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Tutorial 01 · Beginner · 8 min read

Introduction to Accounting

Accounting is the language of business. This first lesson explains what accounting really means, why it matters, and how the full accounting cycle moves a single bill from your desk to your final balance sheet.

What is Accounting?

The main objective of every business is to earn a profit. But at the end of every month, quarter and year a business owner needs to answer some very specific questions: How much did I make? How much stock is sitting in the warehouse? Who owes me money and who do I owe? Can I afford to expand?

You cannot answer any of those reliably from memory. You need a complete, systematic record of every transaction — and a way to summarise that record into reports. That system is accounting.

Accounting — formal definition Accounting is the process of identifying, recording, classifying, summarising, analysing, interpreting and communicating the financial information of a business to its users for judgement and decision-making.

The 7 Functions of Accounting

Every accounting system, from a shopkeeper's notebook to an enterprise ERP, performs the same seven functions in the same order:

  1. Identifying — picking out the financial transactions from source documents (invoices, cash memos, agreements, receipts) and measuring them in rupees.
  2. Recording — writing down every identified transaction in chronological order in the journal or subsidiary books.
  3. Classifying — grouping similar transactions together into ledger accounts (all cash transactions in the Cash A/c, all sales in the Sales A/c, and so on).
  4. Summarising — using the classified data to prepare the trial balance, Profit & Loss account, and Balance Sheet.
  5. Analysing — establishing relationships between figures (gross profit margin, current ratio, debtor days) to find financial strengths and weaknesses.
  6. Interpreting — explaining what the analysis actually means for the business owner.
  7. Communicating — sharing the final reports with the people who need them: the owner, lenders, tax authorities, investors.
How iAccounting helps

Steps 2 through 5 — recording, classifying, summarising and analysing — are fully automated inside iAccounting. You upload an invoice or type a transaction; the software handles every step from journal entry to balance sheet automatically.

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The Accounting Cycle

These functions repeat every accounting period in a continuous loop called the accounting cycle:

StepActivityOutput
1. TransactionA financial event occurs — a sale, purchase, payment, receipt.Source document (invoice, voucher)
2. Journal EntryThe transaction is recorded chronologically as a debit to one account and a credit to another.Journal book
3. PostingThe journal entry is transferred to individual ledger accounts.General ledger
4. Trial BalanceAt period end, total debits and credits are listed to verify arithmetical accuracy.Trial balance
5. Financial StatementsFrom the trial balance, the Trading A/c, P&L A/c, Balance Sheet and Cash Flow are prepared.Final accounts

The cycle then restarts with the next transaction and continues for as long as the business exists.

Book-keeping vs Accounting vs Accountancy

These three words get used interchangeably but they mean different things:

  • Book-keeping covers the first four functions — identifying, measuring, recording and classifying. It is routine, clerical work that can be done by a junior staff member.
  • Accounting begins where book-keeping ends. It covers summarising, analysing, interpreting and communicating. It needs analytical skill and is usually done by qualified accountants.
  • Accountancy is the body of knowledge — the principles, conventions and standards — that governs both book-keeping and accounting.
BasisBook-keepingAccounting
ObjectiveMaintain systematic recordsAscertain results & financial position
PhaseRecording phaseSummarising phase
StagePrimary — basis for accountingSecondary — starts where book-keeping ends
SkillRoutine, no special skillAnalytical, needs expertise
Who does itJunior staff (book-keepers)Senior staff (accountants)

Objectives of Accounting

  1. Keep systematic records of every business transaction so nothing is omitted or fraudulent.
  2. Calculate profit or loss for the period through the Trading and Profit & Loss account.
  3. Ascertain the financial position of the business through the Balance Sheet — a snapshot of assets, liabilities and capital.
  4. Provide information to interested parties — owners for decision-making, banks for loans, tax authorities for compliance, and investors for valuation.

Branches of Accounting

Accounting has grown into three specialised disciplines:

  • Financial accounting — recording transactions and preparing financial reports for external users like banks, shareholders and tax authorities. This is what most people mean when they say "accounting".
  • Cost accounting — analysing the cost of producing each unit or service so management can price correctly and control expenses.
  • Management accounting — pulling data from financial and cost accounting to support internal decisions: budgeting, pricing, capital expenditure, performance review.

Advantages & Limitations of Accounting

What accounting gives you:

  • Protection of business assets through proper records
  • Evidence for tax assessments — proper books are your defence in any audit
  • A reliable record that replaces memory
  • Year-over-year comparison to spot trends
  • Bankable financials when applying for a loan
  • A basis for valuing the business if you ever sell

What accounting cannot do:

  • Capture qualitative factors — staff quality, customer goodwill, industrial relations
  • Prevent "window dressing" if the owner deliberately manipulates entries
  • Reflect inflation — assets sit at historical cost even when their market value has tripled
  • Be 100% exact — depreciation, bad debts and stock valuation all involve estimates

Three Types of Accounting Information

InformationStatementWhat it tells you
Profit or SurplusProfit & Loss AccountHow much you earned or lost during the period
Financial PositionBalance SheetWhere you stand on assets, liabilities and capital on a specific date
Cash FlowCash Flow StatementHow cash moved in and out during the period
Up next: Now that you know what accounting is, the next tutorial introduces the core vocabulary you will use every day — capital, assets, liabilities, drawings, debtors, creditors and the rest.

Build on this lesson with these related tutorials:

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