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Working with the Report Wizard in Excel’s Small Business Financial Manager

May 18, 2015 By Stephen L. Nelson Leave a Comment

After you’ve imported your accounting data, you use the Report Wizard to produce a fi- nancial report based on the imported accounting data.

Reviewing the Report Wizard Reports

The Report Wizard produces reports that fall into one of seven categories: balance sheets, cash flow statements, change in stockholders’ equity, income statements, ratios reports, sales analysis reports, and trial balance reports. Table 9-1 briefly summarizes the types of reports that the Report Wizard produces in each of these categories.

CATEGORY REPORT OPTIONS AVAILABLE
Balance Sheet Simple balance sheets, balance sheets with prior-year comparisons, and balance sheets with scenarios you’ve created using the what-if analysis tools.
Cash Flow Simple one-period cash flow statements with year-to-date and prior-period comparisons, rolling twelve-period cash flow reports, and one-period cash flow reports and year-to-date cash flow reports with scenarios created using the what-if analysis tools.
Change in Stockholders’ Equity Simple income statements with one-period and year-to-date comparisons, income statements with twelve-period and four-quarter trends, income statements for a fiscal year and periods, income statements for a fiscal year and quarters, and income statements with scenarios created using the what- if analysis tools.
Ratios A rolling twelve-period report showing trends in financial ratios.
Sales Analysis Sales reports from a variety of perspectives, including by customers and by types of services.
Trial Balance Simple trial balance reports with one-period and year-to-date comparisons and trial balance with scenarios created using what-if analysis tools.
Table 9-1. The Report Wizard report categories and report options.

Using the Report Wizard

To use the Report Wizard to create one of its reports, follow these steps:

  1. Start the Report Wizard.
    You can do this either by choosing the Financial Manager menu’s Report Wizard com- mand or by clicking the Report button on the Startup screen (see Figure 9-3).

    Figure 9-3. The Small Business Financial Manager Startup screen.
    Figure 9-3. The Small Business Financial Manager Startup screen.
  2. Select the category of financial reports you want to create.
    To select a financial report category, click an entry in the Financial Reports list box (see Figure 9-4). After you select a financial report category, click Next.

    Figure 9-4. The first Report Wizard dialog box.
    Figure 9-4. The first Report Wizard dialog box.
  3. Provide the user name and database password.
    If Small Business Financial Manager requests it, provide the user name and database password you created during the importation of your accounting data.
  4. Select the type of report you want.
    When Excel asks what type of report you want, select an entry from the Report Types list box. Then click Next.

    You can’t select a report type that relies on a scenario unless you’ve already created the scenario using the what-if analysis tools.
  5. Select an end date for the report.
    When Excel asks for the report end date, select an entry from the End Date For This Report list box. Then click Finish.

The Report Wizard creates a financial report based on your parameters and places the report on a new worksheet in the open workbook. Figure 9-5 shows an example of one such financial re- port, an income statement for December 1998 with year-to-date and prior-period comparisons.

Figure 9-5. An example financial report created by the first Report Wizard.
Figure 9-5. An example financial report created by the first Report Wizard.

Using the Report Wizard’s Reports

The principal reason for using the Report Wizard is to generate a report so that you can analyze the report using Excel. This may mean simply viewing the report, perhaps on screen or in a printed copy. If you’re using Small Business Financial Manager in this way, how- ever, you may be doing so only because the reporting capabilities of your accounting soft- ware are very limited or restricting.

The other way you can use the Report Wizard reports, of course, is to use the now-in-a- workbook financial data for making your own calculations. This work is something you can’t do with your accounting program’s reports. Once you’ve got a report stored in an Excel workbook, it’s relatively easy to create formulas that manipulate the data, extract informa- tion so it can be analyzed, and chart information so it can be visually analyzed or shared. This type of work requires the basic Excel skills discussed in Chapters 2 and 3.

If the information on which a report is based changes, choose the Financial Manager menu’s Recalculate Reports command.

Filed Under: Finance, Using Excel Tagged With: small business financial manager

About Stephen L. Nelson

Stephen L. Nelson is the author of more than two dozen best-selling books, including Quicken for Dummies and QuickBooks for Dummies.

Nelson is a certified public accountant and a member of both the Washington Society of CPAs and the American Institute of CPAs. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Accounting, Magna Cum Laude, from Central Washington University and a Masters in Business Administration in Finance from the University of Washington (where, curiously, he was the youngest ever person to graduate from the program).

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