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Accounting Articles

1: Non profit Accounting: Visionaries and Your Dream Job!
Are you one of those nonprofit accountants that works with a visionary? You know the type of person I mean: he is committed to increasing awareness of human rights violations, she wants to build a hospital for adolescents newly diagnosed with cancer. They are determined to achieve their goals; they are focused, persuasive, and determined. And did I say charismatic?

2: Office Accounting Software
Buying the right Accounting Software for your business is very important. Because you will be using your Accounting Software frequently, it?s urgent to ensure that you pick the right software for your business and your needs. Accounting Software can be a great tool for your small business, allowing you to keep track of all your financial data, and easily produce reports for effective planning. Here are some things you should think about, before buying your Accounting Software:

3: Tally Accounting Software
In business today, it is very important to have an accounting method that is both accurate and convenient to use. This is where accounting software Tally comes in. This software is a software program that maintains all books of accounts starting from records of vouchers, ledgers, etc. it is perfect for those businesses who deal in multiple products and prices.

4: Tax Accounting Software
Have you ever been so tired of computing all those credits and debits all day long? Exhausted of just looking at numbers that, oftentimes, do not make any sense at all? Worn out from recording each and every amount of money that comes in and goes out of your business?

5: Free Accounting Software: Tips On Getting Free Accounting Softwar
Free accounting software is available that may very well meet all of you accounting needs! Be sure that any products used for business purposes will create suitable audit trails to help avoid trying to recreate data at a later date. Also make sure that any accounting software used whether free or paid, will meet all of your needs both today and in the near future to avoid having to go through a possibly cumbersome upgrade down the road.

6: All About Manufacturing Accounting Software
Manufacturing accounting software is like general business accounting software that has been more specialized to serve companies who manufacture, create, distribute, and sell inventory. Most small companies may feel they can survive without manufacturing accounting software, and may even try to get buy using a simple spreadsheet to track their production and costs, but the software will become necessary as the business expands beyond the point where the manager can just walk out to the warehouse and see the number of jobs and purchase orders the company has.

7: Tough $$$ Decisions
The people who make decisions in accounting, make it based on three categories. First, people who manage a business, second, the external people of a business who have a direct financial interest to a business, and third the people and organizations that have an indirect effect on a business. This applies to non profit organizations as well. Management refers to the group of people who are in charge for operating a business and for measuring up to the profitability and liquidity goals. If a business is extremely large, then the management will most often require more than one person, and the people are hired to perform their job. Managers need to answer important questions such as what was the company's net income, and if they have a substantial rate of return. Does the company have enough assets, and which products bring in the most money? When making a decision, managers usually follow a systematic approach. Even though larger businesses require a more concrete analysis, they follow a similar pattern to small businesses.

8: IRS Online Payment Made Easy
Nowadays, most processes, activities, and businesses have online versions. You can play a video game online, watch the latest movies online, read fashion and culture magazines online, listen to math and physics lectures online, as well as order food and shop for clothes online. However, did you know that some tedious and patience-testing processes can now be done online too? Yes, you can file your taxes online, and this time, it's so much easier.

9: Follow the Magical Accounting Rules
To make sure that financial statements are easy to understand, there is a set of rules and practices that is established, which is known as the generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). This has been developed to provide a basic guideline for the rules of accounting because I think it's fair to say that it can get confusing at times. There are a lot of variations to the meaning so here is the best answer. It's the generally accepted accounting rules and procedures that are necessary to define accounting practice.

