantities of input inventory items
will decrease by the quantities included in the production order.
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Example
Brilliant Industries creates a production order to build three table lamps for its north warehouse. Each lamp uses one each
of three other parts in stock. Brilliant also includes 75.00 worth of manufacturing labor in the cost of the three lamps (25.00
each):
This field appears on the definition screen for all inventory items when the Production Orders tab is enabled and the first production
order has been entered:
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Note
The default value is 1. Inventory items not used in production orders should be left this way. So should inventory items
always purchased from suppliers.
The overall workflow is Purchase Pulp Convert Pulp to Paper Print Book on Paper Sell Book.
Example
You purchase 1,000 kg of pulp for 2,000. You create a production order converting 200 kg of pulp to 40,000 sheets paper,
then another production order using 20,000 sheets of paper to print 100 books, all on the same day.
The Inventory Items tab shows you have 800 kg of pulp remaining at an average cost of 2.00 per kg. That average cost
follows from your initial purchase of 1,000 kg for 2,000:
You also have 20,000 sheets of unused paper left over from the production run of 40,000. The paper is carried at .01 per
sheet, calculated from production of 40,000 sheets from 400 worth of pulp. Because half the paper was used to print books,
half the value of pulp used to produce the paper remains, while the other half has passed on because of the second
production order.
Finally, you now have 100 books in inventory at an average cost of 2.00 per book. The total cost of inventory owned is the
same 2,000 you originally spent to purchase the pulp.
In the absence of production stages, production orders issued the same day for pulp conversion and printing might be executed out of
order. Manager does not normally distinguish transaction order when events occur the same day, a problem potentially made worse if other
inventory purchases, sales, returns, production orders drawing on the same items, and inventory transfers also intervene in rapid succession.
Average costs transferred to new finished goods could be wrong. In our example, final average costs for both the book and remaining
quantities of interim items would be erroneous. This, in turn, would result in inaccurate profit calculations during an accounting period.
Production stages solve the problem. Manager checks your production orders for potential problems and displays an alert in the
Inventory Items tab if it finds any:
When you click on the alert, you will see list of problem inventory items, their current production stages, and recommended production
stages. There are two options for action:
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• Manually Edit inventory items where the current production stage is lower than recommended. Set the production stage at least
as high as required.
Example
Because production stages were never assigned to the inventory items in our illustration, the Inventory Items tab
displays an alert. When clicked, it shows the following recommendations:
Both items are checked and Batch Update clicked. Manager now recognizes the Book item needs further elevation:
The process is repeated. The ultimate result assigns production stages as below:
Circular production
Circular production refers to a situation where an earlier-stage inventory item requires a later-stage item for its own production. Neither
Manager nor any other accounting system can resolve circular production orders.
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Example
Suppose we shred unsold books to create pulp. We create the production order below:
But if we follow the recommendation, the program immediately suggests elevating Paper to stage 5. That leads to a
recommendation to elevate Book to stage 6, and so on, forever.
The solution for circular production orders is to break the circle with an inventory write-off of the later-stage item. Then, a new production
order can be used to add earlier-stage inventory produced from it. Nothing is entered for the bill of materials of the new production order if
the item produced is stage 1, but the value of the write-off is incorporated as a non-inventory cost. If the item produced from the written-off
item is higher than stage 1, additional inventory items can be added to the bill of materials. And if additional non-inventory costs are
incurred, they can be added, too.
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Example
We shred and write off 50 books, posting the write-off to a suitable expense account, which will serve as a temporary
clearing account. For this example, we choose Other expenses:
In this case, recycling yield is not 100%, so only 75 kg of pulp is obtained of the 100 that originally went into these 50
books. Drilling down from the Summary tab on the Other expenses account, we find the value of books written off was
100.00:
We immediately create a new production order for the amount of pulp produced by shredding. We add non-inventory
costs equal to the write-off, allocating them to the same expense account as the write-off. We leave the bill of materials
blank, because no other inventory items are involved:
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Our final inventory status shows fewer books, more pulp, and no change to paper:
• A business follows a just-in-time purchasing policy, buying raw materials only after production orders requiring them are issued.
• Suppliers deliver new inventory prior to sending a sales invoice (which is entered by the business as a purchase invoice). In this
situation, the inventory may be on hand in the warehouse but not yet technically owned by the business, because the purchase has
not been recorded.
Insufficient quantities cause accounting problems, because the cost of inventory items not yet owned is unknown. (Quoted or expected
prices do not count.) Therefore, the true cost of the production order’s finished item(s) is also unknown. In turn, the cost of sales for sold
items is unknown and profit is miscalculated.
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Note
In the long run, after all inventory replenishment is recorded, overall profit could be correctly calculated. However, costs of
individual production orders and sales, and profits for interim periods could still be incorrect.
Manager avoids these problems by determining when quantities of inventory items are insufficient for production orders and actively
controlling allocation of costs to the right accounts at appropriate times. Fortunately, you do not need to do anything. Everything is
automatic.
Note
Nothing about insufficient quantities or Manager’s treatment of them controls or prevents actual production. They only
affect when and how costs are distributed to finished items and eventually to the cost of goods sold. If required materials
are physically available in inventory, production can occur, regardless of whether their purchase has been recorded, they
are needed for other production orders, or their reception has been recorded by goods receipts.
A customer buys a handbag on June 24, 2020. We record the sale with a sales invoice on that day at a price of 100:
Before we can deliver the handbag to our customer, we need leather to produce it. We do not have leather in stock, so we order it from our
leather supplier. Our leather supplier will deliver the required leather the next day, June 25, 2020, but will invoice us at the end of the month.
Once we have the leather on hand, even though we do not yet legally own it, we create a production order on June 25, 2020 to take 5 units
of leather to produce 1 unit of handbag:
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Finally, on June 30, 2020 our leather supplier gives as a purchase invoice for 20 covering our purchase of 5 units of leather:
Absent Manager’s insufficient quantity process, this sequence of transactions would end up showing a value of 20 for inventory on hand
even though the quantity of everything on hand is zero:
That would occur because, when the production order was created on June 25, 2020, it created 1 handbag with a cost of 0 because the cost
of leather became known only at the end of the month when we entered the purchase invoice from our leather supplier. But by that time,
the handbag had been sold and delivered, so the purchase cost of leather was transferred directly to handbags, of which none existed. This
sequence also would distort the Inventory Profit Margin report, because no cost is being allocated to the sale (as the cost of the leather
became known several days after the sale). Profit margin for this sale would incorrectly show 100%:
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In normal production and sales environments, idiosyncrasies like this could easily be overlooked, buried by other transactions.
Note
In the context of this Guide, the term produce means to account for the production of finished inventory items, including
their proper costs. As mentioned in a Note above, production orders do not actually control manufacturing activity.
For example, if your production order has 5 input items and even one is of insufficient quantity, the output item is not costed and added to
inventory until there is sufficient quantity of all input items. This means once the finished item is finally produced, the full cost is known and
subsequent sales of this item will correctly record the cost of goods sold. We will return to our example of leather and handbag to see this
concept at work.
When the production order is entered on June 25, 2020, leather has been ordered and delivered, but not yet purchased. So from an
accounting perspective, its cost is unknown. In the Production Orders tab, Manager shows Status of the production order to be
Insufficient Qty:
Insufficient Qty means the production order has one or more items on its bill of materials for which the business does not own the required
quantity. (Remember, ownership is conveyed by a purchase invoice or payment.) In this case, we have insufficient quantity because we are
using 5 units of leather which we did not purchase yet. We will own these 5 units of leather once the purchase invoice from our leather
supplier is entered on June 30, 2020. Once that leather is purchased, production order status will automatically switch from Insufficient Qty to
Complete:
Status being Complete triggers addition of the finished inventory item to inventory on the date the production order is fulfilled, not on the
date the production order is created. This is important because, on the date the production order is created (June 25, 2020), the cost of
leather is not known yet. It becomes known on June 30, 2020. So the finished handbag is added to inventory on June 30, 2020 with its full
cost.
