The Art & Science Of Small Business Accounting Loveland CO

To many small business owners, accounting can seem like a foreign language and can be as hard to comprehend as the hypotheses of Dr.

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Kruger & Clary, CPA's
(970) 482-6947
515 S. Howes Street
Fort Collins, CO
Pressey & Power, CPAs, Inc.
303-776-6123
201 Terry St., Suite 1-C
Longmont, CO
Wadman Fredrick L
(970) 667-5162
1052 Cleveland Ave
Loveland, CO
Flood Peggy CPA
(970) 667-5316
873 Cleveland Ave
Loveland, CO
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(970) 669-7200
903 Cleveland Ave
Loveland, CO
Halliburton Hogsett Scott & Associates PC
(970) 667-5316
873 Cleveland Ave
Loveland, CO
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(970) 622-0618
359 W 1st St
Loveland, CO
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(970) 663-2020
2105 Maple Dr
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Hanna Holdredge & Associates Cpa's PC
(970) 667-2555
345 E 27th St
Loveland, CO
Frink Ronald L CPA
(970) 667-2123
210 E 29th St
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To many small business owners, accounting can seem like a foreign language and can be as hard to comprehend as the hypotheses of Dr. Stephen Hawking. On the other hand, some people just get it. Hopefully, most of you reading this are in this latter group since you are in the tax and accounting profession. You understand the science behind it, more than just the generally basic math. You understand the necessity of properly maintained accounts and the methods by which to track and correct errors and imbalances. And, in some cases, you have the cunning ability to don the gumshoes of a sleuth to find the causes of more serious financial irregularities. It is the combination of these capabilities that brings the accounting profession near to being an art form. Well, sort of.

We are not, of course, espousing the use of creative license when it comes to your clients' financial records, but rather pointing out that the broad scope of accounting functions requires both logic and the touch of a muse. Not all are gifted with these attributes, but small business owners still need to accurately maintain their business records on a day-to-day basis. This is the job of small business accounting software, for which small business owners have a wide variety of options. In addition to keeping proper books, these programs can improve efficiency, help them better serve their customers, perform payroll tasks and related compliance issues, offer invoicing and correspondence functions, offer analysis and planning, and many other functions. But since your small business clients are not likely to be as knowledgeable and adept at accounting and business process functions, a small business accounting program's ease-of-use is often paramount to whether it is properly employed.

And that is where the vendors and software programmers exercise their mix of science and creativity. Make no mistake, what they do certainly is art, for they are charged with taking the complex, interrelated scientific accounting principles and creating a system that makes it easy to do the right thing (posting transactions to proper accounts), and difficult or impossible to do the wrong thing (backing out of transactions without managerial approval).

Over the past 20 years or so, the small business accounting programs on the market have evolved tremendously, generally perfecting the basic accounting functions and moving from basic spreadsheet bookkeeping to advanced processing capabilities with deep database functionality. Over the past five years, these programs have seen the rise of Internet-based functions, from online remote access, to electronic banking and reconciliation, automatic tax and payroll updates, and even fully web-based accounting systems. These systems now offer features that would have been available only in very high-end programs just a few years ago, including varying levels of inventory support, industry-specific templates and workflow processes, strong sales and invoicing, decent customer relationship management modules, highly customizable report options, integrated communications, analysis capabilities and scheduling functions. In short, these programs have essentially become enterprise resource planning systems (ERPs) for small businesses, integrating all core functions of the business.

Of course, all of the capabilities of a small business program should be evaluated prior to making a selection, and, if your clients have asked for your assistance, they've exercised excellent judgment. But keep in mind that even if a program can do everything you want it to do for your client, your client is the one who will be interacting with it. So find a system that meets the science part of your client's needs (proper accounting, payroll, invoicing, etc.), while also meeting the artistic side of the equation: user-friendliness. This review section should give you a good jumping off point, with all products scored based upon Ease of Use/Basic Functionality; Core Features/Expandability; Reporting & Management Functions; Audit Trail, Integrity & Accountant Control Tools; Import/Export/Integration; Help & Support Options; and Relative Value.

author: BY ISAAC M. O'BANNON, TECHNOLOGY EDITOR - CPA Technology Advisor


Featured Local Company

Kruger & Clary, CPA's

(970) 482-6947
515 S. Howes Street
Fort Collins, CO
www.krugercpas.com