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The big decision

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Before you fiddle with your computer or the QuickBooks software, you need to choose the date — the so-called conversion date — on which you want to begin using QuickBooks for your financial record keeping.

This decision is hugely important, because the conversion date that you choose dramatically affects both the work you have to do to get QuickBooks running smoothly and the initial usefulness of the financial information that you collect and record by using QuickBooks.

You have three basic choices:

 The right way: You can convert at the beginning of your accounting year (which, in most cases, is the same as the beginning of the calendar year). This way is the right way for two reasons. First, converting at the beginning of the year requires the least amount of work from you. Second, it means that you have all the current year’s financial information in one system.

 The slightly awkward way: You can convert at the beginning of some interim accounting period (probably the beginning of some month or quarter). This approach works, but it’s slightly awkward because you have to plug your year-to-date income and expenses numbers from the old system into the new system. (If you don’t know what an interim accounting period is, see Appendix B.)

 The my-way-or-the-highway way: You can convert at some time other than what I call the right way and the slightly awkward way. Specifically, you can choose to convert whenever you jolly well feel like it. You create a bunch of unnecessary work for yourself if you take this approach, and you pull out a bunch of your hair in the process. But you also have the satisfaction of knowing that through it all, you did it your way — without any help from me.

I recommend choosing the right way. What this choice means is that if it’s late in the year — say, October — you just wait until January 1 of the next year to convert. If it’s still early in the year, you can retroactively convert as of the beginning of the year. (If you do this, you need to go back and do your financial record keeping for the first part of the current year by using QuickBooks: entering sales, recording purchases, and so on.)

If it’s sometime in the middle of the year — say, Memorial Day or later — you probably want to use the slightly awkward way. (I’m actually going to use the slightly awkward way in this chapter and the next chapter because if you see how to convert to QuickBooks by using the slightly awkward way, you know how to use both the right way and the slightly awkward way.)

QuickBooks 2021 For Dummies

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