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Income Statement Breakdown (Part 4): Finding the Bottom Line

July 28th, 2010 | Comments Off | Posted in News, Tips & Advice

We’ve been taking apart the income statement to help you better understand it and so that you can find money-saving, profit-increasing opportunities inside of it. This is the fourth and final step in the process and here we are getting close to the bottom line!

So far we’ve…

But those are not the only people who have their hand in the cash register! Let’s not forget banks and the government. In this fourth and final section of the income statement breakdown, we need to make sure they get their share.

Like the other sections, you add up the various expenses you have here and subtract it from Net Profit. This section is sometimes called “Non-Operating Expenses”. If you have shareholders, some of their payouts go here, too.

Now let’s look at this part of the income statement and we’ll compare how the accrual and cash-based system work so you can see both in action:

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Income Statement Breakdown (Part 2): Cost of Goods Sold

July 14th, 2010 | No Comments | Posted in Tips & Advice

Over the next few blog posts, we’re breaking down the income statement so you can understand how it works, see how it impacts your business, and find new opportunities to improve your business because of it. Last week we covered the Revenue section. We started that section with Gross Sales and finished it with Net Sales.

Now we’re looking at the second section of your income statement, Cost of Goods Sold (sometimes called “COGS”). Here, we’ll add up all the costs associated with creating your product or service, and then we’ll subtract it from the Net Sales amount you came away with in the previous section.

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QuickBooks & FreshBooks – Part 3 – Sales Tax

February 22nd, 2010 | No Comments | Posted in Freshbooks, QuickBooks

Part 3: Handling Sales Tax

QuickBooks is an accounting application and FreshBooks is an invoicing application. They are two different things, but in the end to have your data matching in both, there could be a ton of double entry resulting in valuable time consumed and strenuous effort.

You can have your data accurate in both, while not matching in both. Matching and accuracy are two different things. For all of the numbers to match up, it is a matter of accuracy. To have all of the details such as sales items etc. it would be a matter of matching.

In this blog post, I will begin to show you ways to get accurate data from FreshBooks into QuickBooks.

This blog post is Part 3, if you have not read the previous posts, I suggest that you do:

Part 1: Methods 1 & 2 to getting FreshBooks Income into QuickBooks

Part 2: Method 3 to getting FreshBooks Income into QuickBooks

Also useful, is my post: Handling Credit Card and PayPal Processing Fees in QuickBooks, which has a short segment relating to FreshBooks as well.

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