Accounts are classified as header or detail. Transactions are then assigned directly to detail accounts. Header accounts are used to group multiple accounts into a single account for flexible reporting. Each MYOB account must have a unique number.

 

Accounting Period - A subset of your fiscal year. MYOB treats each calendar month as a separate accounting period. Additionally, MYOB provides an optional 13th period for year-end adjustments.

 

Account Number - The account number is what identifies an account. Each MYOB account must have a unique number.

 

Accounts Payable - What you owe someone else for Goods or services delivered. In MYOB accounts payable is a liability account. Any time you record a purchase in the Purchases & Payables command centre, the unpaid balance of the purchase is added to your accounts payable. Every time you pay a bill (using Vendor payments in the Purchases command centre), the amount is subtracted from your accounts payable balance.

 

Accounts Receivable - What someone else owes you for Goods or services delivered. In MYOB accounts receivable is an asset account. Any time you record a sale in the Sales command centre, the unpaid balance of the sale is added to your accounts receivable balance. Every time you enter a customer payment (using Customer Payments in the Sales command centre), the amount is subtracted from your accounts receivable balance.

 

Accrual Method (basis) - This is a method of accounting, which records the sale, or purchase of goods and services at the time they're delivered, not at the time they are paid for.

 

Accrued Expenses - These are expenses for goods or services received, but not yet billed. Once billed they become a payable.

 

Ageing: Payables - The number of days between receiving a bill from a vendor and an ageing date (usually today).

 

Ageing: Receivables - The number of days between invoicing a customer and an ageing date (usually today).

 

Allocation Accounts - In MYOB when writing a check or recording a deposit, the allocation accounts are the expense, income, etc. accounts that balance the transaction.

 

Audit Trail - A list of the transactions that make up the balance of an account or accounts.

 

Assets - Assets are things you own. Your cheque account is an asset. So is your computer. If someone owes you money, the total owed to you is an asset. Things that can be turned into cash within a relatively short period of time (less than a year), are called Current Assets. Things that take longer to turn into cash, like your factory building are called Fixed Assets. Assets normally have a debit balance.

 

Bad Debt - Money owed to you that has a very slim chance of being paid back. Many businesses create a contra-asset account to approximate the value of their bad debt. That way, they have a clearer picture of the actual value of their assets.

 

Balance - The sum of all the money added to and subtracted from an account.

 

Balance Sheet - The balance sheet is a financial snapshot of a company's condition at a single point in time. A balance sheet contains a listing of the company's asset, liability and equity accounts. It is called a balance sheet because the total value of the asset accounts minus the total value of the liability always equals the total of the equity accounts.

Budgets - Expected monthly net activity for an account. Budgets are useful for planning for the future and analysing actual performance against planned performance.

 

Cash Disbursements - Money out. All money entered in Write Cheques, Paid Today (Purchases), Vendor Payments, and Write a Refund Cheque (Settle Returns & Credits) is recorded as a cash disbursement and entered in the Cash Disbursements journal.

 

Cash Drawer - Where the money is kept between leaving the customers hands and being deposited in the bank. Many businesses set up their cash drawer as an asset account (Detail Cheque Account).

 

Cash Flow - The net flow of money in minus money out over a selected date range.


Cash Method (basis) - The opposite of the accrual method of accounting. The cash method records the sale or purchase of goods and services at the time they're paid for, not when they're delivered.


Cash Receipts - Money in. All money entered in Make a Deposit, Paid Today (Sales), Customer Payments, and Deposit a Refund Cheque (Settle Returns & Debits) is recorded as a cash receipt and entered in the Cash Receipts journal.

 

Chart of Accounts - A listing of your entire asset, liability, equity, income, cost of sales, expense, other income, and other expense accounts.

 

Cleared - A cheque or deposit is cleared when your bank adjusts your account balance for it.

 

Closed Period - An accounting period in which all entries are completed. MYOB does not require that you actively close a period. However, in Preferences you can prevent accidental posting to a closed period.

 

Closed Purchases - Purchases that have been paid in full.

 

Closed Sales - Sales that have been paid in full.

 

Company Information - Found in MYOB's Setup Menu, your company information contains your company's name, address, tax ID's and information about your company's fiscal year.

 

Contra Account - An account that normally carries the opposite balance of the accounts of the same type. Assets for example, normally have a debit balance; a common contra-asset account is the accrued depreciation of an asset. By using a contra account, you can show a company a car that's worth $12,000, by listing the asset at its $15,000 purchase price followed by the -$3,000 balance of the accrued depreciation account. Contra accounts can also be used as suspense accounts.

