Accountancy Software

April 24, 2007

A bewildering array of accounting software is available. A recent visit to the Amazon site revealed a list of 215 different accounting and payroll packages (excluding personal accounting software).

Your choice of software should not be based solely on price. Read the box to ascertain if the software is appropriate to the current needs of your business. To make your investment in an accounting software a worthwhile one, you should consider the following:

* What management information will you need regularly?
* If you are an employer, do you require a payroll package?
* Do you need to track movement of stock?
* Do you trade abroad? Do you sell in one or more currencies?
* Do you want to computerise job costing?
* Need to raise invoices?
* How many people will need to use the software at the same time?

The most popular packages are: Sage, Quickbooks, MYOB, Iris and TASbooks. To save you the trouble, I would strongly recommend that you choose a package from one of the above. Quite simply, all other accountancy software is little more than a calculator fronted by (nice) graphics.

Here’s a quick overview of the three most popular accountancy packages:

Sage

    By far the market leader for accountancy software for small and medium sized business. This is what Sage has got to say about its products:

    Sage Instant Accounts is designed for start-ups, sole traders and small businesses, who have limited IT and accounting skills and who are, therefore, looking for an easy-to-use solution. It offers all of the usual accounting ledgers and they do your double-entry bookkeeping for you. Instant Accounts Plus comes with all of the above, plus basic stock management and two user capability. Instant Accounts Financial Suite combines the accounts package, plus payroll capability. Instant Business Suite offers the accounts and payroll packages, plus ACT! (Sage’s contact management package). Prices start at £110 + VAT for the basic Instant Accounts package, rising to £203.40 excluding VAT.

    Sage Line 50 is the UK’s most popular small business package. It is a powerful system which will accommodate increasingly complex requirements as a business grows. It will cover almost all accounting needs, from VAT returns to credit control, and offers a wide range of management information and reports. It is backed by excellent customer support, advice and training. It integrates with other software and offers industry-specific add-ons and provides comprehensive data storage and full security. Prices start at £525 + VAT for the single company version.

    Pros and cons
    Most bookkeepers are familiar with Sage but if you’re willing to have a bash at it yourself then there’s a number of courses available to you. First class telephone support. Price tag is a little offputting. A little less user-friendly in places than its rivals.

      MYOB Mind Your Own Business

    The strength of this Australian import lies in its compatability with both Apple Mac and PC (Windows).

    MYOB products:

    MYOB BusinessBasics
    Resembles an automated cash book. It will help you keep your bank accounts in order, track expenses, create sales invoices, maintain customer information and provide the reports you or your accountant need for VAT reporting. Ideal for one-man bands or organisations that do not require a great deal of management information. Price £67.23 + VAT + Delivery.

    MYOB Accounting
    Aimed at the small business, MYOB Accounting provides full-featured, integrated accounting in a package that includes nominal ledger, chequebooks, sales and purchase ledgers, payroll, item stock, jobs management and a contact card file. Integrates a direct link to Microsoft Excel and Word. Possible to upgrade to multi-user platform. £199 (excluding VAT) + delivery.

    MYOB Accounting Plus
    Includes all the features of the MYOB Accounting package PLUS it will write cheques, create invoices and track your money and stock. With additional features time billing, multiple currencies, multiple price levels, emailing of invoices, reports, plus links to Word and Excel. Multi-user. This package costs £299 + VAT + Delivery.

    Advantages & Disadvantages

    Competively priced given the range of features. Cross-platform capability may be a bonus to some. Telephone support is mostly good. Try before you buy with a 30-day free trial A little disappointing that transactions included on the VAT reurn cannot be flagged directly but rather the software accommodates this by allowing the user to lock down the period for which the VAT return has been processed. Thus achieving the same objective as ‘flagging’ transactions.

      Quickbooks

    Developed by US software developer Intuit Quickbooks comes in four varieties:

    QuickBooks SimpleStart
    Like MYOB BusinessBasics this is an automated cash book since it lacks features such as balance sheet, purchase and sales ledgers. It is aimed at first time users of business management software. Interactive tutorials help you create invoices, post receipts, print cheques, pay bills, manage your VAT and generate reports. £79.95 + VAT.

    QuickBooks 2004 Regular
    Deigned with start-ups in mind. It offers set-up wizard and tutorial, invoicing and VAT management, automate stock control, data back-up and integration with Word and Excel. £149.95 + VAT. If you need payroll facilities you can opt for QuickBooks 2004 Regular + Payroll for £199.95 + VAT.

