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Accounting and Accountancy
Often when I meet someone for the second or third time, they say, “aren’t you in accounting?” While I am into accounting, which is the methodology and measuring aspect of my work, the profession as a whole is better labeled as ‘accountancy’.
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Accountancy is the profession and accounting it the methods by which accountants
measure, track and report on financial information so that resource allocation
decisions can be made by, well, whoever the decision makers are.
For a small business owner’s personal finances, as an example, I may be
measuring the finances of a few people (the family), and reporting the necessary
information to the small business owner. In this situation, the decision maker
is the small business owner and his decisions involve deciding how much money he
has to put toward family necessities.
Generally speaking, there are two main types of accounting. There is financial
accounting and there is auditing. Financial accounting typically involves
processing of financial information about a business operation where information
is recorded, organized, summarized, interpreted and finally communicated.
Auditing, on the other hand, is there process that an independent auditor
examines accounting records and financial statements so that he or she can
express a professional opinion about the financial records and answer questions
about projections. At the heart of accountancy lies the need to take stock of
the day to day state of various sales and expenses.
In the modern world when many contracts are partially fulfilled at varying
times, bookkeeping is the only way to know where you and your business stand in
the greater scheme of things. If you operate your own small business, you may be
able to do just fine with some accounting software. Take a look around for some
flowchart templates. These can make monthly financial recording and reporting,
dare I say it, fun. Simply enter in the various types of income and expenses,
then each subsection updates the appropriate fields. Before you know it you’ve
got proof that all bills have been allotted for and you’ve got your bottom line.
If you find you can manage your business finances on your own, then, by all
means, stick with the system that you know works for you. If, however, you start
running into complications that make it hard for you to see where discrepancies
are coming from, it may be time to enlist the services of a professional
accountant.
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