 

Conversion Month - The month in which you start entering transactions in MYOB

 

Cost: Item - The cost of an inventory item. MYOB uses average cost. That is, it totals the cost of all your purchases for a particular item currently on hand and divides by the number of items on hand.

 

Cost of Sales - Sometimes called cost of goods sold this account type works just like an expense account. The only difference is where it appears on the profit & loss statement. Cost of Sales accounts appears after your income accounts, but before your expense accounts. Cost of Sales is subtracted from your income to produce gross profit your expenses are subtracted from your gross profit to produce net profit. In MYOB, you are not required to use Cost of Sales accounts.

 

Credit Amount - On the right side of the ledger (a debit amount occupies the left side). A credit amount increases the balance of accounts with a credit balance and decreases the balance of accounts with a debit balance. Accounts that normally carry a credit balance is liability, equity and income accounts.

 

Credit Invoice - In MYOB a credit invoice is a sale with a negative balance due. Usually caused by a return or adjustment, a credit invoice is settled by using Settle Returns & Credits. There you can write the customer a refund cheque or apply the amount to another open receivable.

Credit Terms - Terms are the agreed upon rules, governing the number of days between delivery and payment, discounts for early payment and penalties for late payment. In MYOB , you can set default terms for all customers when entering your linked receivables accounts in Setup MYOB Enter the default terms for your vendors when you enter your linked payables accounts. You can override the default terms in each individual card.

 

Creditors - A creditor is someone to whom you owe money. Creditors are often used instead of Payables (see Payables).

 

Current Assets - Assets that can be turned into cash within a relatively short period of time (less than a year, are called current assets. Some of your current assets are your cheque and savings accounts, accounts receivable and petty cash. Current assets usually do not lose their value over time. Current assets normally have a debit balance. As a general rule, the more current an asset is, the closer it is to the beginning of your chart of accounts.

 

Current Liabilities - Liabilities that become payable within the next year are called current liabilities. When recording a liability that is to be paid back over the next few years, many accountants split it into two liabilities. The part that is to be paid off within the next year is entered as a current liability; the remaining is entered as a separate long-term liability.

 

Current Year Earnings - Current year earnings is an equity type account. Its balance equals your income minus cost of sales and expenses. Current year earnings are zero at the beginning of a fiscal year. As the fiscal year progresses, current year earnings are kept as a running total. When you start a new fiscal year, a current year earnings is reset to zero by moving its balance into the account called Retained Earnings.

 

Customer - Someone to whom you sell goods or services. In MYOB you must enter a customer card before you can track a receivable balance.

 

Debit - On the left side of the ledger (the credit amount occupies the right side), a debit amount increases the balance of accounts with a debit balance and decreases the balance of accounts with a credit balance. Accounts that normally carry a debit balance are assets and expense accounts.

 

Debit Purchase - In MYOB a debit purchase is a purchase with a negative balance due. Usually caused by a return or adjustment, a debit purchase is settled by using Settle Returns & Debits. There you can deposit a vendors refund cheque or apply the amount to another open payable.

 

Debtors - A debtor is someone who owes you money. The word Debtors is often used instead of Receivables (see Receivables).

 

Deposits: From Customers - Advances received for goods or services not yet delivered. Customer deposits are kept in a liability type account. When a customer makes a payment against a pending sale, MYOB treats it as a deposit.

 

Deposits: To Vendors - Advances paid to vendors for goods or services not yet delivered. Vendor deposits are kept in an asset type account.

 

Depreciation - The expense allocation of the cost of an asset over a period of time. Most accountants create a contra-asset account to track the depreciation of an asset. See Contra Account. A typical depreciation transaction credits the contra asset account and debits a depreciation expense account. Depreciation is most often recorded as a general journal entry.

 

Detail Accounts - A n MYOB account to which transactions can be assigned.

 

Disbursements: Cash - Money out. All money entered in Write Cheques, Paid Today (Purchases), Vendor Payments, and Write a Refund Cheque (Settle Returns & Credits) is recorded as a cash disbursement and entered in the Cash Disbursements journal.

 

Discount: Early Payment - The amount taken off the balance due in return for payment within an agreed upon number of days.

Discount: Volume Purchase - The amount taken off an item's cost because of a special vendor or customer arrangement.

 

Discount Days - The number of days from a sale or purchase within which full payment of the balance due entities the payee to a discount.

 

Double Entry Accounting - A method of bookkeeping in which every entry is balanced by another entry. Correct double-entry accounting always provides a balanced set of books; that is, the total value of your asset accounts minus the total of your liability accounts will equal the total of your equity accounts.


