Are you really
making full use of the program’s reporting tools?
Let’s take a look. Reporting changed a lot between
QuickBooks 2009 and 2010 in terms of interface,
navigation, and access to reports. We’ll look at version
2010 since the core reporting mechanisms are similar,
and wrap up with a brief summary of the new features in
2010.
Extensive customization
Open the Reports menu. You can go directly to the
Report Center, but since the interfaces are
different (and very self-explanatory), we’ll work from
the menu.
Drop down to Sales, and in the pop-out menu, click
Sales by Customer Detail. You’ll see a window
similar to Figure 1.

Figure 1: You may
just be changing the date range when you run reports in
QuickBooks. If so, you’re missing out on a lot of
customization and other features.
Don’t like displaying the date/time/basis for each
report? Click Hide Header and then Show Header
if you want to bring it back.
Are some of your columns—usually Name, Item, and
Memo—being truncated (such as Gutter clean…
in the example above)? Grab the diamond to the right of
the column name and drag it to the right with your
mouse. It may take some adjusting to make every column
header display properly.
Are you exporting a lot of reports to Excel workbooks
but never clicking on the Advanced tab in the
dialog box? If your reports always look different in
Excel and you don’t like them, it may be because you’re
skipping this step. Click the Export button, and
the dialog box shown in Figure 2 appears. Click
Advanced to see this view.

Figure 2: Before you
export a report to an Excel worksheet, click the
Advanced tab in the Export Report dialog box. You’ll be
able to select options that will preserve or ignore the
original QuickBooks formatting.
Sophisticated
modifications
To get to the real meat of your modifications, click the
Modify Report button. You’ll be able to tinker
with a number of report elements here, including (and
shown in Figure 3):
-
Display.
What dates should the report cover? Which columns
should display (you’ll have plenty to choose from)?
Cash or accrual? How do you want to total and sort
data? Click Advanced to show all accounts or
those in use during the report period, and to
display a customer’s current balance or the balance
as of the report’s ending date.
-
Filters.
QuickBooks builds in powerful filtering
capabilities, allowing you to corral a subset of
data that contains exactly what you want, down to
the words included in the Memo field. Take
some time here and read the accompanying help files.
A box on the right displays the current filters; you
can easily remove any of them or revert to the
original configuration.
-
Header/footer.
Easy stuff. How should the report look? QuickBooks
gives you a lot of control over that. You’ll simply
check or uncheck boxes, and enter information.
-
Fonts & Numbers.
Easy here, too. You can make choices about the fonts
and colors you want your report to contain, and how
you want numbers to be displayed.

Figure 3: QuickBooks
gives you an enormous amount of control over the format
and content of your reports.
Memorization and more
Once you’ve gone through all the trouble of formatting a
report, you’ll probably want to save it so you can use
it again (the settings are memorized, not the data).
QuickBooks makes this easy. With the report open, click
Memorize. In the window that opens, type a name
for your report (if you want to specify a new one), and
check the box next to Save in Memorized Report Group
if you want it categorized. To access a memorized
report, open the Reports menu and put your mouse
on Memorized Reports. From the pop-out menu,
select the report you want. You’ll still be able to
modify it.
The new Report Center in QuickBooks 2010, shown in
Figure 4, makes it easier to locate the desired
reports quickly. It features a scrolling 3-D
representation of sample reports in each financial
category (list and grid views are also available); you
can click on icons in a toolbar to see your own version
of the report, change the dates, learn more about it,
and tag it as a favorite. Other links let you toggle the
view among standard, memorized, favorite, and recently
accessed reports.

Figure
4: This “carousel” view of sample reports in QuickBooks
2010 especially helps beginners find the correct report.
Grid and list views are also available, as are other
tools for locating the right screen.
When you’re just running reports for your own
edification, you may not do more than select a report
and change the date range. But there will likely be many
occasions when you’re presenting reports to an audience,
like bankers or potential customers. QuickBooks’ report
tools can help you slice and dice your data in myriad
ways and make your financials look polished and
professional. The ability to export to Excel opens up
even more possibilities.
If you need help with this feature, or have any
questions on QuickBooks's reporting, don't hesitate to
give us a call.