Knowing how to complete an AIA G-702/G-703 billing form and documenting change orders are important for your overall cash flow, if they aren’t done correctly – well you don’t get paid on time! This Tuesday Training segment will provide you with detailed information on both
Welcome to Tuesday Training!
Tuesday Training is a new feature here on the QuickBooks for Contractors blog. While everyday focuses on training of one sort or another, Tuesday’s are dedicated to more in-depth training.
We’ll teach you the things you need to know about using QuickBooks, that you won’t find in the QuickBooks Help file, in order to successfully run your construction business and obtain accurate job costing reports; from eBooks, live webinars, and recorded training sessions.
You’ll find high-quality (budget friendly) training without having to leave the comfort of your home or office.
AIA G-702/G-703 Training Exercise – $25.00
Most anyone will tell you that completing the AIA G-702 and G-703 forms by hand is frustrating and difficult. To fill out one correctly, you pretty much have to:
- forget about any basic accounting principals you’ve ever learned
- ignore change orders that have been submitted or approved, but not processed
- ignore money that is still outstanding from previously submitted applications for payment
You need to realize that the payment applications that you submit are an important piece of your overall cash flow management. When your payment applications get screwed up — bad things happen; none of which put you in “good standing” with the General Contractor or Project Owner, and can ultimately damage your company’s overall cash position.
This 38 page eBook contains everything you’ll need to learn how to complete these billing forms correctly; including a sample AIA training exercise that walks you through, from start to finish, how to complete an AIA G-702 & G-703 form by hand.
Purchase your copy today for $25.00.
Documenting Change Orders, Extra Work Orders & Job Costs
It almost goes without saying that on any construction project, a contractor’s ability to get paid for the Original contract, Extra Work Orders and/or Change Orders is vital to the business’s profit margin.
It’s the start of a new contruction season, is your job costing system in place?
Free eBook – click here to download.
Many companies fail to set up their charts of accounts correctly in QuickBooks. Over the years I have seen charts of accountants that look like a collage of accounts in helter skelter format without any logical order, containing duplicate if not triplicate accounts, inconsistent protocols, and even inappropriate, if not undecipherable, names.
At tax time, when their CPA receives either a backup or Accountants copy of the file like OR reports that have been created from the file, it becomes an even bigger mess. The trial balance that must be created by the tax preparer requires countless hours of reclassifications and groupings to mesh and coordinate the amounts within the file to the classifications required on tax returns and financial statements. Business owners then bear the costs of needless and expensive clean ups, often tacking on an additional $500 to $1000 per year to their annual accounting bills.
There is no excuse for not having a QuickBooks chart of accounts set up in a format compatible with what is reported on a company’s tax return as well as their financial statement. Once set up, a simple click in QuickBooks prints a readable and well-organized financial report for internal management, bankers, other creditors, bonding companies, shareholders, etc. In addition, with some mapping to an Intuit tax software program, the client’s trial balance amounts can be exported to the company’s tax return by the tax preparer with another click of the mouse.
In order to minimize the costs associated with having their tax returns prepared, as well as interim and year-end financial reports, businesses owners would be well advised to adopt account names, groupings, and an overall format required by their tax returns. A good chart of accounts can accommodate the requirements of both internal and external financial reporting, since subaccounts would provide any necessary detail required by management and interested outside parties – while a simple click of the Modify Report button in QuickBooks re-arranges the expense accounts in alphabetical order – often the desired presentation for banks.
Many Certified Public Accountants (CPA’s) and Certified Public Bookkeepers (CPB) prefer to have their clients set up the chart of accounts using account numbers. Many clients do not want to use numbers because they find them cumbersome.
A compromise is to turn on the “Use account numbers” preference (Edit menu -> Preferences -> Accounting -> Company Preferences tab -> Use Account Numbers) when setting up the chart of accounts. Then, turn off the account numbers preference. When the preference is off, account numbers are not eliminated, simply hidden from view. At the end of the year, the CPA can turn the preference back on and add account numbers to any accounts created by the client during the year.
When the “Use account numbers” and “Reports-Show accounts by Name only” preferences (Edit menu -> Preferences -> Reports & Graphs -> Company Preferences tab -> Reports – Show Accounts by: Name Only option) are activated, account numbers appear next to the account name in QuickBooks financial reports.
Many users prefer not to have account numbers display on financial reports. If, instead, the preference “Reports-Show accounts by Description only” is activated, the account description entered when the account was setup is used. Therefore, when using account numbers, enter an account description. (This description can be identical to the account name.)