E&OE - Errors and Omissions Excepted. A note often found on financial documents indicating that errors may be corrected if found.

 

Earnings - Income minus cost of sales and expenses. See Current Year Earnings.

 

Equity - A company's net worth. The equity portion of a company equals its assets minus its liabilities. Equity is an account type in MYOB It usually carries a credit balance. Some common equity accounts are current year earnings, retained earnings and shareholder's equity.

 

Expense - The cost associated with running a business. Expense is an account type in MYOB It usually carries a debit balance.

 

Finance Charge - The amount added to an outstanding balance as a penalty for late payment.

 

Financial Statements - The balance sheet and income (profit & loss) statement. The balance sheet is your company's financial picture at a single point in time. The income statement shows your company's financial performance over a period of time.

 

Fiscal Year - The 12- month period you use to define your accounting year. MYOB does not require that it match the calendar year. MYOB also provides an optional 13th period for making year-end adjustments that you do not want to affect a particular month.

 

Fixed Assets - Assets, which have a relatively long life. Your buildings, cars and computers are fixed assets. Fixed assets are usually depreciated; that is, they lose some of their value as you use them.

 

General Journal - A journal is a helpful organising tool. It ties like transactions together for ease of access. In MYOB the general journal keeps transactions that do not belong in the Sales, Purchases, Inventory, Cash Disbursements, or Cash Receipts journals.

 

General Ledger - This is where all your account information -sales, purchases, inventory, cash in, cash out - come together. You draw your financial statements - balance sheet and income statement - from the general ledger.

 

Gross Profit - Gross profit is your income minus cost of sales.

 

Header Account - A header account in MYOB is used to group other accounts together for reporting clarity. You may not post a transaction to a header account.

 

Historical Balance - The balance of an account prior to converting your records to MYOB You are not required to enter historical balances in MYOB Enter them only if you wish to compare a current month's activity to the activity for the same month last year. Clicking a button at the bottom of the Chart of Accounts window enters historical balances.

 

Historical Purchase - A purchase made prior to using the Purchases command centre in MYOB requires that you enter historical purchases that make up the current balance of the linked account, however, you may do this at anytime and may use the Purchase Command Centre before this has been completed.

 

Historical Sales - A sale made prior to using the Sales command centre in MYOB MYOB requires that you enter the historical sales that make up the current balance of the linked receivables account, however, you may do this at anytime and may use the Sales Command Centre before this has been completed.

 

Identifiers - A one-letter code used to sort and select cards in the card file. MYOB lets you assign up to 26 identifiers to a card.

 

Income - Revenue from the sale of goods or services. Income is an account type in MYOB It usually carries a credit balance.

 

Income Statement - Also called a profit & loss statement, the income statement shows your company's performance over a period of time. A MYOB Income statement begins with income. It then subtracts cost of sales to produce a gross profit. Expenses are subtracted from gross profit to produce operating profit. Other income accounts are added to operating profit and other expense accounts are subtracted form operating profit to produce net profit.

 

Inquiry - A menu provided by MYOB to facilitate searching for a transaction. Inquiry displays are for searching only, they should not be confused with trial balance, receivables or payables reports.

 

Inventory - Physical items kept for possible sale to a customer. Most accountants record an inventory's value in a current asset account.

 

Invoice - The written record of a sale. MYOB handles 4 types of invoices: item, service or professional and other. An item invoice is used to sell things on your items list. A service invoice is used to sell things that are not on your items list. A professional invoice is for billing work done, often over several days.

 

Item - A unit in MYOB's items list. An item can be physical inventory, like a widget or a pair of shoes, or it can be non-physical like an hour of your time.

 

Item Invoice - The written record of a sale of something on MYOB s items list.


Item Purchase Order - The written record of a purchase of something on MYOB s items list.

 

Job - Something for which you wish to track income and expenses. In MYOB, a job can be a profit centre, a product line or any other subset of your business that requires a separate income statement.

 

Journal - A journal is a tool for organising your accounting entries. MYOB groups all entries into one of six journals: General, Disbursements, Receipts, Sales, Purchases, or Inventory. A journal is simply a helpful organising tool - nothing more or less.

 

Liability - Liabilities are things you owe. You working capital loan is a liability. Your accounts payable, what you owe someone for a purchase, is also a liability. Liabilities that are due within the next year are called current liabilities. When a liability is not due for more than a year, it is called a long-term liability. Liabilities normally have a credit balance.

