Title: The SalesCollection Business Process
1Chapter 6
- The Sales/Collection Business Process
2Chapter Objectives
- Identify the characteristics of the traditional
sales/collection process and related IT
applications. - Describe weaknesses in the traditional
sales/collection process and IT application
architecture. - Develop a REAL model of the sales/collection
process. - Suggest ways to improve the sales/collection
process and its IT application.
3The Purpose of the Sales/Collection Process
- The sales/collection process is a series of
operating events that - collectively serve to attract customers,
- help customers select goods and services,
- deliver the goods and services requested, and
- collect payments for the goods and services.
- The process should
- Minimize the amount of time between the selection
of products and services and the collection of
cash. - Minimize the amount of cash that is not collected
from customers for goods and services provided. - Structure product quality and price to balance
customer value and organization profitability.
4An Overview of the Traditional Sales/collection
Process
- In a manual sales/collection process, paper is
used - as the primary means to capture and store
business data and communicate information to
information customers - as the audit trail for documenting the process.
- to store duplicate data as data is processed
across various departments (e.g., the Sales Order
Department, the Shipping Department, the Billing
Department, and the Warehousing Department).
- to communicate authorizations between departments
and to external parties. - Files of source documents and journals are often
called transaction files while master files
include the subsidiary ledgers, general ledger,
and control accounts used by units within the
Accounting Department (e.g., accounts receivable,
inventory control, and general ledger).
5Take Order
- The customer order typically includes data about
the customer, where to ship the goods, the items
the customer wants to order, and payment terms. - The company receives the order and checks the
customer files to see if the customer is a new or
existing customer. - Usually, this customer order is recopied onto a
companys own sales order document. - A copy of the sales order may eventually be used
as a sales invoice. Having order data on a
pre-numbered internal document helps a company
locate order data and avoid losing orders. This
is important, because missing documents can
signal unfilled or unauthorized transactions.
6Sales Order
- The Sales Order has many of copies
- A copy of the sales order is sent to the Credit
Department for approval. - A picking slip or stock request document, to the
Warehousing Department authorizing warehousing to
pull the goods and move them to the shipping
area. - The packing slip is sent to the Shipping
Department to communicate that goods are
forthcoming from the Warehousing Department.
- Two copies of the sales order are sent to the
Billing Department to inform them of the sale and
for use in invoicing the customer after the goods
are shipped. - A copy of the sales order (the copy with Credit
Department approval) is filed in the Sales Order
Department with the customer's order document to
create a customer order activity file. The file
of customer orders is organized alphabetically
(for ease in locating information by customer
name). - Finally, a copy of the sales order may be sent to
the customer to acknowledge acceptance of their
order.
7Fill Order
- The Warehousing Department cannot act without
authorization from the Sales Order Department. in
the form of the picking slip or stock request
document. - Warehousing personnel pick the goods (noting any
stock-outs or other problems on the picking slip)
and transfer them to the shipping area.
- (If necessary, a back order document is created
for stock-out items.) - A warehouse inventory subsidiary ledger may be
updated to reflect the goods taken out of
inventory. - In a traditional accounting system, each
department may keep its own inventory records.
These separate inventory records are not included
on Exhibits 6-1 and 6-2.
8Ship Product
- The Shipping Department compares the packing slip
(from the Sales Order Department) with the
picking slip and the goods to be shipped. - They pack the goods and select a carrier they
prepare a bill of lading (that describes the
packages they accept for shipment, the carrier,
the route, and customer information), keep a copy
in the Shipping Department, and send a copy to
the customer.
- Shipping personnel prepare a shipping notice to
communicate that the goods have been shipped. - The packing slip is included with the packaged
goods. - A copy of a shipping notice is sent to the
Billing Department as notification of the need to
bill the customer. - Documents in the shipping activity file are
typically ordered numerically to allow a
completeness check to identify missing documents
or documents used out of order.
9Bill Customer
- Upon notification of shipment, the Billing
Department pulls and reviews the sales order from
the temporary file to make sure the products
should have been shipped. They also review the
shipping notice to verify that the goods have
been shipped and that the transaction meets the
definition of a sale for accounting purposes. - The Billing Department prepares a sales invoice
by adding prices to the data found on the sales
order document.
- A copy of the sales invoice serves as the source
document for recording the transaction in the
sales journal. - The total amount of the group of sales invoices
for a period of time is summed to calculate a
batch control total. - The batch control total is used to prepare a
journal voucher document - The journal voucher document is sent to the
General Ledger Department for posting to the
general ledger
A copy of the sales invoice is sent to the
customer (as their bill). A copy of the sales
invoice is sent to the Accounts Receivable
Department to record in the accounts receivable
subsidiary ledger, and the picking slip or
packing slip is sent to inventory control to
update the inventory subsidiary ledger.
