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Pre-accounting

The pre-accounting process refers to the preparatory tasks and tools used to increase efficiency and accuracy of actual bookkeeping.

Traditionally, accounting involves a lot of manual tasks including data entry, sorting, and handling of paperwork. One of the most common pain points for business owners and finance teams is chasing down expense receipts when closing the books.

Pre-accounting softwares provide effective solutions to these inefficiencies, with accounting automation features like mobile receipt capture, real-time spend tracking, and integrations that streamline the entire workflow.

What pre-accounting looks like

Traditionally, the accounting process might look something like this: an employee meets a client at a cafe for a work meeting. After paying with their credit card, they hastily stow away the purchase receipt and forget about it for several weeks...until the finance team asks for all their expense receipts in preparation for month-end closing.

It takes the employee several days to find the receipt, crumpled up under piles of other documents in the office. This creates extra work for the accounting team, who need to decipher the receipt’s information, reconcile the payment, and then enter it all into the general ledger.

Now imagine the same scenario, but with pre-accounting optimization. That might look like this: the employee makes a payment at the cafe with their company card. They use a spend management mobile app to snap a photo of the receipt and instantly reconcile their purchase. The transaction’s information is immediately synced with the company’s integrated accounting software, updating the general ledger in real-time.

Both the accounting team and the employee save hours of time, which can be refocused on executing strategic work to grow the company.

How pre-accounting works

Pre-accounting processes can vary depending on elements like company structure, size, and resources.

Small business owners frequently use automated accounting softwares like Quickbooks Online or Xero; tools that are well-suited to solo entrepreneurs and early-stage startups.

Larger companies may opt for more advanced tools like ERP systems that consolidate multiple facets of business operations into one management platform.

Generally, pre-accounting can include any or all of these functions:

  1. Reconciling information

All financial activities are consolidated and prepared for clean data entry. This involves tracking all types of company spend and streams of revenue, as well as collecting and tagging the associated documentation for each transaction.

2. Document collection

Business administration and employee reimbursements can be performed more quickly when essential documents like paper receipts are filed earlier, rather than later. Many fintech mobile apps support instant receipt capture, so employees can effortlessly and automatically submit purchase details to finance teams in real-time.

3. Staying audit ready

A shared goal among accountants, bookkeepers, and CPAs is ensuring the company’s financial reporting is as accurate as possible, and ready for audit. Good pre-accounting practices enable finance teams to report accounting data securely, and easily catch if there are any mistakes to be corrected.

4. Expense reports

Paper expense reports for employee reimbursement are tedious and slow to process, and increase the risk of fraud.

Alongside a clear expense policy, pre-accounting can support smarter expense management by eliminating manual reports and digitizing the expense approval process. Instead of sorting through stacks of expense reports every month-end, all purchase details are added to the general ledger in real-time whenever a purchase is made with a company credit card.

5. Processing invoices

Much of the time spent on accounts payable is focused on aligning and matching documentation: invoices against purchase orders, delivery orders, receipts, etc. Smart payment platforms enable finance teams to streamline the entire AP workflow, from receiving and validating invoices, to paying vendors on time.

The benefits of pre-accounting

Today, pre-accounting strategies are fundamental to a healthy and efficient finance function. There are major benefits to implementing financial accounting tools and/or spend management systems in your business.

Time and money saved

By automating slow manual processes like receipt collection, finance teams and team members alike can save days of time every month.

This not only takes pressure off of any employees who make one-off or frequent purchases for work, it also alleviates accountants’ stress of hunting down receipts.

More accurate reporting

Many fintech softwares use OCR (optical character recognition) technology to scan receipts, invoices, and other documents to instantly extract and sync all pertinent details online.

Pre-accounting can eliminate manual data entry and significantly reduces the risk of human error. It also provides businesses with real-time financial data throughout the fiscal year, with a single source of truth for company finances.

Less financial risk

Pre-accounting work supports better decision-making. The more accurate financial data a business has, the more company leadership is able to make smarter investment and business decisions. Pre-accounting helps finance teams optimize their accounting systems, and also helps them inform executives on how to best achieve cost savings, scale growth, and avoid high-risk transactions.

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Last update: 2 February 2022

Pre Accounting — FAQ

Spendesk automates pre-accounting by capturing and categorizing transactions before posting to the ledger. Spendesk uses virtual and physical cards, receipt capture, automated expense reports, and configurable approval flows to match spend with invoices and coding. Spendesk integrates with accounting systems like QuickBooks and Xero to export pre-accounting entries, reducing manual reconciliation and speeding month-end close.

Spendesk improves pre-accounting accuracy by enforcing receipt capture, automatic OCR data extraction, and rule-based coding at the point of transaction. Spendesk's real-time spend controls and pre-approval workflows attach receipts, VAT rates, and general ledger codes to cards and invoices, which reduces manual errors and ensures consistent, auditable entries before export to accounting software.

Spendesk syncs pre-accounting data directly with popular accounting platforms and ERPs using native integrations and CSV exports. Spendesk supports two-way integrations with QuickBooks, Xero, and additional ERP connectors, mapping transactions, VAT, and coding to chart of accounts so finance teams can push validated pre-accounting entries into the general ledger without manual rework.

Spendesk recommends starting pre-accounting setup by configuring card policies, approval workflows, and chart-of-accounts mappings before issuing cards. Use Spendesk's receipt capture, automated VAT capture, and rule-based coding to enforce correct GL codes and department tags at transaction time. Set up integrations with QuickBooks or Xero and schedule regular exports to keep pre-accounting aligned with month-end close.

Spendesk centralizes receipts by linking photo captures and emailed invoices to each transaction, applying OCR to extract amounts and VAT. Spendesk's mobile receipt capture, automated matching to card transactions, and employee reimbursement workflows create pre-accounting records with attachments and coding, enabling accurate expense claims and fast reconciliation before exporting to accounting systems.