Archive for the ‘Accpac Stuff’ Category

Sage Accpac 5.6 What’s New Video

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Sage Accpac Help is often ignored by users of Sage Accpac yet it can be a timely resource of ideas and answers. This document will show how to access a free What’s New in Sage Accpac 5.6 video on demand.

Once you select a company and login to Accpac, click on the Help in the top of the system.

You will see that Help has numerous options. Click on the Get Free Training on New Features. You must have access to the Internet to view the free video.

This will open a web page within Sage University. You will need to click the register button and then Check Out. If you have never registered with Sage University you will need to set up an account. Once you do this, you can watch the video at your leisure as many times as you would like.

If you spend some time accessing the Help features, I’m sure that you will see how you can get more information from your Sage Accpac installation.

If you have any questions about Sage Accpac and how it can provide you with a greater insight into your business, please don’t hesitate to call one of our consultants at 512-990-3994 or go online to http://www.mindovercorp.com.

Sage Accpac 5.6 Bank Reconciliation

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

One of the cool new features of Sage Accpac 5.6 is the streamlined Bank Reconciliation screen. The new screen allows you to have more information and drill-down information during the reconciliation process.

After opening the Bank Reconciliation screen you will see the number of tabs has been decreased as well as a new button set by the Bank Entries Not Posted amount. There is also a zoom button beside the Book Balance which will show you how the Book Balance is calculated.

If the button is Active (not grayed out), you can click the button and it will allow you to Post Bank Entries entered into the reconciliation module but not yet posted.

Clicking on the Reconciliation tab shows you all of the bank transactions, withdrawals and deposits with the ability to select which transactions you want to work with plus how you want to sort them. You have the ability to drill down to any transaction. To reconcile an item all you need to do is double click the “Reconciled” column and an X will be placed on the item reconciled. You still have the ability to import the bank transactions provided you can obtain the statement from your bank in the OFX format.

With this streamlined bank reconciliation screen we believe we will see more of our clients using the bank reconciliation process within Sage Accpac.

If you have any questions about the Bank Reconciliation process or any other feature of Sage Accpac 5.6, please don’t hesitate to call one of our consultants at 512-990-3994.

Sage Accpac 5.6 – Determining Active Modules

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Sage Accpac Help is an often ignored resource for users of Sage Accpac, even though it contains lots of potentially helpful information. This blog post will show you how to use Help to determine which modules are installed and active for the company you are logged into within Accpac.

Once you select a company and login to Accpac, click on the Help in the top of the system.

You will notice that Help has numerous options. Since we want to know which modules are active, we need to click on “System Information”. Several of the other help topics will be covered in later postings.

The System Information screen provides us with a wealth of information regarding the Accpac installation. As you can see from the image below, we know which version of System Manager is running and where the programs are installed, as well as the Shared Data Directory. Each software application installed within the Program Directory is listed in the Applications block.

The modules which are Active for the company you are currently accessing in Accpac have a red check-mark beside the application. For example, we can see that US Payroll 5.5 and 5.6 are installed, with the 5.5 module having Product Update 2 installed. However, 5.6 Payroll is active for the company. Further, we can see that the current Payroll Tax Table update UT56E is installed but hasn’t been made active for this company yet.

If you spend some time accessing the Help features, I’m sure that you will see how you can get more information from your Sage Accpac installation.

 

If you have any questions about SAI and how it might provide you with greater insight into your business, please don’t hesitate to call one of our consultants at 512-990-3994.

Connect Customers to Cash Flow with Customer Inquiry from Sage Accpac 5.6

Friday, March 19th, 2010

One of the cool, new features of Sage Accpac 5.6 is the Customer Inquiry Screen. This screen replaces the old AR Inquiry which was originally a UniDevCo application before it was purchased by Sage.

Technical Sidebar: When upgrading from previous versions, take care to run the additional program to migrate the data from the “uni” tables into the Sage Accpac database.

As you can see below, this one screen contains a tremendous amount of information. Of all of the tabs available, probably the most valuable one is the Credit Status tab because you quickly get an understanding of a customer’s future cash flow value and whether you need to utilize the AR Collections module available in SageCRM to press for payment. Sage Accpac ERP truly is a seamless system that gives you a 360º view of your business if used properly. Are you using Sage Accpac to your full advantage?

The credit status tab gives instant access to potential credit issues with a customer. It even includes “Pending” transactions from order entry and invoices not yet posted in AR. You can run aging summaries as of any date by selecting how you want to age the account and providing the “as of” and cut-off dates.