10: Got to love that accounting equation
A company's financial position indicates the amount of resources that they have, and also the claims against those precious resources at any time. Claims can also be referred as equities. So, a company can be known as a combination of economic resources and equities. Economic Resource=Equities. No mater what type of business your in, every type of company has two different types of equities. They are creditor's equity and owner's equity. In another way Economic Resources= Creditors Equities +Owners Equity. When using accounting language, the economic resources a company has at a particular time is called their assets? On the other hand the amount of creditor's equity a company has is known as their liabilities. So here is the standard equation of accounting or better known as the accounting equation: Assets=Liabilities + Owner's Equity. Similar to an algebraic equation, both sides of the equation has to be equal. This equation comes in handy when analyzing the financial effects of your everyday business activities. Let's talk about a very important concept of any business. Assets are known as the economic resources that a business has that are expected to generate money for them in the future. Some examples are real estate and any other property that a business own so that they can rent out to people. If a business is owed money than it goes into what is known as accounts receivable which are monetary items. However, there are some assets that are not physical. Some examples are copyrights, trademarks, and patents, but they are still extremely valuable to a business. Next, liabilities are the obligations that a business has such as paying cash, provide future services to individuals, or transferring assets to another entity. These are known as the debt of a business or the money that they have to owe in the near future. All of these are recorded in the accounts payable. As I'm sure you know, having a lot of debt is not fun and liabilities/debt are claims that are seen by the law. The law gives creditor (People that money is owed to) the right to push the sale of a company's assets if they don't pay their debt on time. Creditors have a ton of rights over owners and they have to be paid in full even before the owners receive anything. It is very possible for a debt to consume up all a company's resources. Next, owner's equity refers to the claim that owners of a business make in regards to the assets they have. It is the residual interest or the remaining assets of a company after deducting the amount of entity liabilities. Here is the equation for owner's equity. Owner equity=Assets-Liabilities. The owner's equity within a particular corporation is referred as stockholders equity, so the equation then looks like this. Assets=Liabilities +Stockholder's Equity. The stockholders equity has two distinct parts which are the contributed capital and retained earnings. Stockholder's Equity=Contributed Capital + Retained Earnings. The amount than an individual stockholder puts into a business is known as the contributed capital. Contributed capital is usually divided into two separate parts known as par value and "par value" and "additional paid in capital." The retained earnings are the amount of equity that is earned by stockholders from the income generating activities of a business that are kept for future uses by a business. Retained earnings are affected by three types of transactions which are revenues, expenses, and dividends. The increase and decrease in a stock are known as revenues and expenses respectively and these come from operating a business whether online or offline. If you're online than an operating expense that you will have if you have your own website is your domain name and hosting service. Another example is if a customer agrees to pay you in the near future for a service that the company will perform. The money is recorded in the accounts receivable (asset account) which increase the asset value but decrease the stock holder's equity amount which is an example of revenue. However, if a company promises to provide a service in the future than this is known as an expense. When this happens the assets decrease (accounts receivable) and the liabilities (accounts payable) is increased, which makes pretty good sense right? When the revenues exceed the expenses this is known as the net income which is good, and on the other hand when expenses are greater than revenues than this is known as net loss which means that you're losing business or your business costs more to operate than what you make. Dividends are the distribution of assets to stockholders which refer to the past earnings. Do not confuse expenses with dividends, because they both are reducing the retained earnings amount. Retained earnings are the collected net income or revenues minus expenses. The financial statements are the main way for communicating information about a business to those who have some type of interest in it. What helps me is to think of these statements as a type of model for business because they show how a business is doing in financial terms. However, like a variety of methods and models, financial statements are not perfect and have their flaws. There are four main financial statements, and they are income statement, the statement of retained earnings, the balance sheet, and the statement of cash flows. What the income statement does is summarize the revenues earned or the money made, and the expenses or the money that is deducted from a business. Many accountants consider it the most important financial report because it makes it clear whether a business has met its profitability goal. The next one is the statement of retained earnings, and it displays the retained earnings over a period of time. The time that the retained earnings will be zero is when a company first started out in their accounting period. A lot of companies use the statement of stockholder equity as a substitute of retained earnings. This is a more detailed statement because it displays not only the aspects of retained earnings but it also shows the changes in the stockholders equity accounts. Next, the financial situation of a business on a particular date, usually on the end of the month or the year is the balance sheet. The balance sheet displays the value of a business according to their assets and the claims against those assets which are the liabilities and the stockholders equity. Last, the statement of cash flows is geared towards a company's liquidity measures. They are basically the flow and outflow of cash in a company. The net cash flow is the subtraction between the inflow and outflow of money. The statement of cash flows also display the money generated by simply operating a business, and it also displays the investing and financing transactions that occurs during a particular accounting period.


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