Since Clients & Profits
X was designed especially for the advertising industry,
you'll probably feel familiar with it after only
a few days. It's made to move you smoothly through
the steps that every job goes through: estimating,
trafficking, costing, and billing -- the same steps
you go through now. But instead of using a manual
system of job jackets and forms, everything will
be in Clients & Profits X.

Time
Sheets A time sheet is a collection
of a day's time entries for one person. Each
time entry is a separate record of a person's
work containing the date, job number, task,
the number of hours, cost and billing rates,
and a short description. Time can be tracked
either through time cards or time sheets. There's
no real difference between them; in fact, time
entered on time cards becomes a time sheet
when the time card is saved. But the time card
has the advantage of being available to users
all day, while they're working.
Accounts
Payable Accounts Payable is seamlessly integrated
with the vendor files, jobs and tasks, and the general ledger.
This means that when an invoice is posted, many things are
updated at once: the vendor balance increases; the invoice's
cost and gross amounts increase the job's totals; and debit
and credit entries are created in the General Ledger. Vendor
invoices are also integrated with purchase orders.
Checkbook Clients & Profits
X keeps a complete, detailed check register for all of your
bank accounts -- and can help you easily reconcile the accounts
each month. Checks are numbered automatically as they are
written. Different checking accounts should have different
numbering sequences, which you can easily set in the Chart
of Accounts. You can write checks any time. You can write
one check at a time, or many checks at once.
Expense
Reports Expenses are job costs that you incur while
getting work done. They aren't payables, since there isn't
an invoice. And they aren't checks, since you're not actually
paying for them. Expenses are unique because you've already
paid for them in the course of running the agency, so there's
no check to write or invoice to add. There are three kinds
of expenses: in-house expenses, employee expense reports,
and internal charges.
Internal
Charges Internal charges are expenses that you charge
to the client on a unit basis. Shops with in-house output,
duplication, and production equipment can set up a price list
for every kind of internal charge they'd bill to a client.
The Internal Charge Items table keeps a detailed listing of
items and their prices, which are then used for expense tracking.
Charges for internal items can be charged to any job and task,
including quantities, which then appear job cost reports --
and eventually on the client invoice.
Job
Cost Transfers Cost transfers are always added in
pairs: you'll enter the job and task from which the cost
is being transferred, then the job and task that will get
the transfer. Any cost and gross amount can be transferred,
up to the total unbilled cost amounts on the job task. Otherwise,
there's no limit to how costs can be transferred.
Billing/Accounts
Receivable Everything you do for a client is billed
by adding an invoice into Accounts Receivable. Clients can
be billed for anything you do -- whether you're billing an
estimate, an advance, a retainer, a service charge, or a
job's final costs. A/R invoices are seamlessly integrated
with jobs and costs, so billing is particularly quick and
easy -- and can be mostly automatic.
Client
Payments Entries that affect accounts receivable
are entered into Client Payments -- including payments from
clients, adjustments, and write offs. Entries added into
Client Payments affect client balances, unpaid client invoices,
and the general ledger at the same time. Client Payments
is where you'll account for most of the shop's incoming cash.
General
Ledger Clients & Profits X is built around a
one-write, double-entry general ledger. This comprehensive,
accrual accounting system automatically tracks your income,
costs, and expenses using a custom, user-defined Chart of
Accounts. Your G/L accounts track activity totals for 24
accounting periods. The system provides agency-tailored financial
statements, including income statements, balance sheets,
trial balances, detailed general ledgers, journals, and audit
trails.
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Print
for any period G/L
reports can be printed for
any one of the 24 accounting
periods, as well as for a range
of selected periods (e.g.,
periods 1-6) using the period
menu.
Expense
reports can be printed
to the screen, the printer,
to the computer's Clipboard,
or exported to disk using the
Print to pop-up menu. Any report
export to disk can be opened
and edited in a spreadsheet
program like Microsoft Excel.
Pay
everything with one click Use
the Auto-pay Payables window
to write checks for all vendor
payables automatically. It
can save hours compared to
typing checks one-by-one.

Tracking
Time
Daily time keeping
is important because it's
the only way to know how
everyone in the shop spends
their time. In this lesson,
you'll learn how to enter
today's hours into your
Daily Time Card.
Writing
job cost checks
Writing checks for
job costs is similar to
writing checks to vendors.
But checks for job costs
don't pay outstanding A/P
invoices. Here, we'll cut
a check to a freelance
artist who is not an established
vendor.
Billing
a job ticket
A progress/final billing
is a fast, easy way to
invoice a job's costs.
It's an express way to
bill a job, without having
to know, or type in, each
job task. In this example,
you'll create a progress
billing for the job's costs
to date.

Getting a period-end WIP
balance
How do you find what you've entered to WIP in the new
accounting period? If you haven't yet billed clients
for the new period you can get a list of costs by printing
the "Unbilled Job Costs by Task" work in progress report.
Choose Snapshots > Work in Progress then select the "Unbilled
Job Costs by Task" report. To see the unbilled vendor
purchases (i.e., A/P), time, in house expenses, and direct
costs (i.e., checks) enter the new accounting period.
It's the best way to get a clean period-end WIP balance
for last month.
Make A/P invoice numbers
unique
Using unique a/p invoice numbers makes it easy to find
invoices, and keeps them separate on reports and in the
general ledger. If vendor invoices don't include a number
and it's your practice to use the date as the invoice
number, then add the vendor code to it. For example,
the American Express invoice number for November 2002,
could be AMEX11/02.
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