Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
- Include the tasks involved in receiving and processing a customer order, filling the order and
shipping the products to the customer, billing the customer at the proper time, and correctly
accounting for the transaction.
1. Receive Order
- The sales process begins with the receipt of a customer order indicating the type and quantity of
merchandise desired.
- At this point, the customer order is not in a standard format and may or may not be a physical
document.
- Purchase Order: an expenditure cycle document (when the customer is also a business entity)
- Given that the order is not in a standardized format, the first task is to transcribe it into a formal
sales order. (1)
- Sales order captures vital information such as the customer’s name, address, and account
number; the name, number, and description of the items sold; and the quantities and the unit
prices of each item sold.
- A copy will then be placed in the customer open order file for future references that will then be
updated every change of the transaction occurs like shipping etc.
2. Check Credit
- The customer’s creditworthiness needs to be established.
- The circumstances of the sale will determine the nature and degree of the credit check.
- The credit approval process is an authorization control and should be performed as a function
separate from the sales activity.
- The received-order task sends the sales order (credit copy) to the check-credit task for approval.
- The returned approved sales order then triggers the continuation of the sales process by
releasing sales order information simultaneously to various task.
3. Pick Goods
- The receive order activity forwards the stock release document (also called the picking ticket) to
the pick goods function in the warehouse.
- Stock Release Document: identifies the items of inventory that must be located and picked
from the warehouse shelves.
- After picking the stock, the order is verified for accuracy and the goods and verified stock
release document are sent to the ship goods task.
- If inventory levels are insufficient to fill the order, a warehouse employee adjusts the verified
stock release to reflect the amount actually going to the customer.
- The employee then prepares a back-order record, which stays on file until the inventories
arrive from the supplier.
- Back-ordered items are shipped before new sales are processed.
- Stock records are adjusted to reflect the items left in the inventory. (These stock records are not
the formal accounting records for controlling inventory assets)
4. Ship Goods
- Before the arrival of the goods and the verified stock release document, the shipping
department receives the packing slip and shipping notice from the receive order function.
- Packing slip will ultimately travel with the goods to the customer to describe the contents of
the order.
- Shipping notice will later be forwarded to the billing function as evidence that the customer’s
order was filled and shipped.
- The shipping goods function thus serves as an important independent verification control point
and is the last opportunity to detect errors before shipment.
- Shipping clerk packages the goods, attaches the packing slip, completes the shipping notice, and
prepares the bill of lading.
- Bill of lading is a formal contract between the seller and the shipping company to transport
the goods to the customer.
5. Bill Customer
- The shipment of goods marks the completion of the economic event and the point at which the
customer should be billed.
- To prevent problems, the billing function awaits notification from shipping before it bills.
- Upon credit approval, the bill-customer function receives the sales order (invoice copy) from
the receive order task. (This document is placed in an S.O pending file until receipt of the
shipping notice, which described the products that were actually shipped to the customer.)
- The completed sales invoice is the customer’s bill, which formally depicts the charges to the
customer.
- The billing function also performs the following task:
1. Records the sale in the sales journal.
2. Forwards the ledger copy of the sales order to the update accounts receivable task.
3. Sends the stock release document to the update inventory records task.
- At the end of the period, these entries are summarized into a sales journal voucher, which is
sent to the general ledger task for posting to the following accounts:
Accounts Receivable – Control
Sales
- The journal voucher system eliminates the need for a formal general journal, which is replaced
by a journal voucher file.
6. Update Inventory Records
- The inventory control function updates inventory subsidiary ledger accounts from information
contained in the stock release document.
- Periodically, the financial value of the total reduction in inventory is summarized in a journal
voucher and sent to the general ledger function for posting to the following accounts:
Cost of Goods Sold
Inventory – Control
7. Updates Accounts Receivable
- Customer records in the accounts receivable (AR) subsidiary ledger are updated from
information the sales order (ledger copy) provides.
- Periodically, the individual account balances are summarized in a report that is sent to the
general ledger.
8. Post to General Ledger
- By the close of the transaction processing period, the general ledger function has received
journal vouchers from the billing and inventory control tasks (1) and an account summary
from the AR function (2).
- This information set serves two purposes:
1. Use the journal vouchers to post to the following control accounts:
Accounts Receivable – control
Cost of Goods Sold
Inventory Control
Sales
2. This information supports an important independent verification control.
- An organization can expect that a certain percentage of its sales will be returned. This occurs for
a number of reasons, some of which may be:
1. The company shipped the customer to the wrong merchandise.
2. The goods were defective.
3. The product was damaged in shipment.
4. The buyer refused delivery because the seller shipped the goods too late or they were
delayed in transit.
- When a return is necessary, the buyer requests credit for the unwanted products. This involves
reversing the previous transaction in the sales order procedure.
- The sales order procedure describes a credit transaction that resulted in the establishment of an
account receivable.
- Payment on the account is due at some future date, which the terms of trade determine.
- This involves receiving and securing the cash; depositing the cash in the bank; matching the
payment with the customer and adjusting the correct account; and properly accounting for and
reconciling the financial details of the transaction.
- The organization should be structured so that the perpetration of a fraud requires collusion
between two or more individuals. (3)
3. Supervision
- Often used when unable to enact appropriate segregation of duties.
- Supervision of employees serves as a deterrent (discouragement) to dishonest acts and is
particularly important in the mailroom.
4. Accounting Records
- With a properly maintained audit trail, it is possible to track transactions through the systems
and to find where and when errors were made:
Prenumbered Documents: sequentially numbered by the printer and allow every transaction to
be identified uniquely.
Special Journals
Subsidiary Ledgers
General Ledgers
Files
5. Access Controls
- Prevent and detect unauthorized and illegal access to the firm’s assets.
- Access to assets and information should be limited.
6. Independent Verification
- Physical procedures as well as record-keeping should be independently reviewed at various
points in the system to check for accuracy and completeness.
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