New NAV2013 video reviewed: Clients First Finance New Features Cash Flow Forecast
Posted: October 1, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: cash flow, learning, NAV 2013, tips and tricks, video Leave a commentMicrosoft Dynamics NAV 2013 Finance New Features CASH FLOW FORECASTING; Clients First (45:37) This is one of the more comprehensive cash flow forecasting videos I’ve seen to date geared toward the finance super user for the new cash flow forecasting features. The video is presented by Dirk Reeps, Microsoft Support Engineer. He covers the different data sources used to construct the forecast, what parameters are required, shows a basic demo of the new functionality from 12:42 to 16:15, and some more specific examples from 22:06 to 36:50. From 7:32 to about 9:32, there is a nice discussion of how to include budgeting for cash flow forecasting, and starting at 38:20, there is a discussion of dimensions with cash flow forecast, and account schedules at 39:56.
There are a whole lot of very technical NAV2013 videos out there made for programmers and NAV developers. Videos geared toward the NAV end-user are a bit more difficult to find. I’ve added a new page to the blog so I can add videos I’ve found that I think are helpful. I’ll review each video I find personally and post some comments on each to make it easier for you to decide if you want to spend your time viewing it yourself.
New NAV2013 video reviewed: Clients First Finance New Features Dimensions
Posted: September 30, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: dimensions, NAV 2013, tips and tricks, video Leave a commentMicrosoft Dynamics NAV 2013 Finance New Features DIMENSIONS; Clients First (40:13) This is one of the only comprehensive videos I’ve seen to date that covers the redesigned NAV2013 dimensions. It’s geared toward finance super users as well as developers and discusses in detail why Microsoft made the design changes to dimensions in NAV2013 as well as how the new functionality works. Important new information include the use of SQL for transformation of dimensions from old to new databases instead of the upgrade toolkit, coding changes to the update analysis dimension as well as to the close income statement, and coverage of known issues and work arounds for dimension limitations. The video is presented by Alessandro Vannini, Microsoft Escalation Engineer. The overall pace is pretty slow, but hang in there, the information is worth it! The demo picks up at 22:10 and shows some nice examples of using Ctrl-Alt-F1 to view the dimension sets on the page while still maintaining the end-user view of individual dimensions.
There are a whole lot of very technical NAV2013 videos out there made for programmers and NAV developers. Videos geared toward the NAV end-user are a bit more difficult to find. I’ve added a new page to the blog so I can add videos I’ve found that I think are helpful. I’ll review each video I find personally and post some comments on each to make it easier for you to decide if you want to spend your time viewing it yourself.
Blogiversary Top 20 (#1) Account Schedules Formulas Page
Posted: April 29, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: account schedule formulas, Account Schedules, cheat sheet, comparison date formula, comparison period formula, Dynamics, Microsoft, NAV, tips and tricks Leave a commentWe’re celebrating our one year blogiversary by reposting the Top 20 Most Viewed in the last year, as determined by you, our readers! Follow this link to see the entire list. Enjoy!
The most viewed blog entry in the Dynamics NAV Financials first year isn’t an entry at all, but an entire page! Check out the Account Schedules Formulas Page found here to see what 15 people a week come to the blog to use.
I developed this page in response to a question I would get in my classes on account schedules. “Do you have a cheat sheet for all the formulas you can use in Account Schedules?” I’ve shied away from this in the past, because it’s a complex question. You’ve got to take into account comparison period versus comparison date, column type used, use of filters, and like all Microsoft products, there is often more than one way to accomplish the same result. But I think I’ve got us a start. To my knowledge, there are bits and pieces of this out there, but this is the most comprehensive guide to account schedule formulas that I know of.
If you know of more, please submit them here. As long as I can test it to prove it works in the way described, and it’s different enough from already listed formulas, I’ll add it to the list and make sure to put a shout out to the contributor on the blog.
