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There is a cycle of action in accounting for any business.

This cycle is depicted diagrammatically below:

What do all these new words mean?

1. SOURCE DOCUMENTS – Source documents are documents, such as cash slips, invoices, etc. that form the source of (and serve as proof for) a
transaction. In other words, they are the first documents that exist relating to a transaction.

Invoices, cash slips, receipts, check counterfoils, bank deposit slips and even internet payment confirmations are all source documents.

2. JOURNALS - These are chronological (date-order) records of transactions entered into by a business. Journals are that first basic entry of debit and
credit for each transaction. In the examples we have been doing in the previous chapters, where we have debited one account and credited another, we
have been doing journals.

Read through this first lesson on basic accounting journal entries for a brief overview.

There are actually a few types of journals, and they don't all look exactly like the above debit and credit. We'll run through each of them in the second
lesson on accounting journals, from the cash receipts journal to the general journal, so you get a good idea of what each one is for and how it works.

3. LEDGER (T-ACCOUNTS) - The ledger is a collective term for the accounts of a business. (A ledger of accounts is like a school of fish). The accounts
are in the shape of a ‘T’ and thus are often referred to as ‘T-accounts’. In this step we take all the debits and credits (journals) relating to one account –
let’s say ‘bank’ – and draw up an account for bank that shows all the transactions relating to it.
There a few lessons available on T accounts. In our first T-account lesson called T Accounts we'll look at how to draw up a T-account.

After this basic grounding we'll look at balancing T-accounts.

Next we'll look at posting journals (posting means transferring information from the journals to the T accounts).

And, in our final lesson on T accounts, we'll go over control accounts and take a closer look at the debtors and creditors ledgers.

4. TRIAL BALANCE - A sheet displaying all the accounts of a business, drawn up as a trial (test) of whether the total of all the debit balances equal the
total of all the credit balances (A balance is the amount of an item at a point in time. For example, The balance in the bank account on the 1st of January
was $5,000.). The trial balance is prepared as a final check just before the financial statements are drawn up. Click here for a brief lesson on the trial
balance.

5. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - A statement is a report. Financial statements are the most important reports of a business. These statements are
prepared from the information in the trial balance. The purpose of these statements is to show the reader the financial position, financial performance and
cash flows of a business, as well as other useful information concerning the business. Financial statements are usually prepared once a year.

Financial statements consist of (amongst other things) an income statement, statement of changes in the owner’s equity, balance sheet, cash flow
statement and (where needed) an auditor’s report.

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