 

Linked Account - Linked accounts are what MYOB uses to post your inventory, sales and purchase transactions to the proper account. When, for example, you link your receivables account, you are telling MYOB which account to post the balance due from a sale. You link your receivables and payables accounts from the Setup Menu in MYOB From then on, you can use MYOB s invoice and purchase order functions without having to identify them every time.

 

Long-Term Liability - Something you owe that does not have to be paid for at least a year.

 

Net Income - The total of all income accounts minus the sum of your expense and cost of sales accounts. Also called Net Profit (Loss).

 

Net Profit (Loss) - The total of all income accounts minus the sum of your expense and cost of sales accounts. Also called Net Income.

Open Purchase - A purchase with an outstanding balance due.

 

Open Sale - A sale with an outstanding balance due.

 

Opening Balance - The dollar value of an account as of your the point in time you started using MYOB (Conversion Month) MYOB Opening balances are entered from MYOB's Setup menu. They must balance - total assets must equal the total of liabilities plus equity - however, MYOB will allow you to continue without completing this information by balancing for you, using the Historical Balancing equity account. When you know the full information, you can enter the missing balances and MYOB will automatically remove the Historical Balancing figure.

 

Operating Profit - Your profit before considering account types other income and other expense.

 

Other Expenses - A MYOB account type used to record expenses that are not directly related to your company’s operations. Use other expense accounts to record expenses that are outside the normal operation of your business such as loan interest, fines, etc. Then you look at your P&L, MYOB removes these costs from the operating costs and gives you a clearer picture of your operations. Other expense accounts usually have a debit balance.

 

Other Income - A MYOB account type used to record income that is not directly related to your company's operations. Use other income accounts to record income that is outside the normal operation of your business such as interest income. When you look at your P&L, MYOB removes the income from your operating income and gives you a clearer picture of your operations. Other income accounts usually have a credit balance.

 

Other Purchases - Used in MYOB to record non-item purchases that do not require a printed purchase order.

 

Other Sales - Used in MYOB to record non-items sales that do not require a printed invoice.

 

Out of Balance - When the total credit amount does not equal the total debit amount in a transaction, it is out of balance. MYOB does not allow you to record an out of balance transaction.

 

Paid up Capital - The amount of money paid by shareholders in excess of the par value of the share.

 

Par Value - The face value of a share in a company. Most times it has very little to do with the actual value of the share.

 

Payables - What you owe someone else for items or services delivered. In MYOB accounts payable is a liability account. Any time you record a purchase in the Purchases command centre, the unpaid balance of the purchase is added to your accounts payable. Every time you pay a bill (using Vendor Payments in the Purchases command centre), the amount is subtracted from your accounts payable balance.

 

Pending Invoice - In MYOB, when you make a sale but have not yet delivered the goods or services, you can enter a pending invoice. A pending invoice does not record the sale, nor does it decrement your inventory. It simply keeps the invoice on file to be recorded when the goods or services are delivered. A payment applied to a pending invoice is treated as a deposit.

 

Pending Purchase - In MYOB, when you make a purchase but have not yet received the goods or services, you can enter a pending purchase. A pending purchase does not record the purchase, nor does it increment your inventory. It simply keeps the purchase on file to be recorded when the goods or services are delivered. A payment applied to a pending purchase is treated as a deposit.

 

Point of Sale System - Entering and printing invoices as they are made to the customer. In Preferences there is a checkbox for printing invoices as they are recorded.

 

Prepaid Expenses - Something you pay for (usually a service) in advance of receiving it. Prepaid expenses are assets. A good example of a prepaid expense is your insurance payment. Say your insurance costs are $100 per month. At the beginning of the year, you pay $1,200 for a year's insurance. The $1,200 is a prepaid expense and is recorded as an asset. Every month, as you use up your insurance, you need to move $100 from the prepaid expense asset account to your insurance expense account.

 

Professional Invoice - The written record of a sale of time or service, with the facility to record the dates of each service.

 

Professional Purchase - As above but 'record of a purchase'.

 

Primary Vendor - In MYOB the primary vendor is the vendor from which you usually purchase a particular item. When your To Do List says that you are running low on an item, if the item has a primary vendor, click the arrow and MYOB automatically creates a purchase order.

 

Profit takes a few forms: The total of all income accounts minus your cost of sales is called your gross profit. The total of all income accounts minus your cost of sales and your expense is called your operating profit when you subtract other expenses and add other income to operating profit you have net profit.

 

Profit & Loss Statement - Also called an income statement shows your company's performance over a period of time. An MYOB profit & loss statement begins with income. It then subtracts cost of sales to produce a gross profit. Expenses are subtracted from gross profit to produce operating profit. Other income accounts are added to operating profit and other expense accounts are subtracted from operating profit to produce net profit.