Because there was a sale entered on June 24, 2020 to remove one handbag, the handbag can finally be removed from inventory on June 30,
2020, along with its full cost:
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After the production order is created, the Inventory Items screen shows this:
Qty on hand for leather is reduced by 5 and total cost changes from 8.00 to 0.00. But inventory costs cannot simply disappear. In this case,
the value of 2 units of leather is transferred to an account named Production in progress:
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Production in progress is an asset control account added to your chart of accounts automatically when your first production order is created.
Partial costs are temporarily accumulated there for production orders with insufficent quantity. When the production order collects sufficient
quantities for all inventory items on the bill of materials, the cost is transferred to Inventory on hand. If you have no production orders with
insufficent quantity, the balance of Production in progress will always be zero.
To do this, follow the same procedure as when using production orders for manufacturing, but enter zero as the quantity of the Finished
item. Non-inventory costs, such as labor, can also be added to a production order used this way.
This will decrease the quantity in stock of inventory items included in the Bill of materials without increasing the quantity of the
Finished item. All inventory and non-inventory costs will be added to the average cost of the Finished item.
Example
A car dealer uses inventory items to track cars available for sale. It also uses inventory items to track spare parts required by
the service department. Spare parts are not used to manufacture new vehicles. They are used to repair, maintain, or
improve existing vehicles, including those held for sale. The car dealer, of course, wants to track consumption of parts when
they are installed in a car already in inventory, but does not purchase or sell them in the process. No money changes hands.
So, when repairs are made to a used vehicle or optional accessories are installed on a new one, a production order is
prepared. The vehicle being repaired or improved is selected as the Finished item. All parts consumed from inventory are
listed on the Bill of materials. Labor for installation is added as a Non-inventory cost, posting to an appropriate labor
expense Account. Costs of parts and labor are transferred to the vehicle’s cost.
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Chapter 9: Payroll
Payroll Guides describe how to record earnings, deductions, and contributions associated with your employees, as well as how to pay
employees what they are owed.
9.1 Employees
9.1.1 Enter employees
Employees in Manager are persons for whom the business will record payroll transactions. Individuals must be set up as employees before
payslips can be issued to them. Employees are also eligible to submit expense claims, even if they are not specifically defined as expense
claims payers and do not have a capital account. (See another Guide for more information about expense claims.)
Local laws usually govern who is considered an employee. Even when a regular amount is paid to them, some individuals might need to be
treated as partners (with capital accounts), sole traders/proprietors (with equity accounts), or subcontractors. The key factor in deciding to
enter a person as an employee is usually whether their compensation can be considered a wage expense under local law and accounting
regulations.
Note
Some businesses use third-party processing services to manage payroll. In such cases, there is usually no reason to enable
the Employees tab, because individual payroll transactions are not entered in Manager. Instead, lump-sum transactions
are entered for each payroll period and individual payroll records are maintained by the outside processor. This can be
advantageous when local tax and retirement laws are complex or change frequently.
Before an employee can be entered, enable the Employees tab. Below the left navigation pane, click Customize . Check the box for
Employees , and click Update below the list:
Enter an employee
In the Employees tab, click New Employee :
Complete the entry. Most fields are self-explanatory. All except Name are optional:
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Email address will be used if payslips are later emailed to the employee. Currency can be selected only if a base currency has been set and
a foreign currency has been defined. Control account is available when a custom control account for employees exists. Otherwise,
employees are automatically assigned to the Employee clearing account. Other information can be entered if custom fields are created for
payslips.
Click Create to enter the employee, who will show in the Employees tab listing:
If making a transition to Manager’s payroll management from another accounting or payroll system, employees may have balances owed to
them or owing to the business. If so, set starting balances according to this Guide. Enter the starting balance by clicking the blue balance of
the Employee clearing account, then Edit for the employee:
• Select Paid in advance if the employee owes the business money, such as for an employee loan. Select Amount to pay if the
employee has unpaid earnings as of the start date.
• Enter the amount owed or owing as a positive number, regardless of the situation.
Inactive employees
When employees terminate employment and will no longer be paid, you can remove them from lists by making them inactive. In the
Employees tab, click to Edit the employee and check the box:
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Click Update and the employee will not appear in active lists.
If the employee ever returns to active status, scroll to the bottom of the employees list, where you will see the employee’s name in light grey
text with strike-through markings:
Note
This Guide provides instructions on paying employees set up under the Employees tab and whose payroll transactions
have been entered in the Payslips tab. It does not address third-party payroll processing.
In Manager, payslips record earnings, deductions, etc. of employees. They do not record actual payments to those employees of amounts
owed as a result of payslips. To pay employees, you must enter payments in the Receipts & payments tab. Two approaches can be
used, depending on whether the employee is owed for a single payslip, multiple payslips, or expense claims.
A payment entry screen will appear, prefilled with information for paying the employee:
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• Enter a Reference number if desired. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will automatically assign a Reference by
finding the highest existing number and adding 1.
• Select Cleared or Pending Status if paying from a bank account. Cash account payments are presumed to be cleared immediately,
so this field does not appear for them.
• Payee should be filled with the name to which payments are made for the employee on the relevant payslip. Normally, this is the
employee’s legal name, but an employee may have given instructions for payments to be made to someone else.
• Item should be left blank, as no inventory or non-inventory items are involved in payroll transactions.
• Account will be prefilled with Employee clearing account and Employee name. Do not change these.
• Description for the line item is optional, but can be filled with distinguishing information, especially if other items are being added
to the payment.
• Tax should normally be left blank, as payments to employees are not taxable in most jurisdictions.
• Check the box if Amounts are tax inclusive. Normally, this will have no effect, because no tax code will be applied.
• Check the box if you will use a Custom title. A field will appear in which to enter the alternate title.
• Check the box if you will use a Custom theme. Select the theme from the dropdown menu that appears.
If other items are to be added to the payment, click Add line . When finished, click Create .
Caution
Be sure to complete steps in making the payment: write the cheque, enter an electronic direct deposit, or prepare a cash
envelope. Remember, the payment form records the transaction; it does not complete it.
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Either continue using the total balance shown for the employee, or drill down further by clicking the employee’s balance (in this illustration,
no other employees have balances):
If you drill down on the employee’s balance, you will be able to see all transactions contributing to it. Whichever path you follow, make note
of the amount(s) owed to the employee:
Initiate payment directly in the Receipts & Payments tab. Click New Payment :
Manually complete the entry form, exactly as you would for a single-payslip payment. Post the transaction to Employee clearing account and
Employee name. For Amount, enter either the full amount due from Employee clearing account or one contributing amount from the
employee’s drill-down listing. If following the second path, click Add line to enter additional contributing amounts.
When all amounts have been entered, the payment total should equal the employee’s balance in Employee clearing account. Click Create
to record the payment:
Bulk payments
Multiple employees’ payments can be recorded simultaneously. Go to the Employees tab, where you will see a list of amounts owed to
each employee in the Amount to pay column. Click the total for the column:
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A new page will appear, listing all employees with amounts due. On this screen, employee details can be edited, but amounts owed cannot.
Those must be altered by editing the original transactions, which are accessible by clicking individual employees’ balances. To record the
bulk payment, click New Payment :
A new payment transaction form will appear with line items for all employees owed money:
Note
Since several employees are being paid, enter something like Payroll or Various in the Payee field of the payment form.
Effect of payments
Each payment line item debits Employee clearing account Employee name and credits the bank or cash account that is the source of
funds. If all employees are paid the full amounts owed, Employee clearing account will be reduced to a zero balance.
