Continuous Accounting: The New Age of Accounting
Continuous Accounting: The New Age of Accounting

See Also:
Reducing Your Cash Conversion Cycle
Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s)
Accounting Principles 1, 2, and 3
Accounting Principles 5, 6, and 7

Continuous Accounting: The New Age of Accounting

Continuous Accounting is the new age of accounting. It provides a more efficient way to review financial performance in a real-time automated process, and a trustworthy, repeatable accounting cycle to forecast future results. It also gives the financial department a larger role in strategy and planning.

The Old Model: Record-to-Report (R2R) Accounting

The traditional model consists of a linear record-to-report process for accounting. In order to complete a record keeping process, a company must report certain tasks and responsibilities pertaining to the company’s financials. Expect these to be completed by the end of the period – which can last anywhere from two weeks to two months. Store and manage the data in a large computer processor. Disadvantages of this process include:

  1. The data accumulated over a large period of time have a greater chance for error with unreconciled transactions
  2. Inaccuracy and misrepresentation
  3. Takes up too much time and loses effectiveness of team

The New ModelFinancial Strategies with Cloud-Based Technology

Managers and financial leaders cannot afford to wait a month to two months for reports to be processed. This is what bookkeepers tend to do. Continuous accounting changes the prolonging process from period-end to a day-to-day basis. The cloud platform is capable of recognizing and verifying information constantly and repeatedly, thus enabling it to be “continuous.”  This evenly distributes work rather than accumulating large amounts of tasks over time. Continuous accounting is an organized alternative to the old model of record-to-report accounting.


Want free access to a tool that can measure your unit economics? Get it here!

[button link=”https://strategiccfo.com/know-your-economics-wkst?utm_source=wiki&utm_medium=button%20cta” bg_color=”#eb6500″]Download The Know Your Economics Worksheet[/button]


Shifting Business to the Continuous Accounting Platform

In the past, bookkeepers would record with accumulated reports, which would process a month at a time at least. With the matching principle, the company matches the expenses that are incurred during the same period the revenue is recognized (or the time the service was performed). Instead of recording in batches, modify the accounting system record as they occurred. Now, the next progression is to continuously reconcile accounts and analyze detail. In order to do this, have companies automate their systems. Otherwise, bank statements and other records would have to be linked and reconciled daily.

Advantages of Continuous Accounting

1. Continuous Accounting processes financial information faster than before.

Certain companies depend on a faster cash conversion cycle, in which case this technology would be useful. Instead of reviewing financial information every month or so, continuous accounting will complete the processes day-by-day. The processing of financial information will be quicker, and key performance indicators will become more apparent and easier to fix. This allows financial leaders to eliminate risk and take action proactively and defensively.

2. Automated systems improve the productivity of the accounting departments.

Increased automation should result in the benefit of improved productivity. This reduces costs because taking the manual systems, rather than automatically through continuous accounting, and applying them everyday would be cost-prohibitive.

Disadvantages of Continuous Accounting

1. Adapting the finance departments to a new way of accounting.

Implementing change is always a challenge, especially when a department, trained for 10, 20, 3o years on how to properly perform accounting, does it. Larger companies would benefit from continuous accounting more than smaller companies, where new, younger, more adaptable people work. However, the disadvantage of switching from traditional accounting to this new automated technology is that the larger companies have employees that have worked as an accountant for 25+ years and aren’t as adaptable.

2. Financial statements may not be as accurate. 

Instead of waiting a couple of weeks before submitting invoices or reports, continuous accounting processes the information right away. This leaves little time to adjust and organize data. By using continuous accounting, the financial leader succumbs to having financial statements 90% accurate rather than the expected 100%.

How Continuous Accounting Affects the Future of Finance

Technology itself is changing finance departments globally. Continuous Accounting is just the start of new automation processes that pertain to large sources of data. Technology such as Continuous Accounting establishes a precedent for timely, cost-effective, and/or high-quality improvements for business.

[box]Strategic CFO Lab Member Extra
Access your Strategic Pricing Model Execution Plan in SCFO Lab.
Click here to access your Execution Plan. Not a Lab Member?
Click here to learn more about SCFO Labs[/box]

ARTICLES YOU MIGHT LIKE

Is Mexico the New China?

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and escalating tensions with China, American companies are actively seeking alternatives to mitigate their supply chain risks and reduce dependence on Chinese manufacturing. Nearshoring, the process of relocating operations closer to home, has emerged as an explosive opportunity for American and Mexican companies to collaborate like never before.

Read More »

IP Valuation & Monetization For The C-Suite

Intellectual Property (IP) defines and protects the sources of goods and services in the marketplace, the products and services offered for sale and the content surrounding such offerings.  Whether trademarks, patents, copyrights, or other IP, it is critical that C-Suite strategy drives and shapes the creation, valuation use and monetization of all its intellectual property.

Read More »

The Accounting Gap Between Large and Small Companies

The Accounting Gap: It’s unfortunate, but true. A large gap exists between the accounting departments of large or publicly traded companies and smaller or private companies. In our past 25 years of consulting we’ve noticed that more often than not, these smaller/private companies will fill the gap with Bookkeepers, rather than the degreed Accountants/CPAs they

Read More »

JOIN OUR NEXT SERIES

Financial Leadership Workshop

MARCH 28TH-31ST 2022

THE ART OF THE CFO®

Financial Leadership Workshop

Days
Hours
Min

August 7-10th, 2023

SHARE THIS ARTICLE
WIKI CFO® - Browse hundreds of articles