I believe the power of community is an amazing thing. We continually make each other better by sharing information. I’m looking forward to seeing what our amazing NAV community can accomplish!
Blogiversary Top 20 (#2) NAV keyboard shortcuts – Classic to RTC
Posted: April 26, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Classic Client, keyboard shortcut, Microsoft, NAVUG, RTC, tips and tricks, user group Leave a commentWe’re celebrating our one year blogiversary by reposting the Top 20 Most Viewed in the last year, as determined by you, our readers! Follow this link to see the entire list. Enjoy!
Who knew that keyboard shortcuts could be so darn controversial?
I recently got the chance to present a NAV tips and tricks session at the NAVUG Midwest Regional Chapter meeting, and one topic that came up again and again was what keyboard shortcuts were changing in the transition from the classic client to the role-tailored client (RTC).
The first discussion started as a rumor during the social hour the night prior. “Did you hear they’re getting rid of F8?” “No, they can’t get rid of F8!” “What’ll we do without F8?” “Oh my inventory accountant is going to hate that” “Well I heard they’re changing everything.”
Well lucky for us we had quite a few folks there who have already been using the RTC who were able to quite handily put that vicious rumor to rest. F8 is firmly available to copy the field above in the new client, just has it has been in the classic client.
There are quite a few other things that are just simply changing, and I think the changes make a whole lot of sense.
Take F3. F3 has been the constant companion of the NAV user, utilized whenever we needed to designate a new record, a new line, a new document, or a new card. Anything new has been F3. This has been replaced with four new commands in the RTC. Complicated? No, I think that Microsoft has made a concerted effort to simplify by making keyboard shortcuts more consistent with other Microsoft Office products. Even though four new commands are replacing one, I think that Ctrl+N will come quite naturally to someone wanting to create a new record. Ctrl+Insert likewise makes sense for inserting a new line. Ctrl+Shift+C for opening a new card and Ctrl-F2 for creating a new document may be a little taxing, but I’m betting we’ll all get used to it. Frankly, I’m glad to see Microsoft making it easier and more consistent for new users to adopt.
I’m sure I may utter an oath or two when I hit F3 in the RTC and instead of getting a new record, get bumped into a field filter. But I sure will appreciate many of the brand new keyboard shortcuts that support RTC features that we’ve never had before like Alt+Tab to switch among open windows and F5 which now acts as a refresh command, just like it does in other programs.
Check out the link below which goes to a Microsoft .pdf listing out a nice comparative list of keyboard shortcuts between the classic client and the RTC. This will be the first document I give to my end users when we start working on our transition to the RTC. There will always be fear of change, even with small things like keyboard shortcuts.
Encourage folks to look for the consistencies and efficiencies gained with the new ones and remind them; at least they didn’t get rid of F8.
Blogiversary Top 20 (#7) 15 days of NAV dimensions
Posted: April 19, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Account Schedules, Convergence, CustomerSource, dimensions, Dynamics, NAV, NAV 2013, tips and tricks Leave a commentWe’re celebrating our one year blogiversary by reposting the Top 20 Most Viewed in the last year, as determined by you, our readers! Follow this link to see the entire list. Enjoy!
March Madness may mean basketball for some folks, but for me it means Convergence! Getting a chance to participate as a speaker at Microsoft Dynamics Convergence is a great opportunity to meet new NAV users I haven’t met before. I’m always looking to expand my network of knowledgeable professionals, and one of the ways I do that is by sharing information.
I’m lucky enough to be giving a concurrent session this year called Tips & Tricks for Working with Dimensions in Microsoft Dynamics NAV and I thought I would put together a series for the blog on the same topic to get the information out to a wider audience. For the next 15 days, there will be a brand new post on one of these dimension topics. Enjoy!
Day 1 4 questions to ask when deciding how to use NAV dimensions in your business
Day 2 5 reasons you need to use NAV dimensions
Day 3 The finance professional’s perspective on NAV dimensions
Day 4 Why finance and IT need to work in partnership on a NAV dimension strategy
Day 5 Viewing NAV dimensions on postings: where can you see them?