9.2 Payslips
9.2.1 Set up payslip items
Payslip items are specific elements that can appear on payslips. They are necessary so entries on employees’ payslips will be posted to the
proper account or accounts. Therefore, you must define at least one payslip item before you can issue your first payslip. Every payslip item
must be one of three types:
• Earnings
• Deductions
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• Contributions
Before payslip items can be defined, you must enable the Payslips tab. Under the left navigation pane, click Customize , check the box
for Payslips , then click Update below the list:
• Expense accounts on the Profit and Loss Statement. Such accounts record the various types of payroll expenses of the business.
Examples include Wages, Manufacturing labor, Vacation pay, Holidays, Sales commissions, and Bonuses. All payroll expenses can be
combined in a single account, or you can divide them into as many categories as will be convenient for management review.
Consider whether government authorities require reporting of certain categories of payroll expense when choosing your accounts.
• Liability accounts on the Balance Sheet. These accounts record amounts owed to outside entities, such as tax authorities or benefit
funds on behalf of employees. Examples include Income tax withholding, Pension fund salary deferrals, Employee medical insurance
premiums, and Employer retirement contributions. Some may represent funds deducted from employees’ pay. Others may represent
funds contributed by the business. The primary considerations in determining which accounts to establish are who the funds will
eventually be remitted to and for what purpose.
• Asset accounts on the Balance Sheet. These accounts record amounts owed to the business, such as salary advances to employees
that must be repaid.
These accounts can be used to post more than one payslip item or type.
Example
Northwind Traders establishes the following payroll accounts:
—Wages & salaries, an expense account for normal and vacation or holiday earnings
—Retirement matching, an expense account for the company’s portion of retirement contributions
—Income tax withheld, a liability account for tax deductions from employees’ pay
—Retirement fund deferrals, a liability account for both employees’ and the employer’s contributions to a retirement fund
Note
Prior to Manager version 19.11.83, built-in accounts named Wages & salaries (an expense account) and Payroll liabilities (a
liability account) were activated automatically when payslip items were used. All payslip items posted to these accounts
unless separate accounts were purposely set up and selected while defining payslip items. Much greater flexibility is
achieved by defining your own payroll accounts.
For businesses already established when version 19.11.83 was released, the built-in accounts were automatically converted
to standard accounts with the same names. No action is required by the user for the conversion.
Earnings items
Earnings items are typically wages, salaries, bonuses, commissions, and various allowances you will pay to employees. Employees, in turn, will
see earnings on their payslips broken out into these categories.
Go to Settings , then Payslip Items , locate the Payslip Earnings Items list, and click New Payslip Item :
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Give the earnings item an informative Name, such as Regular wages, Holiday pay, or Vacation. Assign earnings items to the expense account
created for each one.
Exmple
Northwind creates an item for regular wages and assigns it to the Wages & salaries account:
Click Create to save the earnings item, which will appear on the Payslip Earnings Items list:
Note
Earnings items must be posted to expense accounts because they are expenses of the business in the current accounting
period.
Deduction items
Deduction items include payroll taxes, insurance premiums, union fees, or wage garnishments you subtract from an employee’s pay.
Employees will see their deductions broken out into these categories.
Deduction items are defined the same way as earnings items, except that you click New Payslip Item for the Payslip Deduction Items
list:
Give the deduction item an informative Name, such as Income tax. Assign deduction items to the accounts you set up for them.
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Example
Northwind creates a deduction item for income tax and assigns it to the Income tax withheld account:
It also creates a deduction item for retirement fund contributions by employees, assigning it to the Retirement fund
deferrals account. And it creates an item for recovery of salary advances and assigns it to the Staff salary advances account.
All three appear on the Payslip Deduction Items list:
Note
Deduction items are most frequently posted to liability accounts because deductions from an employee’s gross pay (e.g.,
payroll tax, union fees) are payable to someone else (e.g., tax authority, union) by the business. Only when the deductions
are payable to the business itself should the associated payroll account be classified as an asset account.
Contribution items
Contribution items are paid by an employer and characterized as both earnings and deductions.
Example 1
You are required to deposit a certain percentage of an employee’s gross pay into a pension or superannuation fund. This is
regarded as a contribution. It represents a type of employee earnings paid by the employer, but is deducted from gross pay
at the same time and subsequently paid into the employee’s pension fund.
Example 2
You have a matching gift program under which you add to an employee’s charitable contribution. Your matching gifts
would normally be earnings for the employee and an expense for you, but the simultaneous deduction also makes it a
liability you will pay to the charity.
Contribution items are defined the same way as earnings and deduction items, except that you click New Payslip Item for the Payslip
Contribution Items list:
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Give the contribution item an informative Name, such as Retirement match or Matching gift. Assign contribution items to the expense and
liability accounts you set up for them.
Example
Northwind creates a contribution item for its portion of retirement contributions. It assigns the item to the Wages & salaries
expense account and the Retirement fund deferrals liability account:
Click Create to define the contribution item, which will appear in the Payslip Contribution Items list:
• Deductions, e. g., taxes, union dues, retirement savings, or anything else funded by the employee from gross earnings but withheld
by the business and paid to another entity on the employee’s behalf
• Contributions by the business, e. g., retirement plan contributions, charitable matching gifts, or other things paid to outside
authorities, organizations, or custodians on the employee’s behalf
Before you can issue a payslip, enable the Payslips tab. Under the left navigation pane, click Customize , check the box for
Payslips , and click Update :
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Notes
Some businesses use third-party processing services to manage payroll. In such cases, there is usually no reason to enable
the Payslips tab, because individual payroll transactions are not entered in Manager. Instead, lump-sum transactions
are entered for each payroll period and individual payroll records are maintained by the outside processor. This can be
advantageous when local tax and retirement laws are complex or change frequently.
Payslips cannot be issued until payslip items have created under Settings . See another Guide for procedures.
Payslips also cannot be issued until employees have been entered in the Employees tab. See another Guide for
procedures.
Issue a payslip
In the Payslips tab, click New Payslip :
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• Date will automatically be prefilled with today’s date, but may be edited.
• Reference is optional and may be used for internal or external sequences. If the box within the field is checked, Manager will
number the transaction automatically. The program will search for the highest number among all existing payslips and add 1.
• Check the box for Show totals for the period (if desired) and enter a date. Totals will be displayed at the bottom of the payslip
for the period beginning with the entered date and ending with the Date of the payslip.
• Check the box for Custom theme (if any are enabled) to select a theme.
More earnings, deductions, or contributions can be added by clicking Add line . When finished, click Create to issue the payslip:
Payslips can be emailed to employees directly. Click Email while viewing the payslip:
The payslip will be emailed to the address on file in the employee’s profile in the Employees tab:
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Payslip effects
Payslips affect at least three accounts. More could be affected if various payslip items are allocated to more than one account. The first is
Employee clearing account, where the net pay amount is posted:
Second are the payroll liability accounts, where both deductions and contributions are posted. All amounts posted to these accounts are
owed to outside entities. In this illustration, both payroll tax and retirement match are posted to Payroll liabilities:
Third are the payroll expense accounts, where expenses to the business are posted. In this illustration, both wages and retirement match are
posted to Wages & salaries:
Caution
Payslips do not record payment to the employee. They only record expenses and liabilities associated with payroll. Further
transactions are needed to discharge the liabilities by paying the employee and forwarding deductions and contributions
to relevant entities.
Note
Procedures for issuing regular payslips are described in another Guide. Read it first. Recurring payslips are very similar.
Before you can set up recurring payslips, you must enable the Employees and Payslips tabs, enter one or more
employees, and define payslip items.
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To set up a recurring payslip, go to Settings Recurring Payslips and click New Recurring Payslip :
Complete the entry form exactly as for a regular payslip, with the following additions:
• Next issue date is the date of the next recurring payslip. You should enter a date that is the same day of the week or month you
want future payslips to be issued.
• Interval must include the number of weeks or months between recurring payslips.
Click Create to save the recurring payslip, which will be visible in the Recurring Payslips listing under Settings :
Example
One recurring payslip has at least one pending payslip:
The second notification occurs any time you go to the Payslips tab. You will see a yellow banner.
