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Ask YC: accounting help
11 points by codilechasseur on Aug 6, 2008 | hide | past | favorite | 18 comments
For those of you with small home based businesses or a business on the side. How do you keep track of invoicing and payables/receivables? I'm using Quicken Home and Business 2008 and it's nice and all, but I just want to invoice and know what's outstanding etc.. I don't need to micro manage an investment portfolio or know what the interest on $10 is going to be in 5 years.

An online solution would be ok. Better if it combines my home and business together.




QuickBooks isn't the only option. My startup makes this:

http://www.thinkcomputer.com/software/exponent/enterprise.ht...

and we use it to run everything. And it runs on Macs.


Without sounding like a broken record... Quickbooks.

It's also easy to just give your accountant the qb file for taxes. I'd advise to stay with the non-online version. When I was looking at it awhile ago it didn't have everything I needed, also you always want access to your books.


Quickbooks is the only way to go. The fact that you already use Quicken will help you in getting up to speed.

Also, definitely go for the online service Quicken offers (as opposed to the shrink wrapped s/w.


Try to avoid Intuit (Quicken/Quickbooks). They have a monopoly, and it is unfair.

I tried for a bit to compete with them, but the banks are complicit and it is impossible to provide proper account import functionality with the way things are now.

That said, try Less Accounting (http://lessaccounting.com/) or Harvest.


Some people care much more about efficiency than your perception of fairness. For them, Quickbooks is a pretty clear answer.

Ability to just hand it over to your accountant is a must.


+1 for Harvest. I'm very fond of their service. I'm using them despite the fact that I also have Quickbooks for accounting.


+1 for less accounting, it's amazing.


http://freeagentcentral.com is the best web based accounting system there is. I've used Freshbooks and Blinksale before but these guys handle almost all accounting needs end to end for a small business. Although primarily UK based they have a universal version that works world wide.

They also have a beautiful API so we can fill in any gaps very easily ourselves and they're adding new features every week... and they are probably one of the top users of http://getsatisfaction.com.


Quickbooks. It's almost a small-business industry standard.

The nice thing is every small accounting firm or contractor I've ever come across knows Quickbooks. This means you can often email them your accounting "database" to have them do a sanity check or cleanup remotely. Makes it easy to collaborate without having to pay for on-site consulting time.

I have personally used Quickbooks on startups through the first few million in revenue.

BTW, your "home" and "business" worlds are completely separate. Don't commingle them.


I'm on a Mac, and I've heard a lot of complaints that Quickbooks can't transfer data back and forth between Mac/Window machines. I imagine a lot of accountants use Windows.


I'm on a Mac also, and thankfully haven't had to worry about this for the last few years :) And yeah, I've never met an accountant on Windows.

I'm OS agnostic, I prefer to use what I think is the best solution for the problem. With that in mind, it might be worthwhile to look into a windows machine to run QB. You can rdesktop to it (there is a great rdesktop app for the Mac), and when you get to the point of having a part-time accounting person come in, the PC will already be all set up for their use. This is what I did in the past (dedicated low-end PC for "hosting" QB).


I think there's a lot more mileage in running Windows under VMWare Fusion or Parallels, than in having an entire machine dedicated to doing nothing but running Quickbooks.

Might help the balance sheet out... :)


Would running a Windows VM work for you? VMware Fusion is a terrific product.


Yeah, I'm running Quickbooks on my Parallels partition. If you ever need to go to the next level - i.e. have someone else take over accounting from you - you should really run a Windows Quickbooks install. It's not worth the headache to try anything else.


On the open source side there's Gnucash. It's a full double-entry accounting package that I've used for years. It's been awhile since I've used any Intuit products, but Gnucash is working fine for me.


I use blinksale and love it for invoicing. Not sure if that covers all your needs.


using harvest for invoicing, probably going to get quickbooks for the rest - seems to be the standard.


freshbooks?




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