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Accounting: A Bigger, Better Bookkeeper 5 Views
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Description:
A short evolution of accounting: from counting rocks in a cave, to lined paper, to computer and software. All hail the Quickbooks gods!
Transcript
- 00:00
Accounting Allah shmoop a bigger better bookkeeper all right well
- 00:06
before technology reared its ugly and a beautiful head Ah
- 00:10
bookkeeper was all that small companies in a farming agricultural
- 00:14
business driven world needed four hundred bushels of corn sold
- 00:18
for a dollar of cash each Like How hard is
Full Transcript
- 00:21
that to count up Not very but there's a food
- 00:24
chain in counting beans at heart bookkeepers Arthuis data gatherers
- 00:28
They assess what the actual numbers are E How many
- 00:31
bushels of corn were claimed to have been sold And
- 00:34
are there really four hundred cash dollars in the cigar
- 00:37
box At the end of the day they're like anyone
- 00:40
stealing anything Well in today's parlance bookkeepers a lower order
- 00:43
form of accounting would check to see what checks were
- 00:46
written this month and actually cleared the bank deposit system
- 00:50
without bouncing And for the ones that did bounce well
- 00:53
they'd execute a series of actions to hopefully in the
- 00:56
future collect that money and well he eventually ending with
- 00:59
a write off AII the money was never there or
- 01:02
the guys with the baseball bat were in fact successful
- 01:05
And then the money was collected and then went through
- 01:07
regular channels Yeah well book keepers have very narrow functionary
- 01:11
activities where they glean from multiple sources the basic information
- 01:15
and make sure that the revenues and expenses are loaded
- 01:17
into the system That's it It's kind of robotic They
- 01:20
don't really think broadly They just gather the data type
- 01:23
it in lather rinse Repeat well Accountants meanwhile are the
- 01:27
philosopher kings of this process They must actually uh what's
- 01:32
it called Oh yeah Think If Shmoop sold for one
- 01:37
hundred twenty dollars a one year subscription to its premium
- 01:40
product and the check cleared and was cashed Well what
- 01:44
is shmoop recognizes revenues Well the bookkeeper just deposited one
- 01:47
hundred twenty bucks into the Shmoop Wells Fargo account But
- 01:50
the one year subscription comes with a money back guarantee
- 01:53
for the first month thinking alert must think Answer not
- 01:57
obvious So while the bookkeeper just types in those numbers
- 02:00
Accountant has to figure out when and how to recognize
- 02:04
the dough Does she look at it like it's revenues
- 02:07
when the check is deposited Well what if the check
- 02:10
then bounces revenues Well what about when the check is
- 02:13
cashed But then also clears Is that then revenues or
- 02:17
well is that in fact just cash flow but not
- 02:19
revenues Well the answer just as it always is like
- 02:23
with diapers Yeah depends a number of people who make
- 02:26
us sad We'll ask for their money back from Shmoop
- 02:28
That's about one in five hundred Well using Gap we
- 02:31
must recognize the most conservative approach in terms of estimating
- 02:35
how many people will ask for their money back So
- 02:38
maybe we hold is a separate line item and allowance
- 02:41
for doubtful accounts and rich turns I eat people who
- 02:44
just want to get their money back and go away
- 02:46
quietly Or maybe we recognize no revenues until that first
- 02:50
month has entirely passed just to be on the extremely
- 02:54
safe side Then the accountant figures out whether they recognize
- 02:57
a hundred twenty dollars divided by the eleven remaining months
- 03:00
there to calculate the revenues Or maybe there's something else
- 03:03
like What about this What about alternatively we apply Gap
- 03:06
The accountant could then divide that hundred twenty dollars by
- 03:09
twelve and simply hold as a quote reserve account unquote
- 03:13
one month worth of subscription revenue Back that out right
- 03:17
As things clear and things were okay no one wants
- 03:19
their money back Then Everything is happy right So yeah
- 03:22
bookkeeping is just keeping the books Bookkeepers add up numbers
- 03:25
and columns neatly and accurately and the accountant conducts The
- 03:28
analysis is of that data Heavy thinking non robot replacing
- 03:33
next year stuff Okay so to really drive home this
- 03:35
idea a couple more examples Oh website has been selling
- 03:41
one hundred hair clips a week for five years Then
- 03:44
suddenly they sell ten thousand clips in one week Or
- 03:47
at least they get a request to ship ten thousand
- 03:49
of them to a P O box in Russia All
- 03:52
the bookkeeper just sends along the sales of ten thousand
- 03:54
and goes home at five o one p M The
- 03:57
accountant gets this number and things How do you say
- 04:02
my sight got hacked in Russian All right Another example
- 04:08
A sales person buys billboard ads to market their product
- 04:12
is not a cross of operating the business Or is
- 04:15
it a cost that should be directly associated with that
- 04:18
sales persons product Like there's lots of sales peoples in
- 04:21
the company but only that guy bought it So what
- 04:23
do you do with it How do you think about
- 04:24
that is an expense Will accountants make logical decisions about
- 04:27
where the right numbers go On a financial statement A
- 04:30
bookkeeper friendly just wouldn't care Yep we're sure some of 00:04:33.029 --> [endTime] them are very nice people though
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