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Example
Example
Click Create to issue all recurring payslips listed. Edit any that require changes before giving them to employees.
If the recurring payslip ceases to be useful, Delete it in the Settings tab. Since a recurring payslip is a template, not an actual
transaction, Manager will allow you to delete recurring payslips that have already been used.
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Fixed and intangible assets are property owned by a business with long lifetimes. Their full cost is recovered over an extended period of time
rather than being counted entirely as a current expense.
• Have a useful life longer than one major accounting period (usually one year)
• Cost more than the capitalization threshold (set either by company policy or local law)
• Be held for productive use rather than immediate sale (inventory is not included among fixed assets)
The acquisition cost of a fixed asset is recovered over its economic life through depreciation, rather than as an expense during a single
accounting period.
Before you can enter any transaction related to a fixed asset, the fixed asset itself must be created in Manager. If the Fixed Assets tab
has not already been enabled, click Customize below the left navigation pane. Check the box for Fixed Assets and click Update
below the list:
When the tab is enabled, four accounts are automatically activated in your chart of accounts:
• Fixed assets, at cost, an asset account recording the acquisition cost of all fixed assets
• Fixed assets, accumulated depreciaiton, a contra asset account summing depreciation to date of all fixed assets
• Fixed assets - loss on disposal, an expense account recording loss (gain) on disposal of fixed assets
These accounts cannot be disabled while the Fixed Assets tab is enabled, but they can be renamed under Settings
Chart of Accounts .
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• Item code is an optional alphabetic or numeric designation for the fixed asset.
• Item name is the name that will appear for the fixed asset in reports and lists.
• Depreciation rate is the notional annual percentage depreciation rate for the asset. This rate will be used by the Depreciation
Calculation Worksheet in the Reports tab to calculate a daily depreciation rate, which will be used in calculations.
• The Control account — At cost field appears only when a custom control account made up of fixed assets exists. Otherwise, the
asset is assigned to the Fixed assets, at cost control account by default.
• The Control account — Accumulated depreciation appears whenever a custom control account for fixed asset depreciation
exists. Otherwise, the asset’s depreciation will be posted to Fixed assets, accumulated depreciation.
• When the Custom depreciation expense account box is checked, a dropdown field appears that allows you to select any regular
expense account for posting current depreciation expenses for the asset. If nothing else is selected, current depreciation for the
asset will be posted to Fixed assets - depreciation.
Click Create .
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Example
Brilliant Industries is adding a packaging machine in its factory. The machine has an expected life of 10 years and will be
depreciated using a straight-line method, so a fixed asset is created:
The fixed asset will show under the Fixed Assets tab with no book value:
Note
To this point, you have not recorded the purchase of the fixed asset. You have only set it up in Manager. Now you can
record financial transactions related to the fixed asset.
When recording the purchase of a fixed asset under any of these tabs, post the amount spent to the Fixed assets account (or the custom
control account you created for the purpose) and the subaccount for the fixed asset you have purchased.
If you purchase the fixed asset using a loan, you should also create a liability account in your chart of accounts with a name something like
Loan before you record the purchase transaction. Then record the journal entry as a debit to the Fixed assets or other control account for the
purchase cost and a credit to the Loan account of the same amount. Loan repayments must be posted to the Loan account. They have
nothing to do with purchase cost, depreciation, or book value of the fixed asset.
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Example
Brilliant Industries purchases its packaging machine on credit from the manufacturer, entering the 10,500 cost with a
journal entry. The purchase cost now shows in the Fixed Assets tab register:
The purchase cost of the fixed asset will be combined with any other fixed assets’ costs and displayed under the Assets category on the
Summary page:
However, some local tax authorities allow fixed assets to be treated as current expenses under exceptions to normal practice for various
reasons, including:
A typical exception is to allow the entire cost of a fixed asset to be recovered in a single year as a current expense under specific
circumstances. However, such exceptions often include restrictions of their own, such as requirements to recapture (give back) accelerated
depreciation taken previously if the fixed asset is retired from service or the company goes out of business before the asset’s expected
lifespan has passed. In other words, the tax authority will demand its due if criteria for the exception are not met.
Manager can help track necessary information if you take advantage of such exceptions for fixed assets. Purchasing, depreciating, and
disposing of fixed assets are covered by other Guides. Extra steps necessary when expensing fixed assets are accomplished using custom
fields.
Locate the Fixed Asset list and click New Custom Field :
Define a custom field for the date the fixed asset is placed in service. Assign this custom field to Position 1. Check the box to
Show custom field as a column . Make the field Type Single line text:
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Click Create .
Define a second custom field for depreciation method in the same way, assigning it to Position 2. Make this custom field Type a Drop-down
list. Enter list options allowed by local law and business policy. In this example, straight-line depreciation and accelerated depreciation under
(fictional) Rule 24-3998 are allowed:
Define a third custom field for the recovery period. Assign it to Position 3. Define a fourth custom field for the end of the recovery period,
which may or may not match the actual expected life of the fixed asset. Of course, labels for all these custom fields can be altered to match
local requirements.
When these custom fields are completed for all fixed assets, the Fixed Assets register becomes a useful tool for determining:
• How long the fixed asset must remain in service to avoid recapture of depreciation expenses
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Example
In the register below, the delivery truck is being depreciated in a standard, straight-line fashion over a 7-year lifespan. No
special treatment is required. But the packaging machine was fully depreciated at the time it was purchased, yet is expected
to last 10 years. It currently has no book value, even though it remains a valuable business asset. So if it is disposed early,
adjustments to income may be necessary to recapture the accelerated depreciation. Follow local tax law in this respect.
The same basic approach can be followed whenever additional information must be tracked for future decision-making
about fixed assets.
Depreciation can be calculated many ways. You must determine allowable depreciation for the current accounting period according to a
fixed asset’s useful life, original cost, depreciation method, and local regulations. Once you have done that, Manager will keep track of how
much depreciation has been accumulated for the fixed asset.
Straight-line depreciation is the simplest method, dividing the fixed asset’s cost by the number of accounting periods it is expected to last.
Other methods can yield greater depreciation in early accounting periods to recognize rapid obsolesence or take into account the salvage or
scrap value of the fixed asset after it is fully depreciated. Tax regulations might also allow accelerated depreciation to encourage business
investment or simplify filing. And laws may specify which depreciation methods must be used or cannot be used.
Before depreciation can be entered, the Depreciation Entries tab must be enabled. Click Customize below the left navigation pane,
check the box, and click Update :
Note
If you entered depreciation in a version of Manager before the Depreciation Entries tab was added, the box will
already be checked. Just click Update .
Enter depreciation
To enter depreciation for a specific fixed asset, go to the Depreciation Entries tab. Click New Depreciation Entry :
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• Date will be prefilled with the current date, but can be edited.
• Click Create .
Example
Brilliant Industries purchased a packaging machine for 10,500. It has an expected lifetime of 10 years and is being
depreciated monthly. Monthly depreciation is calculated using the straight-line method:
The Fixed Assets register now shows the depreciation amount and reduced book value:
Subsequent depreciation entries will add to the total of accumulated depreciation. A complete record of depreciation for the asset can be
seen by clicking on the blue Depreciation balance for an asset in the Fixed Assets tab:
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By default, the Summary tab combines accumulated depreciation for all fixed assets. It displays Fixed assets, accumulated depreciation as a
contra asset account (meaning the balance is normally negative). This control account is activated automatically when you enable the
Fixed Assets tab:
However, depreciation can be accumulated in custom control accounts instead. These custom control accounts can be assigned on an asset-
by-asset basis. See another Guide for a complete, illustrated example.
Caution
Manager’s Depreciation Calculation Worksheet currently calculates depreciation using the declining balance method.
Depreciation is calculated as a percentage of book value based on the number of days in the depreciation period. If this is
not your depreciation method, you cannot use this worksheet for that asset. Capabilities for other depreciation methods,
including straight-line, will be added in the future.