Day 6 NAV default dimensions and value postings applied to master data
Day 7 NAV default dimensions and value postings on the chart of accounts
Day 8 NAV dimension combinations for additional accuracy
Day 9 NAV dimension priorities
Day 10 Resolving NAV dimension errors
Day 11 NAV dimensions in account schedules
Day 12 NAV dimensions in budgets and consolidations
Day 13 Communicating to IT about NAV dimensions and NAV2013 dimension sets
Day 14 Add NAV dimensions as your business changes
Day 15 Learning more about dimensions from Microsoft Dynamics Customer Source
BONUS View Convergence 2013 session on Microsoft Dynamics NAV dimensions here
This posting is one of the Top 20 Most Viewed in the last year! Follow this link to see the entire list.
Learning about NAV2013: New videos available from technology management
Posted: April 15, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: learning, NAV 2013, tips and tricks, training Leave a commentThere is a new series of NAV2013 YouTube videos available on a wide variety of topics, many of them in the financial area. I’ve previewed four of them today. They’re a nice overview of NAV2013 features, and are a great way to get a preview of what the new version looks like. The series is called, “Dynamics Ignite: Business Made Easy” and the company who produced them is technology management. Find their YouTube channel here, or go to individual topics listed below.
Purchase Order Processing in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Budgets in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Sales and Purchase Pricing in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Accounts Payable in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Assembly Management in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Sales Order Processing in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Accounts Receivables in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Look and Feel of Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
General / Nominal Ledger in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Cash Flow Forecasting Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2013
Blogiversary Top 20 (#16) Tips and tricks for a flawless budget load in NAV
Posted: April 8, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: budgets, Excel, export to excel, NAV, tips and tricks Leave a commentWe’re celebrating our one year blogiversary by reposting the Top 20 Most Viewed in the last year, as determined by you, our readers! Follow this link to see the entire list. Enjoy!
Hopefully, you’ve completed your budget work for 2013 and all you need to do to finish is to load all that information to NAV so you can begin to report against your actual financial numbers. If you’ve done this before, you might already know that NAV’s budget tool can be a bit fussy and also a bit cryptic about why it won’t accept your carefully prepared data. Here are four quick tips to help you with getting that data into NAV quickly, correctly, and in one try.
1. Export first, then import. This is the single most important detail about getting budget data loaded into NAV. You can choose to export an existing budget or even choose to export a blank new budget. Exporting a budget as your first step establishes a working template you can populate your data into, including dimensions. As long as you start with this template, you are already most of the way there to a successful NAV budget load.
2. If you’re using dimensions, validate your data against the provided drop downs. Make sure all budget lines that use dimensions are only using valid dimension names. Any deviation from the allowable values that already exist in NAV can cause your budget load to error out or load without balancing.
3. Clear the formats from your numbers. Once you’ve copied and pasted or typed your numbers into your Excel template, use the Excel “Clear Formats” function on all cells that contain a numeric value to make sure they are all returned to a formatted status of general. NAV does not accept any other format than the one in the template, and use of other formats, including use of commas in the numbers, will cause the budget tool to give an error and keep you from loading your budget successfully.
4. Use the “Add Entries” option for a brand new budget load and the “Replace Entries” option for a subsequent version. The add entries option should only be used for a brand new budget load, otherwise the entries will be added on top of the already existing entries, doubling or tripling them. If you need to load a second or third version or some type of correction, always use the replace entries option instead of the add entries option. If you really get stuck with a bunch of errors, the best thing you can do is delete your budget and reload from scratch.
Take one last look through your data to make sure it’s accurate and exactly what you expected. You can use the budget tool to do this, or even better, put together a quick account schedule that shows your entries using “G/L Budget Entries” instead of “G/L Entries”. Make sure to look at your total balances, balances by fiscal period, and balances with dimension filters applied. Once you’re satisfied that all your budgeted data has loaded correctly and completely, you’re ready to produce financial reporting showing actual versus budgeted numbers!