Another nice feature of Customer Inquiry is its ability to be customized by you. Yes, we mean you! Example: if you don’t use optional fields or contract pricing in your business, you can remove those tabs from your screen to simplify the layout, in essence removing any non-essential items. This enables you to modify the look and feel of the screen to your heart’s content without you having to be a geeky programmer! How cool is that?

You also have drill down capability on any of the transactions in Customer Inquiry. Orders, shipments, invoices, credit notes, debit notes, receipts, adjustments – all can be viewed in more detail with a simple click of a drill down icon. If you need to follow up with your customers or answer their questions about invoices owed or paid, all of the information can be accessed from this wonderfully useful module inside Sage Accpac 5.6. What a time saver!

It just goes to show you how hard Sage works to pack value into Sage Accpac ERP and increase the return on your technology investments.

If you have any questions about Customer Inquiry or any functionality in Sage Accpac 5.6 or previous versions, please don’t hesitate to call one of our consultants at 512-990-3994.

Working together we make one heck of a team!

What Makes a Great Accpac Consultant?

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

I’ve been asked many times “What makes a great Accpac consultant?” I used to say the standard things, good at accounting, good at listening, good at communication, etc. However, after working on three of Mindover Software’s latest projects, I have a definitive answer: Passion!

During the last three projects, which involved complex installations of accounting software, CRM software and other business software add-ons, each of our consultants worked enormous amounts of hours, yet were very mindful of the project budgets. They even accepted last minute changes to project scope while constantly striving to meet client expectations. At one point, our consultants learned how to implement and support some new products just before a go-live date so that one client’s needs were met without losing time on the project schedule. Oh, and did I mention that our consultants somehow managed to keep their home lives stable?!

During each of these projects, and more than once, we heard comments from our client along these lines:

“We really appreciate all of the work you and your team did for us, even staying till 1am and coming back at 8am the next morning! It’s obvious you are our partner and not a vendor. It seems you care more about our business than some of our employees do.”

When a consultant from Mindover Software charges an hour against a project, the customer is receiving years of practical experience, extremely deep product knowledge and a commitment to excellence. Our consultants don’t rest on their laurels, either. They are constantly trying to get better by testing the applications they support, even playing with new ones to see which ones might help their customers the most. To them, it’s all about the best results for their customers.

This is the Passion I was referring to in the first paragraph.

Never Miss Another Lead with Sage CRM!

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Every business has to find and close new sales opportunities to survive and either grow or, at the very least, replace lost accounts. As you undoubtedly know, each time you go through that process, there are multiple points from start to finish where you can lose the new opportunity if you are not careful.

What I propose is that by using Sage CRM you can vastly minimize your chances of losing track of new sales opportunities and even maximize sales with existing customers. Here’s the good news: SageCRM is a sales and customer service application that’s free to owners of Sage Accpac ERP as long as you are on Accpac version 5.4 or higher.

How can SageCRM help you stay better in touch with your prospects and customers?

· Record every communication to and from them

· Set up tasks in case you need to send information or create a sales quote

· Set up auto emails for prospects that email you for information

· Set up follow-up calls or emails for leads not ready to buy just yet

· Create a sales opportunity and track it from identification through closing

If your business has ever lost a lead because somebody failed to follow-up in a timely manner or forgot to send requested information, then SageCRM is perfect for you. Staying in touch with one lead (or one hundred!) is easy because of integration to your daily office applications like Outlook, Word and Excel. You can even track wins and losses to analyze how you can improve your sales closing percentages.

You can’t argue with the price of SageCRM either: a $5000 application and one user license for FREE? Now that’s a value worth investigating as this shopping season heats up!

Want more information on Lead Tracking in SageCRM? Check out the Mindover Software website at http://www.mindovercorp.com/sagecrm.html. You can also call Lloyd Smith at 512-990-3994 or email him at lsmith@mindovercorp.com.

Five Common Mistakes Businesses Make when Buying Accounting Software

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Buying accounting software is a complex process that must be approached with care in order to avoid costly mistakes with long-term business repercussions. In my many years of selling advanced accounting software like Sage Accpac ERP and MAS 500 for Mindover Software, I’ve run across more than my share of businesses that failed to respect the process and often learned from their mistakes the hard way.

 

Here is a list of five of the more common mistakes many businesses make when buying accounting software:

 

1. Failure to fully understand business needs.

 

Seems obvious, right? You’d be amazed at how many businesses rush into a search for sophisticated accounting software without properly understanding a) how their current software comes up short, b) what software functionality is critical to the success of the business and c) what needs are not present today but may be in the near future.

 

It may seem annoying to my customers, but in order to avoid this very pitfall I always start the sales process with a prospect questionnaire. Usually lasting about 30 minutes, the prospect questionnaire helps define the critical business requirements for new accounting software while setting expectations for the overall sales process.