Manager can calculate depreciation automatically and enter depreciation for an accounting period for all fixed assets at once. To include a
fixed asset in this process, its annual depreciation rate must be entered on the fixed asset form:
The annual depreciation rate can be entered when purchasing new fixed assets. Or it can be added by clicking Edit for a fixed asset in the
Fixed Assets tab.
Note
Manager treats the annual depreciation rate as a notional rate for a typical, 365-day year. To figure depreciation over a
defined time period, the program calculates a daily depreciation rate from the notional annual rate by dividing the annual
rate by 365. As a result, depreciation calculated for leap years will be slightly more than for standard-length years.
Calculate depreciation
After you specify depreciation rates on all your active fixed assets, go to the Reports tab and click on
Depreciation Calculation Worksheet , then on New Report :
Create a report covering the period for which you want to calculate depreciation for your fixed assets:
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• The From date will be prefilled with the current date. Change this to the first day of the accounting period for which you are
calculating depreciation.
• The Until date will also be prefilled with the current date. Change this to the last day of the accounting period for which you are
calculating depreciation.
Click Create . The report will calculate depreciation amount for each fixed asset.
Cautions
Before creating a new report, all prior depreciation must be calculated and entered for all fixed assets. The calculation
worksheet assumes book values of fixed assets are valid from the first day of the defined period. If this is not true, both
current and future depreciation calculations will be wrong. (If depreciation for a prior accounting period has not been
entered, you can calculate and enter it by creating reports with earlier date ranges. However, these must be created in
chronological order.
When an asset has no book value at the beginning of a period, no depreciation should be calculated for it. Therefore,
when assets are added during an accounting period, depreciation for existing assets must be calculated through the day
before a new asset is added. A separate worksheet must be created beginning on the date of acquisition of the new asset,
running through the end of the accounting period. If assets are acquired on staggered dates, several worksheets might be
required for a single accounting period.
Example
Brilliant Industries has two fixed assets with different annual depreciation rates. Based on the depreciation rates entered for
each, the Depreciation Calculation Worksheet produces the following results for 2018:
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Enter depreciation
If you are satisfied with calculated figures, click on New Depreciation Entry on the report:
This will copy the figures from the report into an actual transaction in the Depreciation Entries tab. There, you can edit the figures if
needed. The Depreciation Calculation Worksheet is just a worksheet to give you good starting point so you don’t have to calculate all the
figures from scratch.
Example
Brilliant Industries reviews the worksheet from the previous example, confirming the accuracy of the numbers. It clicks on
New Depreciation Entry to generate a depreciation entry for all fixed assets for the 2018 accounting period:
Since Brilliant does not assign fixed assets to tracking codes, it leaves those fields blank. It could, however, have chosen
tracking codes if it desired.
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Example
For the following year, Brilliant Industries generates another Depreciation Calculation Worksheet. Note the different book
values and calculated results:
Example
Brilliant Industries packing machine failed at the end of August 2019 and was scrapped. The fixed asset was disposed. As a
result, only 243 days worth of depreciation is calculated:
Note
If your depreciation scheme allows only full or half accounting periods to determine depreciation, adjust your disposal
dates to the end or mid-point of the period.
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• Been only partially depreciated, with useful life and resale value remaining
• Been partially depreciated, but with no value remaining (worn out early)
Other circumstances could also apply, especially if special tax provisions covered purchase of the fixed asset. Regardless of the exact
situation, the purchase cost of the fixed asset must be removed from the Fixed assets account and its accumulated depreciation must be
removed from Fixed assets, accumulated depreciation. Otherwise, the balances of these two accounts would grow endlessly as the business
purchases assets over the years, even if those assets are no longer owned. Finally, whether the fixed asset is sold, scrapped, or given away,
the difference between its book value and any amount recovered through disposal must be recorded, either as income or expense.
To dispose of a fixed asset, go to the Fixed Assets tab, click the Edit button for the asset disposed, check Disposed fixed asset ,
then enter the date of disposal. If desired, the disposal gain or loss can be posted to any regular expense account. By default, it will be
posted to Fixed assets - loss on disposal.
Example
Brilliant Industries decides to replace the packaging machine it purchased in January with a more capable model, even
though only three months of its useful life have passed. The disposal is recorded as below:
This transfers the book value of the asset to the Fixed assets - loss on disposal expense account and the book value on the balance sheet is
reduced to zero. Fixed assets - loss on disposal is a control account activated automatically when the Fixed Assets tab is enabled.
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Example
After Brilliant Industries’ disposal action, its Balance Sheet shows no balance for either Fixed assets, at cost or Fixed assets,
accumuated depreciation. The Profit and Loss Statement shows three months’ worth of depreciation expense and the large
remaining book value:
Unless Brilliant Industries can find a buyer for the used packaging machine, this situation will look like a serious business
mistake.
Like fixed asset purchases and depreciation, disposals are reported on the Fixed Asset Summary in the Reports tab:
Notes
In the Fixed Asset Summary, the Acquisition cost column includes all purchases and upwards revaluations.
Consideration received includes all sales posted to the asset’s subaccount (see below) and downwards revaluations.
Depreciation includes all depreciation during the reporting period. Profit (loss) includes amounts transferred to other
accounts when the asset is disposed.
Two methods can be used when a disposed fixed asset is sold. The first is to post a receipt in the Receipts & Payments
tab to Fixed assets, at cost and the specific asset’s subaccount prior to recording disposal. This reduces the purchase cost
balance, decreasing any loss on disposal. Such a receipt would show up in the Consideration received column. The
second method is to post the transaction to Fixed assets - loss on disposal after disposal. The net effects are the same, but
the second method would not show on the Fixed Asset Summary, because the transaction would not be posted directly to
the asset’s subaccount.
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• Enter starting balances for purchase cost and accumulated depreciation to date being carried over from your old account system.
(Manager will automatically calculate book value.)
To migrate a fixed asset, return to the left navigation pane, click Fixed Assets , then New Fixed Asset :
• Item code is an optional alphabetic or numeric designation for the fixed asset.
• Item name is the name that will appear for the fixed asset in reports and lists.
• Depreciation rate is the notional annual percentage depreciation rate for the asset. This rate will be used by the Depreciation
Calculation Worksheet in the Reports tab to calculate a daily depreciation rate, which will be used in calculations.
• The Control account — At cost field appears only when a custom control account made up of fixed assets exists. Otherwise, the
asset is assigned to the Fixed assets, at cost control account by default.
• The Control account — Accumulated depreciation appears whenever a custom control account for fixed asset depreciation
exists. Otherwise, the asset’s depreciation will be posted to Fixed assets, accumulated depreciation.
• When the Custom depreciation expense account box is checked, a dropdown field appears that allows you to select any regular
expense account for posting current depreciation expenses for the asset. If nothing else is selected, current depreciation for the
asset will be posted to Fixed assets - depreciation.
Click Create .
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When migrating fixed assets, go to Starting Balances in the Settings tab. Click the blue balance figure for the Fixed assets account.
Click Edit for the asset you are migrating and enter Purchase cost. Return to the Starting Balances list and click on the blue
balance for Fixed assets - accumulated depreciation. Click Edit for the asset you are migrating and enter depreciation to date for the asset
you are migrating.
Example
Northwind Traders is migrating its accounting system to Manager. The first fixed asset it migrates is a packing machine.
Following procedures described above, it creates the packing machine as a fixed asset, then enters starting balances:
AND
Results
The fixed asset, with starting balances carried over from your old accounting system, will show under the Fixed Assets tab. The purchase
cost of the fixed asset will be combined with any other fixed assets’ costs and displayed under the Assets category on the Summary page. A
contra account, Fixed assets, accumulated depreciation, will record depreciation to date for all fixed assets. The difference between the two
account balances represents current book value of all fixed assets. Of course, if you assign the cost and accumulated depreciation of an asset
to custom control accounts, applicable figures will be summed there, instead.
