Contractor Success M.A.P.

553: How To Avoid Year-End Construction Bookkeeping Chaos


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This Podcast Is Episode 553, And It's About How To Avoid Year-End Construction Bookkeeping Chaos As the year comes to a close, it's important to start thinking about your bookkeeping tasks to ensure a smooth transition into the new year. Deadlines are fast approaching, but it doesn't have to be stressful.    Have you given your bookkeeper, wife, partner, accountant, or tax accountant the information needed to complete your reports? Accountants need good information to create detailed reports and save money on your taxes.   Here is where the expression "Garbage In Equals Garbage Out" comes into play. It is impossible to create Job Costing Reports when all anyone knows is the deposit amount on the bank statement.     It's the Mad Dash To The End Of The Year as a contractor recently described their Year End Madness to prepare his documents for the Tax Accountant. Are you in this cycle? I have great news for you - it is preventable. 1. Review your accounts:  Make sure all your accounts are reconciled and up-to-date. This includes bank accounts, credit cards, and any other accounts.  In Construction Accounting, not everything is an expense. Not every item, tool, material, or customer enters the Chart of Accounts. In some cases, Class Tracking is helpful, but most of the time, it is used to make up for a poor Chart of Accounts or as a "workaround" for an accounting product not designed to have Job Costing Reports or Cost Of Goods Sold. Giving your bookkeeper only your bank statements and saying "Fix It" – I Want Job Costing Reports, I Want To Know Details is not enough. Doing it the way you have always done it – expecting a different result isn't how it works. 2. Review your files: Go through your year's costs and ensure they are all properly categorized. This will help you with your tax reporting and better understand where your money is going.  One of the most overwhelming parts of the end of the financial year is finding all the invoices, receipts, and reports you need to file your taxes correctly. Pay attention to how easy it was—or wasn't—to find what you needed this past year. Did you have to search 15 different places for all your receipts? Did you have a combination of online and physical invoices? Did you have clearly labeled folders for everything? Did you leave everything for the last minute? If you search high and low for every piece of paper you need, you might want to consider revising your paperwork so it's easier and less time-consuming to manage. Can you keep track of everything through software and apps? Is there technology or equipment that can help you? Is it worth investing in a filing cabinet? The effort you put now into sorting your paperwork will pay off hugely every year when you can quickly and easily find all the information you need. Let's face it; you'll come up against the end of the financial year every year, so you may as well be systematic about it. 3. Collect your receipts: Ensure you have all your receipts from the year. This includes receipts for business expenses, charitable donations, and any other tax-deductible expenses. Every missed receipt that is a business expense is a missed deduction. Bookkeeping is all about tracking the money. Money In, Money Out is just following the checkbooks. Accounting is entering into an Accounting System that creates a Profit and Loss and Balance Sheet for the Tax Accountant to do the Annual Taxes. (Every successful contractor should have a Tax Accountant do their annual tax return) 4. Reflect on your year: The end of the financial year is a perfect time to reflect on how the past year went. Celebrate the big successes, but remember to focus on other victories. Even if you didn't meet your financial targets, did you survive a particularly tough year? Did you manage to pivot your construction business and try a new model? Did you take some risks and learn from them? Did you grow your business or expand...
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Contractor Success M.A.P.By Randal DeHart, PMP, QPA