What is Basic Bookkeeping?
If you are new to bookkeeping, trying to grasp the bookkeeping basics can be like trying to learn a dead language. It is all foreign and it can seem impossible to understand!
But if you want to start your own business, you need to gain at least a rudimentary knowledge of basic bookkeeping.
There are two basic underlying concepts in accounting and bookkeeping.
The first is:
Profit = Revenue (Sales) - Expenditure
and the second,
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
The expectation of the second equation is that assets will exceed liabilities of the business, and that equity is, in effect, a balancing item.
If the business is doing well and sales revenue exceeds expenditure, the business will make a profit.
If we use a cash based business as an example, the cash flows into the business will exceed the cash flows out and as a result, the cash assets of the business will increase.
At the same time, the owner's equity in the business increases as well by the amount of the profit.
Conversely, if the business is not doing so well and sales revenue is less than expenditure, the business will make a loss. Again, using a cash business as an example, the cash flowing in is less than the cash flowing out and as a result the cash assets of the business are reduced. At the same time the owner's equity is reduced by the amount of the loss.
There are two primary methods of accounting: cash accounting or single entry bookkeeping and accrual accounting which is also called double entry bookkeeping.
Cash accounting is an accounting method that only recognizes cash transactions as and when they occur. For example a sale on credit is not recognized until the account is settled and the cash is received by the business. Non-cash transactions such as depreciation are not recognized at all with this accounting method.
Accrual accounting or double entry bookkeeping is an accounting method that recognizes transactions at the time the commitment is made, rather than when cash is exchanged. For example a sale made to an account customer is recognized when the sale is agreed to rather than when the cash is received. This accounting method also recognizes non-cash transactions such as depreciation on assets.
Cash accounting is easier to manage than accrual accounting, but by using this method you will lose a great deal of information about your business. Cash accounting does not account for credit transactions, so you will not be able to track customer accounts or creditor accounts.
If you are a sole trader operating a cash business, cash accounting would be a reasonable choice. However, if you intend to buy or sell on credit, or if you carry inventory from one month to the next, accrual accounting is the better choice.
First tip; separate your business finances from your personal finances. If your bookkeeper or accountant has to spend time sorting through a box of receipts to work out which ones are business expenses and which are personal, it is going to cost you!
Open a separate bank account and keep all of your business related receipts seperate from your household bills.
Tip number two; get receipts for everything especially when you pay cash. If you cannot substantiate your expenses the tax office may not be very happy with you! If the receipt does not include details of the purchase, write a note on the back and date it so that you will be able to correctly categorise the expense when it comes time to do the books.
Tip number three; if you do not have experience with basic bookkeeping it is well worth considering hiring someone to set up your bookkeeping systems for you. It may save you a lot of heartache in the long run!