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Example
After migrating its first fixed asset, the packaging machine, Northwind’s fixed asset list and Summary show the results:
AND
Note
When migrating many fixed assets, consider using batch operations to accomplish the steps described above.
• Be expected to enhance cash flow for longer than one major accounting period (usually one year)
• Cost more than the capitalization threshold (set either by company policy or local law)
Intangible assets can be related to marketing, intellectual property, contracts, or technology and can include, among other things:
• Patents
• Licenses
• Customer lists
• Copyrights
• Franchises
• Trade secrets
• Good will
Often, intangible assets are acquired when an ongoing business is purchased. Part of the purchase price is allocated to intangible assets. In
other cases, intangible assets are created through reallocation of prior, internal expenses, such as when research and development costs are
converted into the intangible asset of a patent. Local law and accounting standards often influence what can or must be considered an
intangible asset.
Before you can enter any transaction related to a intangible asset, the intangible asset itself must be created in Manager. If the
Intangible Assets tab has not already been enabled, click Customize below the left navigation pane. Check the box for
Intangible Assets and click Update below the list:
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When the tab is enabled, four accounts are automatically activated in your chart of accounts:
• Intangible assets, at cost, an asset account recording the purchase cost of all intangible assets
• Intangible assets, accumulated amortization, a contra asset account summing amortization to date of all intangible assets
• Intangible assets - loss on disposal, an expense account recording and loss (gain) on disposal of intangible assets
These accounts cannot be disabled while the Intangible Assets tab is enabled, but they can be renamed under Settings
Chart of Accounts .
• Name is the name that will appear for the intangible asset in reports and lists.
• Code is an optional alphabetic or numeric designation for the intangible asset. Numeric entries will control the position of the asset
on lists.
• Amortization rate is the annual rate of amortization for this intangible asset. This rate will be used by the Amortization
Calculation Worksheet in the Reports tab.
• The Control account — At cost field appears only when a custom control account made up of intangible assets exists. Otherwise,
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the asset is assigned to the Intangible assets, at cost control account by default.
• The Control account — Accumulated amortization field appears when a custom control account for intangible assort
amortization exists. Otherwise, the asset’s amortization will be accumulated in Intangible assets, accumulated amortization.
• If the Custom amortization expense account is checked, any regular expense account can be selected for posting current
amortization. Otherwise, current amortization will be posted to Intangible assets - amortization.
Click Create .
Example
ACME Industries purchased the patent on an electric controller from its inventor. The patent has a remaining life of 15
years, so an intangible asset is created:
The intangible asset shows under the Intangible Assets tab with no book value:
Note
To this point, you have not recorded the purchase of the intangible asset. You have only set it up in Manager. Now you can
record financial transactions related to the intangible asset.
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When recording the purchase of an intangible asset under any of these tabs, post the amount spent to the Intangible assets account and the
subaccount for the intangible asset you have purchased.
If you purchase the intangible asset using a loan, you should also create a liability account in your chart of accounts with a name something
like Loan before you record the purchase transaction. Then record the journal entry as a debit to the Intangible assets account for the
acquisition cost and a credit to the Loan account of the same amount. Loan repayments must be posted to the Loan account. They have
nothing to do with acquisition cost, amortization, or book value of the intangible asset.
Example
ACME Industries purchases its patent from the inventor for cash, entering the 10,500 cost with a bank transaction. The
acquisition cost now shows in the Intangible Assets tab register:
The acquisition cost of the intangible asset will be combined with any other intangible assets’ costs and displayed under the Assets category
on the Summary page:
Amortization can be calculated many ways. You must determine allowable amortization for the current accounting period according to an
intangible asset’s remaining life, original cost, amortization method, possible impairment of the asset, and local regulations. Once you have
done that, Manager will keep track of how much amortization has been accumulated for the intangible asset.
Straight-line amortization is the simplest method, dividing the intangible asset’s unamortized cost by the number of remaining accounting
periods it is expected to last. Other methods can yield greater amortization in early accounting periods to recognize rapid obsolesence or
take into account the residual value of the intangible asset after it is fully amortized. Tax regulations might also allow accelerated
amortization to encourage business investment or simplify filing. And laws may specify which amortization methods must be used or cannot
be used.
Before amortization can be entered, the Amortization Entries tab must be enabled. Click Customize below the left navigation pane,
check the box, and click Update :
Note
If you entered amortization in a version of Manager before the Amortization Entries tab was added, the box will
already be checked. Just click Update .
Enter amortization
To enter amortization for a specific intangible asset, go to the Amortization Entries tab. Click New Amortization Entry :
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• Date will be prefilled with the current date, but can be edited.
Click Create .
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Example
ACME Industries purchased a patent for 10,500. It has a remaining lifetime of 15 years and is being amortized monthly.
Monthly amortization is calculated:
The Intangible Assets register now shows the amortization amount and reduced book value:
Subsequent amortization entries will add to the total of accumulated amortization. A complete record of amortization for the asset can be
seen by clicking on the blue Amortization balance for an asset in the Intangible Assets tab.
Example
ACME enters amortization for the following month. The drill-down shows all entries:
By default, the Summary tab combines accumulated amortization for all intangible assets. It displays Intangible assets, accumulated
amortization as a contra asset account (meaning the balance is normally negative). This control account is activated automatically when you
enable the Intangible Assets tab.
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Example
ACME’s balance sheet shows its complete position with respect to intangible assets:
However, amortization can be accumulated in custom control accounts instead. These custom control accounts can be assigned on an asset-
by-asset basis. See another Guide for a complete, illustrated example. (That Guide illustrates using custom control accounts for a fixed asset,
but the principles and processes are identical.)
Caution
Manager’s Amortization Calculation Worksheet currently calculates amortization using the declining balance method.
Amortization is calculated as a percentage of book value based on the number of days in the amortization period. If this is
not your amortization method, you cannot use this worksheet for that asset. Capabilities for other amortization methods,
including straight-line, will be added in the future.
Manager can calculate amortization automatically and enter amortization for an accounting period for all intangible assets at once. To
include an intangible asset in this process, its annual amortization rate must be entered on the intangible asset form:
The annual amortization rate can be entered when purchasing new intangible assets. Or it can be added by clicking Edit for an intangible
asset in the Intangible Assets tab.
Note
Manager treats the annual amortization rate as a notional rate for a typical, 365-day year. To figure amortization over a
defined time period, the program calculates a daily amortization rate from the notional annual rate by dividing the annual
rate by 365. As a result, amortization calculated for leap years will be slightly more than for standard-length years.
Calculate amortization
After you specify amortization rates on all your active intangible assets, go to the Reports tab and click on
Amortization Calculation Worksheet , then on New Report :
Create a report covering the period for which you want to calculate amortization for your intangible assets:
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• The From date will be prefilled with the current date. Change this to the first day of the accounting period for which you are
calculating amortization.
• The Until date will also be prefilled with the current date. Change this to the last day of the accounting period for which you are
calculating amortization.
Click Create . The report will calculate amortization amount for each intangible asset.
Cautions
Before creating a new report, all prior amortization must be calculated and entered for all intangible assets. The calculation
worksheet assumes book values of intangible assets are valid from the first day of the defined period. If this is not true,
both current and future amortization calculations will be wrong. (If amortization for a prior accounting period has not been
entered, you can calculate and enter it by creating reports with earlier date ranges. However, these must be created in
chronological order.
When an asset has no book value at the beginning of a period, no amortization should be calculated for it. Therefore,
when assets are added during an accounting period, amortization for existing assets must be calculated through the day
before a new asset is added. A separate worksheet must be created beginning on the date of acquisition of the new asset,
running through the end of the accounting period. If assets are acquired on staggered dates, several worksheets might be
required for a single accounting period.