Blogiversary Top 20 (#17) Tis the (Budget) Season! Three handy NAV account schedule tips to get you through
Posted: April 5, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Account Schedules, budgets, column layout, NAV, row setup, tips and tricks Leave a commentWe’re celebrating our one year blogiversary by reposting the Top 20 Most Viewed in the last year, as determined by you, our readers! Follow this link to see the entire list. Enjoy!
I don’t know about your company, but my company is in full budget preparation mode. We’re working on getting our sales forecast and operating budgets put together in time for the end of year. Like most companies, we’re working on this predictive tool while we’re in the midst of finishing out the year, so of course, we get to make a few assumptions on how the year will end up. I don’t have a crystal ball, but I do have some pretty great account schedules that help folks at my company get a good solid look at where we ended up last year, what we planned for this year, and how we’ve done over a couple of years, and I’m going to share those three account schedule column layouts with you today. Hopefully these simple setups will give you some quick ways to wow your company and make their budget construction process easier.
Tip 1: Show 12 months of actual data
We ask our budget managers to give us a twelve month prediction, why shouldn’t we give them twelve months of data to work with? No matter what month you’ve just closed, you can quickly put together an account schedule that shows all of the completed months for the year (in this case, January-September) as well as October/November/December of the prior year. This way, if your activity is generally the same year over year, budget managers can get a quick gauge from this setup. Keep in mind this column layout isn’t dynamic, so it’s not a true rolling twelve months. For budgeting purposes, it’ll get you what you need.
Tip 2: Show 9 months of actual data and show what the plan is for the last three months of the year
Another way to provide a projection for the year is to show all the completed months for the year (again, January-September) and then show the budgeted plan for October/November/December. This method shows actual activity as well as three months of planned activity in order to project the total for the year. If activity this year is significantly different (higher or lower) from the year prior, you might depend on this view instead.
Tip 3: Show a whole bunch of history at a high level
Especially for sales forecasting, it sometimes gets difficult to look at too much data at once. One way to get past data analysis overload is to provide a few years’ worth of annual data. This column layout will give four years of data, helping you to compare not only year over year, but multiple year trending in your data.
All three of these tips should give you a few additional tools to help you make sense of a whole lot of data. They can be applied to almost any row setup you have whether that setup is related to revenue or expenses. If you’re looking for more formulas, visit the account schedule formulas page.
Happy Budgeting!
Blogiversary Top 20 (#19) The NAV accountant’s little helper: the reconciliation account check box
Posted: April 3, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: balance after posting, Classic Client, general ledger, journal entry, NAV, net change, posting test report, reconciliation account, RTC, tips and tricks Leave a commentWe’re celebrating our one year blogiversary by reposting the Top 20 Most Viewed in the last year, as determined by you, our readers! Follow this link to see the entire list. Enjoy!
There’s a tiny feature in NAV that I take for granted. It’s there, in the background, hiding in the setup, and it helps me out just a little almost every time I make a manual journal entry. Especially if I’m in a bit of a rush, or distracted, this option gives me one more quick but effective look at what I’m doing before I commit a journal entry to my books permanently. This nifty little thing can be added to your NAV setup at any time without any help from IT and won’t require any maintenance. The option I’m talking about is the Reconciliation Account check box you can find on your general ledger account card. Here’s where you can find it:
Role Tailored Client
Classic Client
For any account where you’d like this additional double check, check the Reconciliation Account box found on the General Ledger Account Card. Now go put together your journal entry.
