Michael:

Thanks for the reply. I have to say, I was thinking this would be a natural 
function of business accounting software but I see your point about the bulk. 
This is a function I am currently looking into for a non-profit. Basically, we 
receive invoices for services which I’ve been inputing as bills into the AP 
register. The invoices of course could contain any number of services, many of 
which are common. What we’d like to be able to do is to create reports that 
might say, these are the top 5 services that were preformed in 2016 and how 
many of each there were. I’d prefer to only have to enter this data once, so I 
was hoping that GC would have the functionality but I am finding out that this 
might be outside the scope of any accounting type of software. 

Would you be able to suggest an approach, a tool, that might compliment GC? Or 
is this just going to have to be something totally different?

Thanks.



> On Oct 16, 2017, at 9:17 AM, Mike or Penny Novack 
> <stepbystepf...@dialup4less.com> wrote:
> 
> On 10/15/2017 10:08 PM, DaveC49 wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> The facilities you are requesting are likely to require an inventory
>> management system. At present Gnucash is an accounting package and currently
>> does not incorporate any features for inventory management. As far as i know
>> there are no plans to incorporate such features in the near future. To do so
>> would reuire a developer(s) interested in developing these features.
>> Similarly while it can handle the accounting specific side of payroll
>> management it does not handle the calculation of payrolls, deductions, taxes
>> etc. You may need to took at ERP software if you require these facilities.
>> 
>> David Cousens
> 
> I am going to point something out. Gnucash is an accounting package. A 
> business might need a number of OTHER packages that would interact with the 
> accounting package, but normally are separate parts. Why separate? Because 
> which of these other parts a business might want/need depend on the business. 
> A unified business application (including ALL the different possible pieces) 
> would be unnecessarily bulky, with a given business never using many of those 
> pieces.
> 
> inventory -- only if the business HAS inventory that it sells
> payroll ------ only if the business has employees (employees in the legal 
> sense of that word)
> billed time -- only of a business deals in "billable hours"
> POS --- only if a business does this kind of retail << point of sales not 
> only interacts with accounting but also inventory >>
> etc. etc. etc.
> 
> Since I do accounting just for non-profits, I am aware of OTHER "pieces" that 
> would apply to this specialty. Just because I may be using gnucash to provide 
> these pieces does NOT mean "part of gnucash" << I am simply ALSO using 
> gnucash to implement "virtual  books" for those specific pieces >>
> 
> Michael D Novack
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