Example
Brilliant Industries has only one intangible asset. Based on the amortization rate entered for it, the Amortization Calculation
Worksheet produces the following for 2018:
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Enter amortization
If you are satisfied with calculated figures, click on New Amortization Entry on the report:
This will copy the figures from the report into an actual transaction in the Amortization Entries tab. There, you can edit the figures if
needed. The Amortization Calculation Worksheet is just a worksheet to give you good starting point so you don’t have to calculate all the
figures from scratch.
Example
Brilliant Industries reviews the worksheet from the previous example, confirming accuracy of the numbers. It clicks on
New Amortization Entry to generate an amortization entry for all (in this example, only one) intangible assets for the
2018 accounting period:
Since Brilliant does not assign intangible assets to tracking codes, it leaves that field blank. It could, however, have chosen a
tracking code if it desired.
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Example
For the following year, Brilliant Industries generates another Amortization Calculation Worksheet. Note the different book
values and calculated results:
Example
Brilliant Industries became worthless to the company at the end of August 2019 when products using it were discontinued.
The intangible asset was disposed. As a result, only 243 days worth of amortization is calculated:
• Passed the end of its useful life for your business, but have residual resale value
• Been only partially amortized, with useful life and resale value remaining
• Been partially amortized, but with no value remaining (became useless early)
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Other circumstances could also apply, especially if special tax provisions covered purchase of the intangible asset. Regardless of the exact
situation, the purchase cost of the intangible asset must be removed from the Intangible assets, at cost account and its accumulated
amortization must be removed from Intangible assets, accumulated amortization. Otherwise, the balances of these two accounts would grow
endlessly as the business purchases assets over the years, even if those assets are no longer owned. Finally, whether the intangible asset is
sold or has merely lost its value, the difference between its book value and any amount recovered through disposal must be recorded, either
as income or expense.
To dispose of an intangible asset, go to the Intangible Assets tab, click the Edit button for the asset disposed, check
Disposed intangible asset , then enter the date of disposal. If desired, the gain or loss on disposal can be posted to any regular
expense account. Otherwise, it will be posted to Intangible assets - loss on disposal.
Example
ACME Industries’ electric controller patent becomes useless because the company discontinues products in which it is used,
even though only two months of its anticipated life have passed. The disposal is recorded as below:
This transfers any book value of the asset to the Intangible assets - loss on disposal expense account and reduces the book value on the
balance sheet to zero. Intangible assets - loss on disposal is a control account activated automatically when the Intangible Assets tab is
enabled.
Example
After ACME Industries’ disposal action, its Balance Sheet shows no balance for either Intangible assets, at cost or Intangible
assets, accumuated amortization. The Profit and Loss Statement shows two months’ worth of amortization expense and the
large remaining book value:
Unless ACME Industries can find a buyer for the patent, this situation will look like a serious business mistake.
Like intangible asset purchases and amortization, disposals are reported on the Intangible Asset Summary in the Reports tab:
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Notes
In the Intangible Asset Summary, the Acquisition cost column includes all purchases and upwards revaluations.
Consideration received includes all sales posted to the asset’s subaccount (see below) and downwards revaluations.
Amortization includes all amortization during the reporting period. Profit (loss) includes amounts transferred to other
accounts when the asset is disposed.
Two methods can be used when a disposed fixed asset is sold. The first is to post a receipt in the Receipts & Payments
tab to Intangible assets and the specific asset’s subaccount prior to recording disposal. This reduces book value, decreasing
any loss on disposal. Such a receipt would show up in the Consideration received column. The second method is to post
the transaction to Intangible assets - loss on disposal after disposal. The net effects are the same, but the second method
would not show on the Intangible Asset Summary, because the transaction would not be posted directly to the asset’s
subaccount.
• Enter starting balances for purchase cost and accumulated amortization to date being carried over from your old account system.
(Manager will automatically calculate book value.)
To migrate a fixed asset, return to the left navigation pane, click Intangible Assets , then New Intangible Asset :
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• Name is the name that will appear for the intangible asset in reports and lists.
• Code is an optional alphabetic or numeric designation for the intangible asset. Numeric entries will control the position of the asset
on lists.
• Amortization rate is the annual rate of amortization for this intangible asset. This rate will be used by the Amortization
Calculation Worksheet in the Reports tab.
• The Control account — At cost field appears only when a custom control account made up of intangible assets exists. Otherwise,
the asset is assigned to the Intangible assets, at cost control account by default.
• The Control account — Accumulated amortization field appears when a custom control account for intangible assort
amortization exists. Otherwise, the asset’s amortization will be accumulated in Intangible assets, accumulated amortization.
• If the Custom amortization expense account is checked, any regular expense account can be selected for posting current
amortization. Otherwise, current amortization will be posted to Intangible assets - amortization.
Click Create .
When migrating intangible assets, go to Starting Balances in the Settings tab. Click the blue balance figure for the Intangible assets
account. Click Edit for the asset you are migrating and enter Purchase cost. Return to the Starting Balances list and click the blue
balance for Intangible assets, accumulated amortization.
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Example
Brilliant industries is migrating its accounting to Manager. It owns one intangible asset, the patent for an electronic
controller. Following procedures described above, it creates the patent as an intangible asset, then enters starting balances:
AND
Results
The intangible asset, with starting balances carried over from your old accounting system, will show under the Intangible Assets tab.
The purchase cost of the intangible asset will be combined with any other intangible assets’ costs and displayed under the Assets category
on the Summary page. A contra account, Intangible assets, accumulated amortization, will record amortization to date for all intangible
assets. The difference between the two account balances represents current book value of all intangible assets. Of course, if you assign the
cost and accumulated amortization of an asset to custom control accounts, applicable figures will be summed there, instead.
Example
After migrating its intangible asset, the patent, Brilliant’s intangible asset list and Summary show the results:
AND
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Note
When migrating many intangible assets, consider using batch operations to accomplish the steps described above.
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Despite its overall simplicity, Manager can still present situations where more advanced knowledge is necessary.
Note
When using the desktop edition, business data files can be stored outside the application data folder and opened directly
without first launching the Manager application. This is done by creating a backup file in the desired storage location.
Business data files stored this way are not also copied to the application data folder, so information below does not apply
to them.
Over time, data storage schemes for Manager have changed to accommodate new program features. Sometimes, an update requires new
data files to be created. This happens automatically when the new version of Manager is launched. No action by the user is ever necessary.
Relic data files are not normally deleted. These obsolete data files and/or folders are harmless and can safely be left in place. By modern
standards, they are not large, and do not consume much storage capacity. However, they can be identified and deleted, if desired.
Once at the data folder, you should see files like these:
• 00000000000000000000000000000000.manager is an SQLite database holding a list of businesses, users, and global preferences.
This file is generated automatically the first time you launch Manager and updated as businesses and users are added or removed
or global preferences are changed. It contains no accounting data. If the file is deleted, the program will generate an empty version
of it. Businesses can be repopulated into the file by restoring them from backup.
• Files with names of businesses, like Business Name.manager, are generated for each business added. All accounting data, customer
and supplier information, custom themes, settings, and attachments for a business reside in its individual file. For privacy reasons,
no data from any business appears in the file of any other.
• data stores the application data folder path. If you have an older version of Manager or have never changed the application data
folder location, this file may be missing. If Manager needs it, the program will generate it automatically.
• size (for desktop installations) stores the window size when the application is closed.
So if you have two businesses, your file structure within the application data folder might look something like this:
00000000000000000000000000000000.manager
Northwind Traders.manager
Brilliant Industries.manager
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data
size
Trash
The current version of Manager does not use or create any other files or folders.
• 00000000000000000000000000000000 (without the *.manager extension) is an obsolete index the program ignores.
• recent is a relic file formerly used in the desktop edition to store a list of recently opened businesses.
• language is a relic file that was used to store settings from multiple businesses.
• Files with .manager-journal extensions are temporary SQLite rollback journals created when database revisions are necessary.
