Journals are made up of transactions. For example, the Sales Journal
contains sales invoices. The journals you can work with when importing
and exporting information include:
- General Journal
- Purchase Order Journal
- Purchases Journal
- Inventory Assemblies Journal
- Inventory Adjustments Journal
- Sales Order Journal
- Sales Journal
- Time Ticket
Register - if using Time &
Billing(Sage 50 Premium Accounting and higher)
- Expense Ticket Register - if using Time & Billing(Sage 50 Premium Accounting and higher)
- Payments Journal (Cash Disbursements)
- Cash Receipts Journal
- Payroll Journal
Each transaction within these journals has a general structure in which
they get imported and exported. This structure is based on how the transactions
are entered through one of the Tasks windows.
The following is true when you enter a transaction through one of the
Tasks windows:
- The top half of the screen contains fields in
which you enter general information for the entire transaction, also known
as header information. For example, the Date and Customer ID.
- The bottom half of the screen contains fields
in which you enter distributions, such as the line items and quantities
that are being sold on an invoice.
- Each distribution is composed of a set number
of fields and each transaction could contain up to 160 distributions (except
for Accounts Receivable journals which contain up to 154 distributions).
When you export a journal to a spreadsheet, for example, two additional
fields appear: Transaction Period
and Transaction Number. These
are internal system fields (they do not appear on the window in Sage 50)
that Sage 50 uses to group information. When you import transactions
that were created outside of Sage 50 , the system uses the date to determine
which accounting period in which to post the transaction. This is because
Sage 50 is a date-sensitive system.
If you create transactions in another program to import into Sage 50,
the Transaction Number is a required
field. This is because one transaction can have multiple distribution
lines and the transaction number is used to group all of the distributions
for the same transaction.
The transaction number is a whole number, and all the distributions
for one transaction should have the same number. The numbers must be unique
within a period.
The Transaction Period field
is used for export purposes only. It allows you to determine the system
period number in which the transaction appears. It has no functional purpose
for the import process. (If you are importing from another system, you
do not need to add this field to your data file. In addition, you should
modify the journal template so it does not include the Transaction
Period field.)
Chart of Accounts Beginning Balances:
Beginning balances for your general ledger accounts are imported and exported
as general journal transactions. That means if you try to export these
beginning balances from one company to another, the balances will be correct,
but you won’t be able to view these beginning balances using the Beginning
Balances button on the Maintain Chart of Accounts window. Instead,
you must open the General
Journal Entry window and select the List
button to find the beginning balance entry.
Reversing Entries: Any posted reversing entries
get imported as regular general journal entries, but any associated, future
reversal entries do not get imported or exported.
Recurring Entries:Recurring
entries export and/or import as regular entries. However, they lose
their connection as recurring entries; they are just separate entries
in different periods.
Amount Paid on Invoice: There
is an Amount Paid field at the
bottom of the Sales/Invoicing and Purchases
windows. You can enter an amount there when creating or editing a customer
or vendor invoice, and a receipt or disbursement is automatically created
when you post, to pay this invoice. This amount paid on the invoice or
payment is not exported. However, the associated receipt or payment does
get exported, so your aging reports and account balances would be correct.
Just be aware that if you edit these invoices or purchases, you will no
longer see any amount in the Amount Paid
field.
Cost of Sales: If you import
sales transactions that use inventory, the cost of sales amounts get regenerated
during the import process. If you are importing from another Sage 50
company, the cost of sales in the first company may be different than
in the second company. That's because the order in which you import may
not match the order in which you entered the transactions.
Future Transactions: You should
not attempt to import transactions into a company with dates beyond the
end of the second open fiscal year. When you set up your company during New Company
Setup, the fiscal year structure is established (when your first two
fiscal years will begin and end). Sage 50 allows you to enter and edit
transactions to the two open fiscal years. This includes importing. However,
if you attempt import a journal entry dated past the end of the second
fiscal year, you will get an error. You will have to close
the first fiscal year in the new company, and then import the remaining
future entries.