Forgot your password?

Should a basic business use just a spreadsheet for their accounts?

abacusA thread on UK Business Forums caught my attention today.Kelvin White is a driving instructor and asks for accounting software recommendations for his small business. He is in fact a sole trader driving instructor.  He has no need to file VAT returns or issue invoices to his customers. As well as the usual recommendations, some people suggested that as his requirements are simple, he should just use a spreadsheet.

Forgetting for a moment the room for human error in using a spreadsheet, it is in fact a perfectly good tool for simply keeping a record of the income and expenditure for this type of business.

So, should Kelvin just use a spreadsheet? If all he wants to do is record basic accounting data, it’ll probably suffice. What those that recommend a spreadsheet seem to overlook is the fact that your accounts are much more than just the data needed for the tax man at the end of the year.

Your accounting data is the underlying information about your business and if it’s recorded in a proper accounting application like KashFlow then  you can get so much more useful information from that data.

As an example: with a spreadsheet  Kelvin would have a hard time analysing where his new driving students come from – ie, how they hear about his services. With KashFlow you simply tag each new customer with the relevant source of business from your list of sources. This means you can, in just a couple of clicks, see instantly what sources of business work for you and which don’t.

Income By Source

Income By Source

This is just one of the many non-accounting type reports that can be generated from your accounting data and give non-accountant types insights into their business.

Additionally, the services Kelvin sells and the business-related purchases he makes can also be tagged so that when it comes to self-assessment time, the majority of the work is already done and the numbers for most boxes on the self assessment form are calculated. Thus reducing the bill he’ll get from an accountant at then end of the year.

An accounting application will give you the tools you need to reconcile your accounting entries against your bank account to make sure everything is entered correctly.

Yes, in theory a spreadsheet can also do all of the above. But the more you want the spreadsheet to do, the more laborious data entry becomes and the more room for error.

In summary, I think it’s quite short-sighted to see accounting as just something you have to do to keep the tax man happy and therefore opt for the most basic option possible for inputting data without considering the importance of getting useful intelligence back from that data

[Post to Twitter]  [Post to Delicious]  [Post to Digg]  [Post to StumbleUpon] 

This entry was posted on Friday, February 26th, 2010 at 2:56 pm and is filed under Accounting, Ramblings, Small Business. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

6 Responses to “Should a basic business use just a spreadsheet for their accounts?”

  1. Totally on the nail Duane!

    If people go into business to make money …why then do they spend their time ignoring it and not taking the time out to understand it?

  2. Couldn’t agree more.

    There are all sorts of valuable pieces of information you can collate in almost any business – such as which lines are the most profitable (and should therefore be expanded) or how your costs are distributed.

    We use some of the reports in KF in a fairly simple way – but even this is enough to help us increase profitability – even over the short period of time we’ve been using it!

  3. Accounting is important as it is that discipline that is used to calculate the net profit, the target end result of every commercial enterprise.

  4. With you 100% on this.

    It’s amazing how many businesses just see accounts as a way of “satisfying” the tax man, rather than viewing them as a piece of business information that can be used to help them manage the business

  5. Ian Edwards says:

    Haven’t looked back since I ditched spreadsheets for Kashflow.

  6. Max says:

    I personally think it can be a good discipline to start with spreadsheets as it gets people used to working on their accounts, calculating figures, and looking at the results regularly in a format they are comfortable with.

    However, fairly quickly it can become a chore rather than anything valuable such as forecasts, analysis of trends, drilling down into areas such as sales or costs.

    It can also be a pain to transfer history into one place to be able to analyse information retrospectively and make comparisons between financial periods.

    People can sometimes have the impression that doing their bookkeeping on spreadsheets will save them money in their accountants fees whereas in reality some accountants charge just as much as they would do for a carrier bag of records as they have to check all the formulas and links so may as well have done it themselves in the first place!

    :)

Leave a Reply


Is it the Stig? Is it a listening device? » « What’s your viral coefficient?


Awards and stuff