10Information Processes
- The Accounts Receivable Department uses a copy of
the sales invoice to record invoice amounts in
the customers account in the accounts receivable
subsidiary ledger. - The Inventory Control Department reduces
inventory balances in the inventory subsidiary
ledger (for companies that use a perpetual
inventory system) and assigns the goods sold to
cost of goods sold.
- The General Ledger Department uses the journal
voucher to record the total sale as a debit to
Accounts Receivable and as a credit to Sales in
the general ledger.
11Receive Payment
- At this point, the company waits for the customer
to return payment. - Often the sales invoice includes an additional
page to be returned wit the payment, called a
remittance advice, lists the customers name,
account number, and balance due. - Generally, two people are assigned to open the
mail to reduce employee fraud or theft.
- The employees document the payments by completing
a batch remittance list that lists the source of
each check and its amount. - The amount of the check is compared with the
amount on the remittance advice to verify their
equality and the check is restrictively endorsed
for deposit only.
12Information Processes
- A copy of the batch remittance list is sent,
along with the checks, to personnel in the Cash
Receipts Department. - A deposit slip is prepared to deposit the checks
in the bank. The batch remittance list is used
as a source document to record the cash received
in the cash receipts journal. The totals are
used to prepare a journal voucher that is sent to
the General Ledger Department to update
(increase) the General Ledger Cash account and
(decrease) the General Ledger Accounts Receivable
control account.
- The batch of remittance advices is sent to the
Accounts Receivable Department where the
customer's subsidiary ledger is updated to
reflect the payment. The remittance advices are
placed in customer files to document the customer
payment. A copy of the batch remittance list is
also sent to the controller to reconcile total
remittances for the day to the bank deposit
amount (recorded on a validated deposit slip
obtained from the bank).
13Sample Data Flows Commonly Associated with the
Sales/Collection Process
- Customer Order
- Sales Order
- Picking Slip
- Packing Slip
- Bill of Lading/Shipping Notice
- Sales Invoice (Bill)
- Remittance Advice
- Deposit Slip
- Customer Check
- Open Sales Order
- Open Sales Invoice
14Traditional, Manual Sales/Collection Process -
Part 1
Billing
Customer
Customer Order
Customer Order
Hold Until Shipped
Shipping Notice
S/O copies
Prepare Sales Orders
S/O copy acknowledge- ment
6
Match Copies / Extend Prices
Prepare Invoice
Approved S/O
Sales Order
Sales Journal
Goods, Pkg slip 3, Bill of lading 12
Release all S/O copies after credit approval
Dr/Cr to G/L
A Alphabetic C Chronological N Numerical
Invoice
Sales Order 2 Customer Order
.
15Traditional, Manual Sales/Collection Process -
Part 1
Inventory
Accounts
General
Warehouse
Shipping
Ledger
Receivable
Control
Dr/Cr to G/L
Accts Rec Invoice copy
Packing Slip S/O Copy
Picking Slip S/O
Shipping Notice
Post to A/R sub ledger
Post to General Ledger
Prepare Shipping Docu- ments
Post to inv. records
Release Goods
General Ledger
A/R sub ledger
Bill of Lading
Goods, Pkg slip 3, Bill of lading 12
Picking Slip S/O
Inventory Sub. Ledger
Shipping Notice
Bill of Lading 3
Ship documents goods
N
.
16Traditional, Manual Sales/Collection Process -
Part 2
Customer
Bank
Controller
In Batches
Remittance Advice
Mail Check and RA
Cheques
Deposit Slip Checks
Remittance Advices
Dr/Cr to G/L
Remittance List Created
Post to A/R sub ledger
Bank Validates Deposit
Post to General Ledger
Remittance List 2
Remittance List 1
A
Remittance List 1
A/R sub ledger
Validated Deposit Slip
Compare
Batch of Checks
General Ledger
Remittance List 2
A
Batch of Checks
Remittance Advices
C
Post to Cash Rec. Journal
Prepare deposit slip
Remittance Lists and Deposit Slips
Remittance Lists
Remittance Advice
A Alphabetic C Chronological N Numerical
Cash Receipts Journal
Checks and Deposit Slip
N
Dr/Cr to G/L
C
.
17An Overview Of The Traditional Automated
Sales/collection Process
- Authorizations and data access can be provided
through computer screens there is potential for
decrease in the amount of paper - The paper sales and cash receipts journals in a
manual system have been physically changed to
disk or tape transaction files. The paper
inventory and accounts receivable subsidiary
ledgers and the paper general ledger have been
upgraded to disk or tape master files. - Input typically comes from a hard copy document
(the document symbols) and goes through one or
more processes. Processes (represented by
rectangles) store data in files (the tape or disk
symbols) or prepare data in the form of a report
(also a document symbol).