 

Profit Centre - A subset of your business for which you want to track income and expenses. MYOB calls profit centres jobs.

 

Promised Date - The date a pending sale or pending purchase is due to be delivered. If a pending sale is not delivered as of its promised date, a reminder is posted to MYOB s To Do List.

 

Purchase Order - The written record of a purchase from a vendor. MYOB handles three types of purchase orders; item, service or professional. An item purchase order is used to buy things on your items list. A service purchase order is used to buy things not on your items list. A Professional purchase is for buying time or service, often over several days.

 

Purging - The act of erasing old data. MYOB allows you to purge journal entries, closed sales, closed purchases, and contact logs.

 

Recap Transaction - A MYOB function that lets you look at a journal entry before it is recorded. Recap transaction is particularly useful for those transactions, like invoices and purchase orders, for which the journal entry is not immediately obvious.

 

Receipts, Cash - Money In. All money entered in Make a Deposit, Paid Today (Sales), Customer Payments, and Deposit a Refund Cheque (Settle Returns & Debits) is recorded as a cash receipt and entered in the Cash Receipts Journal.

 

Receivables - What someone else owes you for items or services delivered. In MYOB receivables are kept in an asset account. Any time you record a sale in the Sales command centre, the unpaid balance of the sale is added to your receivables account. Every time you enter a customer payment (using Customer Payments in the Sales command centre), the amount is subtracted from your receivable account.

 

Reconciling - The process of checking that your records agree with your banks records.

 

Recontact Date - In MYOB s Contact Log the recontact date is the date you promised to get back in touch with a contact (card file entry). Once the recontact is made you should erase the recontact date from the contact log record. Otherwise, it will show up in your To Do List.

 

Recurring Transaction - An accounting entry that is made periodically, such as weekly payroll, monthly rent, etc. MYOB allows you to set up recurring cheques, deposits, and general journal entries.

Retained Earnings - Money from previous year's earnings that has been left in the company. At the end of a fiscal year any money earned (or lost) during the fiscal year is transferred to retained earnings. A retained earnings is an equity account.

 

Revenue - Income from the sale of goods or services. Revenue is recorded in an income account in MYOB Income accounts usually carry a credit balance.

 

Reversing - The process of counteracting a mistaken transaction by entering a new transaction with the same amounts, but with opposite signs.

 

Sales History - MYOB retains monthly sales figures for an item, customer or salesperson. Check Track Sales History in the item or card information window.

 

Shareholder's Equity - The owner's stake in the company. It is comprised of the amount the owners invested in the company plus the current year earnings and retained earnings.

 

Service Invoice - The written record of a sale of something not on MYOB s items list.

 

Service Purchase Order - The written record of a purchase of something not on the item's list.

 

Settle a Credit Invoice - When someone returns something, and you record an invoice that has a negative balance due it is called a credit invoice. Paying off this negative amount is called settling a credit invoice. Use Settle Returns & Credits to either write a refund cheque or apply the amount to another open invoice.

 

Settle a Debit Purchase - When you return something to a vendor, and you record a purchase with a negative balance due it is called a debit purchase. Paying off this negative amount is called settling a debit purchase. Use Settle Returns & Debits to either deposit the vendor's refund cheque or apply the amount to another open purchase.

 

Start a New Year - After all transactions for a fiscal year have been entered, you must start a new fiscal year. In addition to clearing out your old transactions, starting a new year moves the balance of current year earnings and resets the balance of your income, cost of sales, and expense accounts to zero. MYOB allows you to Start a New Payroll Year prior to rolling over the rest of your accounts, to allow you to continue the Payroll section while your accounts are being finalised for the year.

 

Terms - Terms are the agreed upon rules governing the number of days between delivery and payment, discounts for early payment and penalties for late payment. In MYOB, you can set default terms for all your customers when you enter your linked receivables accounts in the Setup menu. Likewise, you can enter the default terms between you and your vendors when you enter your linked payables accounts.
Transaction - An entry in MYOB that affects an account or accounts.

 

Trial Balance - This is a report showing all the activity for an account or accounts within a selected date range. It shows the balance of the account at the beginning of the date range, the activity within the date range, and the balance at the end of the date range. The trial balance is a useful tool for checking your entries prior to doing your period-end processing.

 

Vendor - Someone from whom you buy goods or services. In MYOB you must enter a vendor card before you can track a payable balance.  Year End - The end of your fiscal year. It does not necessarily match the end of the calendar year. See Start a New Year.