Instead of posting directly from the entry, choose Actions=>Posting=>Test Report=>Preview (if you’re RTC) or just choose Posting=>Test Report=>Preview (if you’re Classic). NAV will put together a handy dandy print preview which will now include a section at the bottom labeled Reconciliation. This little section will show you which direction your entry is going in, what sign your ending balance will be, and what the actual balance after posting will look like. This all happens before you commit it as final to the system. This may be just the extra bit of help you need in order to keep you from making an error. If you like what you see, post that journal entry!
If you have an account where you’ve got a lot of daily activity, you may not find this as useful as you do with accounts with just a little bit of activity throughout the month because you’ll have a more frequently changing end balance. Decide what might be useful to you.
Next time you do a journal entry, give it a try. Go to the account card and check the box. Make your journal entry. Before you post, run the posting test report. Is the net change in your journal entry going in the right direction? Did you enter the correct account? Is your ending account balance the right sign? Most importantly, is the balance after posting what you expected? This little helper can give you a quick preview before you hit post and save you from having to reverse and correct an entry.
Blogiversary Top 20 (#20) Use show opposite sign to reflect net income correctly on an income statement using NAV account schedules
Posted: April 2, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Account Schedules, financial statement, income statement, net income, show opposite sign, tips and tricks Leave a commentWe’re celebrating our one year blogiversary by reposting the Top 20 Most Viewed in the last year, as determined by you, our readers! Follow this link to see the entire list. Enjoy!
One of the concepts I see students in my NAV account schedules class get stuck on is exactly how to use the show opposite sign function when constructing an income statement. It can be a bit mysterious why it behaves the way it does, and it seems to defy the rules of accounting and basic arithmetic all at the same time. Once you understand why it works the way it does, you’ll know how to use it in the future. From the example shown here, we see a very basic income statement.
Without using any numbers yet, let’s all agree on some basic calculations:
Revenue – Cost of Sales = Gross Profit $
Gross Profit $ / Revenue = Gross Profit %
Gross Profit $ – Operating Expenses = Net Operating Income (Loss)
Putting these basic calculations into the design view for this account schedule gives the result below. Notice we’re not going to use the show opposite sign function yet, or make any changes to the basic formulas we just defined.
When we look at the report view for this account schedule we see that we’ve got a significantly wrong result. The revenue is showing as a negative number and all of the calculations below it are incorrect.
Now, for the accountants out there, you may already have guessed what the problem is. When accounting for revenue, these numbers are assigned a credit value, which shows up as a negative. Most financial statement end users want to see this reflected as a positive number. This is where we need to use show opposite sign. Let’s add that in to the design view, as shown below.
When we look at our new result, you would think all would be correct. We’ve corrected the accounting problem by flipping the sign. However, when you look at the result, we get the following.
Why in the heck is that gross profit number not right? It seems we’ve got very simple math we’re dealing with here, what could be the problem? Many folks at this point go for the simple solution – just select show opposite sign on the gross profit $ line.
Unfortunately, this doesn’t work either, because you are flipping the sign on both the revenue value as well as the cost of sales value and you simply get the opposite of the same wrong number you got above.
The reason this is happening is because the show opposite sign function is doing exactly what it says it is doing, it is SHOWING the opposite sign. This is really only a presentational mask, and when calculations are done against the value, revenue is still calculating as a negative number, even though it appears on your report as a positive number. This little bit of arithmetic defying programming can make an accountant a little cranky, but it is easy to solve with a little mathematic trickery. In order to fix this, we need to put into place a two part solution. The first part we already know; we must select show opposite sign for our revenue accounts. The second part manipulates the Gross Profit $ and Gross Profit % as shown below, changing the value of the revenue account within the equation in order to calculate correctly.
The end result gets us correct results every time.
For those of you who are really paying attention, there is one more math mystery in the show opposite sign puzzle. Why have I chosen to show the calculation for Gross Profit % as -A3/A1 instead of simply using A3/-A1? Again, we’ve got to defy the programming with math tricks. Choosing A3/-A1 gives the error shown below. Get around it by moving the negative value to the other side of the equation and you’re good to go.