North Texas Dentistry Volume 4 Issue 1 Volume 4 Issue 1 | Page 25

access capability ($3.95 monthly), as well as many other remote computer possibilities, such as Windows Remote desktop or Logmein.com, which are both free. These are better options to remotely access QuickBooks, than giving up the full QuickBooks capability. Converting back to QuickBooks Pro. Somehow users aren’t warned enough. Downloading an online copy to convert back to Pro can be problematic. If you were using Pro then went to Online, then want to return to Pro, before you give up Online, be sure to print copies of the Balance Statement and Profit & Loss Report with a date range of All. Then after conversion, compare the same reports in Pro. It can be done – just be careful to compare reports and enter adjustments as needed. If you are a current Pro user, you will be frustrated at the limitations of Online. If you start with Online, you don’t know what you don’t know, until you know how different Pro is, which then will be frustrating. Even with my heavy travel schedule, QuickBooks Online would be great – but not yet. By the way, there are few Advanced QuickBooks ProAdvisors that recommend Online. It will mature eventually but it is nothing compared to its big sister, QuickBooks Pro. What’s the advantage of QuickBooks’ Complete Payroll option vs. my CPA, Paychex, ADP or other payroll providers? Full service payroll companies have a stronghold over practices. Yet, as more practices are doing accounting in-house, payroll has also come in-house. ADP, Paychex and others all offer to pay your employees by check or direct deposit. Typically, the employees’ hours are calculated, hopefully reviewed and called into the payroll service or entered on their website. They pay the payroll taxes, file the payroll reports and create your W-2s at the end of the year. Because the monies are withdrawn from your bank prior to processing, these amounts must be manually entered though into QuickBooks, typically as three lump sums. There is no detail information of the paychecks in QuickBooks, so one must defer to the actual payroll service’s website or printed reports for detail questions regarding a paycheck. The amounts are only entered into QuickBooks as lump sums, not how much was Withholding, Social Security or Medicare. Well. Guess what? QuickBooks has a Complete Payroll option. Enter the employee’s hours in the Start Scheduled Payroll window, click continue, review the information then click Create Paychecks. Enter your password and the payroll is sent to Intuit for processing. But, here’s the cool part – all your payroll detail is contained within QuickBooks, not some external site. And, you don’t have to enter any lump sum amounts. It is just so easy to create payroll in QuickBooks. I seriously do not understand why anything else is ever recommended. Attendees who have switched say that it was less expensive than their previous source. If you go to my website and click the Resources tab, you will find an Intuit contact that will give you a 20% discount and free setup for switching. Can’t I just download all my transactions into QuickBooks without entering the checks or deposits in the QuickBooks register manually? Sure you can, but that’s not the wisest management move. Manually entering deposits then downloading ensures you www.northtexasdentistry.com | NORTH TEXAS DENTISTRY 25