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Evaluating
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Print A Financial Statement To the Screen The process of printing a
financial statement to screen can be very revealing. To start with, this
allows you to see how many default financial statement formats come
standard with the system. Some products provide on a balance sheet and
income statement while others provide numerous standard reports including
a Statement of Cash Flows which, last time I checked, was a required
financial statement according to FASB 52. This process also allows you to
see the flexibility of reporting options prior to printing. For example: 1. Can you define the desired date range? 2. Can you easily report on a single a department, division or fund? 3. Can the report be scheduled to print automatically at regularly scheduled intervals? 4. Can the reports be printed to someone’s e-mail address or fax machine? 5. Can multiple reports be grouped together and printed as a single group, instead of selecting dozens of reports individually each month? 6.
Can the report format be easily customized to add new columns or
rows? Printing a report to
screen also allows you to see how fast the product produces reports. Some
products are much faster than others. For example, Navision Attain
produces reports very fast because of the way it was designed. Each time
transactions are posted in Navision Attain, all necessary day end,
week-end, month-end, quarter-end, and year-ed balances are updated. In
this manner Navision Attain produces financial reports simply by grabbing
the balances and instantly constructing the report. Other products such as
Great Plains Dynamics are designed to tabulate all transactions to
calculate the necessary balances. Only then is the system able to grab the
balances and build the financial report. Because you will typically be
using demo data, most financial statements should print in a few seconds.
If the product you are evaluating requires more than 30 seconds or so to
produce a simple financial report, watch out. It is important to be able
to print financial reports to the screen. If you come across a product
that does not provide this capability, don’t walk away – run away.
Without this capability, users are forced to print reports to paper every
time they want to read a few bits of data. Printed reports, of course,
take time, waste paper, fill landfills, cost money for paper and toner,
and results in wear and tear on your printer. It is true that printed
reports are a necessity – especially when it comes to month end
reporting. However, for day-to-day tasks, printing reports to screen
should be the preferred approach. Reports printed to screen are available
to quickly everybody and always reflect the most current data and
adjustments. Paper reports may be obsolete which could lead to other
problems. Further, reports printed to screen can typically be cut and
pasted into other tools such as Microsoft Excel for easy “what-if”
analysis or charting. Another important feature
to watch for is fixed headers. Some products allow the user to scroll
reports on screen, while the column and row headings stay fixed – only
the data scrolls. In other products the column and row headings disappear
completely when scrolling the data, which makes it impractical to read
financial reports on screen. Once the report is visible
on screen, some products provide the capability to e-mail the report to a
mail recipient, or group of mail recipients. In many cases the report can
be exported or saved to a web page (HTML) format, an Adobe Acrobat (pdf)
format, or to one of many popular delimited formats. Many products, such
as QuickBooks Pro 2002, Peachtree Complete Accounting, and Great Plains
Dynamics provide one-click export capabilities which instantly transfers
the report to Microsoft Excel and Word. The final feature to look
for in a report printed to the screen is “drill-down” and
“drill-around” capability. Some products allow you to double-click on
any number, such sales, and instantly drill to a list of all sales orders
and entries that comprise the sales balance. From here, the user can drill
further all the way down to the underlying invoice, and in some cases, to
a scanned in image of the hand-written source document. The more powerful
products will then provide “drill around capabilities that would allow
you to drill to data in other modules. For example, clicking on a line
item on the underlying invoice displays purchase and sales statistics on
that particular inventory item. Example: Presented below are two
screens taken from MAS 90, the first is the options screen for printing a
financial statement, and the second is the resulting financial statement
itself.
In this options screen, MAS90 does a great job of
providing the user with complete control over the format, periods,
departments, and locations. Other options allow you to specify footnotes
and other attributes. This options screen is fairly strong.
The resulting financial
statement in MAS 90 is fairly basic. There is a nice copy button that
makes it easy to copy the contents of the financial statement and paste it
into Microsoft Excel, but the data is pasted as text, and must then be
parsed to perform additional calculations. As an alternative, MAS 90
offers ODBC connectivity, an Export Utility called exchange, as well as
strong integration to Crystal Reports and other tools. The rest of this
financial report is rather basic. The titles scroll off the top of the
screen when you preview the data, there is no button for easily e-mailing
this report to other users (although MAS 90 does offer this functionality
from other screens), you can not drill down from the financial statement.
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