 

One effective way for a business to define its many functional needs is to hold a meeting with the key parties who will be users and beneficiaries (accountants, executives receiving reports, production staff, etc.) of the new system. The purpose:  write down as many requirements as possible on a white board based on what is being done now and what may be needed in the future. Afterward, a prioritization can be done based on how critical each item is to core business processes. A separate “wish list” can also be compiled to help communicate additional requirements that would be nice to have either right away or in the not-so-distant future, depending upon feasibility, price and ROI.

 

Customers I’ve worked with in the past that had already put together a comprehensive list of needs were more likely to make informed decisions regarding which accounting software would best meet their needs. These customers also were better able to zero in on their most critical requirements, weed out those software vendors that didn’t deliver the goods and pave the way for a successful project launch.

 

2. No project champion.

 

Implementing new accounting software is an expensive and time-consuming process, which is why it’s imperative that an internal project champion take the lead. Unfortunately, it’s not uncommon for an executive like a CFO to manage the search and purchase of complex business software then delegate the responsibility of implementing and using it to accounting staff. The results of this top-down approach can be disastrous, for the company and the software reseller doing the implementation. What the CFO expects may not be adequately communicated down to the staff, or the staff may not have the same level of software acumen as the CFO; in either case, the project can lead to mixed results, functional scope creep and much longer (and costly!) implementations.

 

An internal project champion should be involved from the initial software vendor search all the way through the post-implementation transition. An internal champion needs to be familiar with most of the accounting process flows to be able to communicate fluently with software vendors, which ensures that the software ultimately selected meets the identified business needs.

 

At the risk of insulting some very smart, qualified IT professionals I personally know, I also believe the project champion should have an accounting or financial background. An IT person’s knowledge tends to be focused on hardware and networking technology, which is tangential to the search and purchase of accounting software. An accountant, on the other hand, has experience working with accounting software, knows the make-up of the company’s transaction flows and can articulate the business requirements more readily. While an internally appointed project champion won’t guarantee the success of a project, it will improve the probability of a business obtaining software that will meet the majority of its most important requirements.

 

3. Using an “IT consultant” to manage the research and vetting of software vendors.

 

No, I don’t have a personal vendetta against IT professionals! As I mentioned before, IT consultants are very comfortable with hardware and business productivity applications such as Microsoft Sharepoint and Exchange. Very few, however, have deep knowledge of enterprise accounting software, business processes and accounting lexicon.

 

Some IT consultants justify their hiring by promising to evaluate the merits of each software package and software vendor to make sure they meet company price and functionality objectives while sparing the company the hassle of dealing with aggressive sales people. It sounds like a great idea on the surface, but rarely does it add true value to a business in search of new accounting software.

 

IT consultants attempting to shepherd the software review process simply add an extra layer that insulates a business from the source of information needed to evaluate and determine it best options. The needs of a company are complex and highly resistant to a “cliff notes” approach conducted by an outsider. Factors that limit a 3rd party consultant’s ability to manage the entire process include depth of knowledge of a company accounting transactions and process flows, intimate understanding of the company’s unwritten rules of project engagement and ability to judge potential chemistry between a software implementer and the company’s accounting staff. At the end of the day, only the business knows what’s best for it, and introducing a 3rd party only increases the possibility of ending up with less than desirable results.

 

4. Not pursuing software integration opportunities.

 

Replacing accounting software should be done in light of accomplishing greater efficiencies throughout the company. Many businesses that balk at integrating multiple software applications do so because of perceived up-front costs. If a comparison were done in Excel showing the cost of implementing an integrated system versus the cost of not fixing the problems, the savings of a fully integrated would almost always win out!

 

I once had a customer that sold beach toys and trinkets to resorts all over the US and Caribbean. After a walk-through of his business, I was able to show him how a new, integrated system would save him more money than the up-front cost of the software and our professional services combined. By integrating credit card processing and shipping into the accounting software, his business could handle twice the amount of business with fewer billing and shipping errors and less staff. Another customer of Mindover Software was literally able to triple its revenue over a period of four years in part because of how efficient they were able to manage inventory, field sales, shipping and sales processing (click for story).

 

5. Forgetting to check customer references.

 

This step is often overlooked when a company begins to zero in on the preferred accounting solution. Too often, companies will satisfy themselves with a software demo rather than perform due diligence to be sure the software truly delivers on the promises made by the software vendor. Reference checks are probably the only occasion during the entire sales cycle that prospects have to cut through the hype and learn what real-world companies think of the software.