    QuickBooks 2004 Pro
    As above only featuring advanced VAT and budgeting features, multi-currency and multi-user capability. It also offers ‘inventory control’ and customisable reporting. £299.95 + VAT (£349.95 + VAT with payroll).


    QuickBooks 2004 Premier
    includes all of the above, plus more advanced budgeting and forecasting, business plan creation, time/job costing and remote access features. £449.95 + VAT (£499.95 + VAT with payroll).

    For and Against

    A popular package considering the range of features on offer. Competively priced, these packages come with Intuit’s 60-day money back guarantee. Developed in the United States, some of the terminology and methodology may take some getting used to if you already have experience of other packages. Screen based help is OK, but product is let down by its telephone support.


Better Payment Practice Policy

April 24, 2007

Late Payments threaten the cash flow of small businesses.

Show your commitment to better payment practice by enlisting on the Pay On Time scheme. As well as receiving a free logo to display on your business website and stationery, there’s an abundance of good advice available online.

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Oxygen Office Suite

April 24, 2007

One of my clients has been recording financial transactions on the Microsoft Works spreadsheet that comes bundled in with new PCs. However, from the perspective of an Accountancy professional, the Works’ spreadsheet is a waste of both the Hard Disk space it occupies and the RAM required to run it. You could fall into the trap of upgrading to the powerful but expensive Microsoft Office suite or you could consider the leading Open Source equivalent.

Formally known as Open Office Professional, Oxygen Office is a powerful office suite along the same lines as Microsoft Office. The best thing about it? IT’S FREE.
I’ve been using this software for about a year and I find I’m using it more than my outdated version of Microsoft Office. I could rant and rave about this software but the Open Office site does a much better job of it.
Unlike the Microsoft product, you can download as many copies as you wish and incur no additional license fees.
What’s more you can burn as many copies of the program (or source) to CD or DVD for distribution to your colleagues as you want – you can even sell it for a profit without paying royalties.
Unlike its Microsoft equivalent, Oxygen Office allows the user to open, edit and save documents created by a variety of Office suites (including Microsoft Office!), which means that you can still share documents with people still locked into Microsoft products.
Still not convinced? In the UK, the Open Office suite is currently used by the British Army and Bristol City Council and, from 2008, Birmingham City Council. Across Europe, Open Office is the office suite of choice of the French Parliament and civil service and most city councils in Germany.


FREE PDF Converter

April 24, 2007

I came across this free PDF converter just this weekend. Simply download the software, together with the converter (Ghostscript) and you can easily change your Microsoft documents to PDF format via the File>Print command!


New Statutory Maternity Pay Arrangements

April 24, 2007

1st April 2007 heralded changes to the Maternity Pay Period. These changes apply where a baby is due on or after 1st April 2007.

As before the criterion remains the due date – the actual birth date is of no consequence. Nowadays it is recognised that women can give birth to live babies at 22 weeks. Therefore, in the case of a baby due on April 1st 2007 but actually born in late November 2006, the new arrangements apply from that date.

    Key Changes

  • the Maternity Pay Period (MPP) has been extended from 26 weeks to 39 weeks.
  • the women chooses which day of the week the MPP begins – previously MPP kicked in on the Sunday after the woman took maternity leave;
  • A woman will able to carry out up to ten days’ paid work (Keeping in Touch days) for her employer without loss to Statutory Maternity Pay (SMP) during the weeks these days fall in - until recently women lost her SMP entitlement for the whole week in which she worked in whole or in part. Two points to bear in mind: firstly, regulations prohibit a woman from working for two weeks immediately after the baby is born and secondly, although it’s a matter entirely between the employer and employee, KIT days may be taken in any combination. However if the woman works only part of a day she will be deemed to have used a whole KIT day;
  • the weekly rate of SMP will be divisible by seven so that a daily rate can be used to enable SMP payments to slot in with existing pay practice – most useful where monthly pay is applied; and
  • the standard rate of SMP, Statutory Paternity Pay (SPP) and Statutory Adoption Pay (SAP) has risen to £112.75 per week from April 6th 2007.

    Incidentally, the extension of the pay period to 39 weeks, together with the intoduction of KIT days during the MPP without loss of SMP applies also to SAP. Likewise, the ability to receive the benefit on a daily basis also applies to SPP and SAP.