The ability to track job costs, such as labour charges, materials, overhead, and licences, is essential when you want to determine overall job profitability, or need to provide an estimate for a future project.
When you record transactions, you can associate individual line items or the total amount with specific projects. A single line item amount can be allocated to one or more projects, or you can allocate entire transactions to one or more projects.
By default, all revenue and expense accounts allow project allocations. You can also allocate entries associated with asset accounts, but you must first set up the asset accounts manually to do so.
Transaction amounts are allocated to projects by a specified amount or as a percentage. For payroll transactions, you can also allocate by the number of hours the employee worked on a project for a specific pay period.
Allocating expenses for salaried employees: If projects are set up to allocate payroll expenses by hours, you can allocate payroll amounts for an employee who is on salary when you process their paycheque.
Allocating expenses on a payroll cheque run: When you process a payroll cheque run, you first have to determine if you want to apply the allocation to all paycheques or just one or more paycheques.
If you process a payroll cheque run in which some employees' wages are calculated hourly and others are salary-based, and then you apply an hourly employee's allocations to all of the employees in the cheque run, the salaried employee allocations will be calculated as a percentage, based on the hourly employee's distribution of hours.
(compiled by Bruce Favreau c2003)
Set up projects for each donor to track the receipt of pledges and donations. This will make it easy generate a report on tax receipts issued to each donor.
Assign a project for each livestock or crop type. You can allocate revenue and costs to help you assess the profitability of managing different types of livestock or crops.
Create a project for each job (manufacture of custom tools or mould building) or each product line (such as the mass production of plastics).
If you set up a project for each building you sell or manage, you can track revenues and expenses incurred for each site. You can also set up service items for each expense directly related to the sale or management of a home (such as the different forms of advertisement on the Internet, TV, Radio, Newspaper, or the services required to maintain a property: management, laundry maintenance, business licensing).
Many professionals (such as architects, lawyers, engineers) have significantly sized, sometimes multi-year, projects for which they would like to track costs. They want to know whether a particular job is profitable and whether the costs match the final bill to the client. Since much of their cost is labour, it is important that they set up and use payroll to allocate labour hours to particular projects. Lawyers and others who charge clients for disbursements also need to allocate expenses like courier fees, photocopying, searches, and other payouts. As long as all items are allocated, no items will be missed to charge back for disbursements.
Many service businesses (such as advertising agencies, consultants, graphic artists, interior designers, photographers) have discreet projects/jobs for which there can be significant costs. You can track those costs against the revenue generated by theses projects/jobs. As some of these business costs are primarily labour-related (as opposed to materials), have employees track their time per project, and allocate payroll costs to the various projects.
Set up an asset account to allocate to projects
Allocate transaction amounts to a project