 

I remember one prospect that was ready to eliminate the accounting software I represented based on negative feedback received from the competition. Rather than let a negative comment influence the outcome, I essentially said why not let the software do the “talking?” I arranged an on-site customer referral visit for the prospect to better see how the solution functions in the “real world” as opposed to what’s perceived in professionally scripted demos. The prospect was so impressed by what she saw that we had a signed proposal in hand the same day of the visit!

 

Keep in mind that the prospect could just have easily seen aspects of the solution that did not live up to our sales hype. In that case, it would have given a more complete picture of how effective the solution might (or might not) be for the prospect’s own company. The moral of the story? Take time to check 4-5 referrals in order to gain a balanced view point of the accounting software and, equally as important, of the reseller that will be doing the actual software implementation, training and follow-up support.

 

 

Mindover Software Creates Strategic Referral Alliance with IT Firm

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Austin, TX – August 13, 2009 – Mindover Software, a Sage business partner with offices in Austin, Dallas and San Antonio, formed an innovative strategic IT alliance with Texas Computer Solutions of Andrews, Texas.

 

Mindover Software, which is creating an alliance network of IT firms throughout Texas, cites revenue growth as one of the primary objectives of the network. “The synergy between IT consulting firms and resellers of Sage business and accounting software is well documented,” says Lloyd Smith, president of Mindover Software. “We often work with our customers’ outside IT firms when implementing Sage Accpac or SageCRM, so it only makes sense that we find ways to partner with IT firms to help drive new customer referrals.”

 

The alliance is intended to help participating IT firms like Texas Computer Solutions introduce Sage business and accounting software to their customers and prospects. Sage products represented by Mindover Software include Sage Accpac ERP, Sage MAS 500, SageCRM and Sage FAS. “We have customers of varying sizes and business complexity,” says Mike Sanchez, president of Texas Computer Solutions. “An alliance with Mindover Software allows us to easily identify the right business software to meet our customers’ needs. And it puts us in a position to recommend solutions that improve their bottom-line,” he adds.

 

Mindover Software is offering its alliance partners like Texas Computer Solutions training on business software products like SageCRM, which is a customer relationship management solution that operates over the Internet. “SageCRM is our fastest growing product line,” mentions Smith. “Because Sage CRM software integrates sales, marketing and customer service functions with back-end accounting software, companies can be more responsive to their customers, process transactions from the field and create more targeted marketing campaigns to grow their business.”

 

Texas Computer Solutions was eager to join the alliance network when presented with the opportunity. “We saw immediate value in joining,” says Sanchez. “We can test drive SageCRM, receive additional training on business software that can help our customers, and trade highly qualified referrals to help grow our respective businesses. It’s a great deal for an IT firm like ours,” he adds.

 

About Mindover Software

Mindover Software is a Sage Software business partner and offers a broad range of CRM, ERP and accounting software solutions including Sage Accpac ERP, Sage MAS 500, SageCRM and E-Commerce. From Texas offices in Austin, Dallas and San Antonio, Mindover Software’s staff of professional consultants carries out the company’s commitment to high-quality results and customer satisfaction. Learn more at www.mindovercorp.com or by calling toll-free (866) 990-3994.

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SageCRM Now Works with Peachtree & QuickBooks

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Good news for companies that use Peachtree and QuickBooks. SageCRM now integrates with them to provide a fully-functioning CRM application where before there were only limited offerings. Thanks to Sage 3rd party developer, Greytrix, a new integration link has been developed to the two popular accounting applications.

Users can remotely enter orders over the Internet using SageCRM and so speed up the billing cycle and, ultimately, cash collections. SageCRM provides QuickBooks and Peachtree users a way to view customer financials, invoices, payments and orders in a highly-organized and efficient manner.

This is great news for SageCRM resellers. It now gives them a huge market to target that was previously the domain of smaller, less robust contact management solutions. By courting customers that are reluctant to give up their trusted QuickBooks, Sage itself now has a great opportunity to add new customers that can later be converted to more advanced business and accounting software solutions like Sage Accpac and MAS 90/200. This is definitely the break-through many were waiting for.

Sage Guidance on Future BP Acquisitions

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

I read the new policy on acquisitions issued by Sage yesterday. I have to say, it makes a lot of sense. It clears up questions I had about product marging calculations when you have multiple offices and what happens if you decide to deconsolidate a merged company down the road.

I still personally think that mergers or acquisitions do make sense from a lot of perspectives for Sage business partners. There are a lot of advantages to be gaines, not the least of which include:

  • Better product margins
  • Back office savings
  • More flexible staffing on jobs
  • Expertise on more product lines/3rd party applications
  • Improved financial resources (if the M&A strategy is done well!)

Sage certainly appears not to be discouraging growth through M&A, but it wants to make sure the BP community knows the rules of the game.