They help prevent database corruption. The application normally deletes them when they are no longer needed. They remain only if
an overly aggressive backup process interrupted a file conversion.
• Files with alphanumeric names like f565db9ce66044188729588d6f5f2269.manager. These are either business data files of
previously removed businesses, obsolete files left over from database restructuring of businesses, or obsolete audit trail files.
Relaunch Manager and verify all active businesses are still present and contain expected accounting and custom theme data. If an active
business file was moved from the application data folder by accident, the previously removed file should be moved back into the application
data folder.
When satisfied all businesses are present and include expected data, delete removed files from their temporary location.
• When a file is renamed, the business is renamed on the list. This does not change the business name under Business Details in
the Settings tab. It only changes the name under which the business appears on the Businesses page.
If you are using Dropbox, OneDrive, Google Drive or other cloud storage service, you might find it more practical to move Manager data
into cloud storage so your data is automatically backed up as you work with Manager. This can be accomplished two ways.
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Example
You want to move your data to Dropbox and have created a Manager folder:
If the folder has been newly created and doesn’t contain anything, Manager will not let you proceed. Instead, it will display a notice (the
exact format will vary by operating system):
Before you can use the new folder, follow the instructions in the notice. Copy (or move) all files from the current application data folder to
the new one. Once done, try again. If successful, your new location will be shown under Application Data heading.
Example
After creating a Manager folder in Dropbox and copying or moving all files from the old location to the new one, clicking on
the folder path under Preferences and selecting the new folder changes your data location:
If you install Manager on another computer where Dropbox is installed, and the Manager folder is accessible, you don’t have to copy or
move any files, because all files are already in the folder. So selecting the Manager folder in Dropbox under Preferences on the other
computer will make the same data available.
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Caution
If you are storing Manager data in Dropbox or similar cloud storage used by multiple computers, make sure multiple
computers don’t use Manager at the same time. Dropbox is not good at merging differences between users working on
the same file.
A cloud storage workflow will work well for single users owning multiple computers; they can have up-to-date data in the desktop edition
on all computers.
If you have multiple users who need to access Manager at the same time, consider the cloud edition, which is designed for multiple
concurrent users.
Note
After changing the application data folder location, do not delete the original folder. Manager uses it to store
housekeeping information, including the location of the new application data folder.
Note
Opening a file directly does not add it to the application data folder, so it will not appear in the list on the Businesses
page. To avoid confusion and potential, accidental recording of accounting transactions in the wrong file, remove the
business from the application data folder, leaving only the remotely stored copy.
Note
Previous versions of Manager compacted the data file automatically when a business was backed up. But that process took
excessively long when a business had many transactions, customers, suppliers, etc., causing the data file to exceed 1 GB.
The current implementation allows any data file to be compacted whenever desired, reducing the size of the application
data folder. The process is now entirely voluntary.
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Rather than first launching Manager and selecting a business from the list of businesses in the Businesses tab, open the data file using
the computer’s operating system features. This action will launch the Manager application; the business file will be active.
Thus, copies or backups of a business can be stored remotely, transmitted electronically, transported on portable media, and opened by
accountants or coworkers who do not have access to your applications data folder. The business does not need to be imported into an
application data folder.
Caution
Opening a file directly does not add it to your regular application data folder, so it will not appear in the Businesses
tab when you launch Manager in the normal way. However, the program will temporarily assign its application data path
to the folder where the business file was located. Because every application data folder needs an index, the program will
create an index file (if one does not already exist) named 00000000000000000000000000000000.manager in the same
folder. This index will contain every business file in the same folder, but not those in the regular application data folder. So
businesses in the folder will appear on the Businesses page of the instance of Manager opened directly.
If a version of the business remains in the regular application data folder (appearing in the Businesses tab), be aware
that these are two separate accounting records, even if they have the same name. Changes made in a directly opened file
are not picked up by the version in the regular application data folder. Nor will changes to a version listed in the regular
Businesses tab appear in the directly opened file.
Note
This Guide applies only to users of the cloud edition. To test this feature, you can sign up for free trial at
https://www.manager.io/cloud.
By default, subscribers access Manager Cloud using their *.manager.io URL. But access to the cloud edition can also be set up with a
custom domain name at no additional cost.
Example
If your cloud edition URL is currently yourbusinessname.manager.io, it can be changed to
accounting.yourbusinessname.com or anything else you like. This means your URL does not have to contain manager.io
branding:
Instructions
Setting up a custom domain name is simple. Basically, all you need to do is define a CNAME record for your custom domain that points to
your Manager Cloud URL.
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Step 1
Log into your domain provider’s site and determine where to manage your Domain Name Server (DNS) settings. Depending on your
provider, this may be called Zone File Settings, Manage Domains, Domain Manager, DNS Manager, or something similar.
Here, you will create a new record so your subdomain correctly links to Manager Cloud.
Step 2
In your provider’s DNS manager, create a CNAME record with these values (order and presentation may vary):
• Name, Alias or Host Name: enter your subdomain. For example, if you’re connecting accounting.yourbusinessname.com, you
should enter just accounting.
• Value or Points to: enter yourbusinessname.manager.io (your URL for Manager Cloud).
Example
A custom domain name, accounting.luboshasko.com, can be set up to point to the Manager Cloud URL
lubos.manager.io in a typical DNS manager:
Step 3
Depending on your provider, it may take from 5 minutes to 24 hours for a custom domain to become active. When you are able to navigate
to your custom domain, Manager Cloud will automatically download and install an SSL certificate from Let’s encrypt so your connection will
be still safe and secure.
Example
After setting up the custom domain accounting.luboshasko.com as described above and logging in, a browser will display
the secure connection as below:
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Final words
When custom domains were added (in Manager version 17.9.63), unnecessary manager.io branding was removed from the cloud edition.
So, if you use a custom domain, your restricted users will see your custom URL with no reference to www.manager.io.
This is especially useful for accounting firms or bookkeepers whose clients might be reluctant to do their books under an unfamiliar
.manager.io domain. Instead, they can keep their accounting records under the domain name of a service provider they already recognize
and trust.
Note
Setting up a custom domain name will not deactivate your original *.manager.io URL. Although your restricted users may
be unaware of its existence, your *.manager.io URL will provide backup access to Manager Cloud if problems occur with
setup or maintenance of your custom domain name.
11.3 Users
11.3.1 Reset the administrator password
If you are using Manager’s server edition and forget the password for the administrator, you will be unable to log in under the Username
administrator. So you will not be able to create new users or modify permissions. Attempting to log in without a valid password will return a
warning:
To regain access, you must reset the administrator password. Follow these instructions:
• Find the file named password and delete it. This will remove the password from the administrator account.
• Go back to the login screen, enter the Username administrator, and click Login (Do not enter anything into the Password field).
• Once you log in, set a new password in the Users tab so no-one will be able to access your server as administrator without
entering a password.
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11.4 Self-Hosting
11.4.1 Self-host a Manager installation
Most Manager users will use either the single-user desktop edition or the multi-user cloud edition. However, users with necessary skills and
access to required hardware and software resources can self-host a Manager installation.
Pricing information for the server edition is found here. Server edition licenses can be purchased in most currencies. The server license
entitles you to perpetual use of the server edition version you purchase. Version updates are also free for the first year, after which a license
renewal entitles you to updates for another year.
Instructions for setting up self-hosting vary by operating system. Specific instructions can be found at this web page:
https://www.manager.io/self-hosting. On that page, choose the link for your operating system.
When the time comes to update self-hosted installations, the following link automatically points to the latest version: https://github.com/
Manager-io/Manager.zip/releases/latest/download/Manager.zip. Updating is exactly like initial installation.
Note
Whenever users question whether the server or cloud edition is more suitable for their circumstances, our default
recommendation is to use the cloud edition. Users with necessary skills and resources to successfully install, operate, and
maintain a self-hosted installation will usually not have such questions. They will already be aware of what is involved and
understand the tradeoffs.
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