18An Overview Of The Traditional Automated
Sales/collection Process
- Each program can include screens for collecting
data, edit checks on the data entered,
instructions for processing and storing the data,
security procedures (e.g., limiting access via
passwords or user IDs), and steps for generating
and displaying output. - To understand the files and their use, it is
important to consider their contents (their
record layouts). - Notice the relationship between the documents and
files used for input and the files and documents
generated as output. The input documents and the
files must contain the data necessary to generate
the desired output.
19Traditional Automated Sales/Collection Process
Flowchart - Order Entry
20Traditional Automated Sales/Collection Process
Flowchart - Shipping
21Traditional Automated Sales/Collection Process
Flowchart - Billing
22Traditional Automated Sales/Collection Process
Flowchart - Mail Room
23Traditional Automated Sales/Collection Process
Flowchart - Cashier
24Traditional Automated Sales/Collection Process
Flowchart - Accounts Receivable
25Criticisms of Traditional IT Applications
- Multiple systems
- the sales/collection process has helped you
notice the large number of IT applications and
which exist in each functional area, including
production, marketing, and finance. - Subset of the process
- each of the traditional IT applications capture,
store, and process data about a subset of the
events. None of the applications provide an
organization-wide view of this process. - Untimely processing
- system does not capture data in real time,
significant amount of processing delays results
26Criticisms of Traditional IT Applications
- Limited characteristics
- The traditional accounting system captures only
limited characteristics about the events (e.g.,
date, account, and amount). Capturing only
limited characteristics restricts the types of
information accountants can provide to
information customers. - Level of aggregation
- Data stored in the traditional accounting system
is typically very summarized. - One view
- the traditional accounting system restricts users
to only one view of the business?the financial
view
27Opportunities to Improve the Process
- 3 opportunities for accounting and IT
professionals to enhance their value - Define rules to shape the business processes.
- Embed IT applications in business processes to
control the process and to capyure and store
detailed data in real time. - Provide useful information for decision makers to
plan, execute, control, or evaluate the
organization. - Understanding and defining a business process
includes - Describing each event, what triggers the event,
and the business rules associated with the event. - Identifying business risks associated with each
event
28New Architectures to Support the Sales/Collection
Process
- Organizations can significantly improve processes
by following just one simple principle - Embed IT into the business process so business
event data are recorded and event/process rules
are executed as each event occurs. - The REAL analysis framework aids in analyzing
business events by highlighting what (the
resources involved in the event), who (the
internal and external agents), and where (the
location) of each event. The events, agents, and
resources involved in the sales/collection
process will vary somewhat from organization to
organization.
29Providing Useful Measures About the
Sales/Collection Business Process
- Top Management
- Top managers are primarily interested in summary
information for the sales efforts of the entire
enterprise - Market share of company products compared to the
market share of competitors. - Trends in sales this year compared to prior
years. - Changes over time in key economic indicators
compared to changes in the organizations sales,
sales returns and allowances, and uncollectibe
accounts.
30Providing Useful Measures About the
Sales/Collection Business Process
- Marketing
- Information relevant to marketing includes
- Amount and location of inventory in stock.
- Customer preferences and changes in those
preferences. - Cost to produce each product and to provide each
service. - Activity and success of each salesperson.
- Quantity and price of each product sold by
salesperson, by customer type, and by geographic
area. - Detailed information on competitors products,
services, pricing strategy, and advertising
campaigns.
31Providing Useful Measures About the
Sales/Collection Business Process
- Human Resource
- requires labor information to determine workforce
needs, oversee employee scheduling, initiate
employee compensation, and conduct employee
performance evaluation. - Production
- to maintain adequate stores of inventory on hand
and producea quality product.
32Providing Useful Measures About the
Sales/Collection Business Process
- Finance Accounting
- Finance people must provide
- Strategic management and analysis.
- Management control measures that tie actions to
corporate strategy. - Cost management that is forward focused.
- Effective efficient management of financial
processes. - Support for the core business processes.
33Christopher, Inc. Sales/Collection REAL Model
34Sales/Collection Process Sample Events
- Marketing event
- Customer Order event
- Move the Goods from Warehousing to Shipping event
- Ship Goods and/or Provide Services event
- Receive Customer Payment event
- Accept Returns and Approve Allowance event
- Write Off Uncollectible Accounts event
35Sales/Collection Process Sample Information
Customers
Top Management Marketing Accounting Finance Produc
tion Customers
36Christopher, Inc. Sales/Collection Process
37Christopher, Inc. Sales/Collection Process