Beancounting

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What is "beancounting"?

Beancounting is a job that needs to be after a cash till is pulled from the front desk or thrift store. The staff member counts the money from till, transfers it into the safe, and makes the till ready for the next shift.

The Bookkeeping Toolbox

Get the bookkeeping toolbox (currently located in the Monkeyhouse. It should contain:

  • An endorsement stamp for checks received
  • Some hard copies of the end of shift form
  • Some large envelopes
  • Deposit tickets for making deposits at the bank
  • A pen or two

The Till

Get the till (or tills) from the front desk or the store. This can happen at the end of the day when the shift is over, or at the beginning of the next day. At the end of the day get the till from the cashier at the front desk or store. At the beginning of the day, get the till from the safe. Make sure that you get the till that has been used. (There may be a couple of fresh tills waiting to go in the safe.)

Each till will contain:

  • Cash (bills and coins) received that day
  • Checks received that day
  • A completed end of shift form

It might also contain:

  • Reimbursement slips with proof of purchase receipts attached
  • Miscellaneous money receipts
  • Cash transfer slips
  • Notes about data entry errors that should be corrected in the database
  • Copies of receipts for clients to be invoiced

The job

  1. Get the bookkeeping toolbox
  2. Get the uncounted tills and the cash box from safe
  3. Pull up the income report for the day in question
  4. Check the completed end of shift form for data entry errors
  5. Print hard copy of income report and manually correct if necessary
  6. Review the checks.
    • Each one should say "TS" for Thrift Store of "FD" for Front Desk. If not, write that on the check. (Note: sometimes the folks in the store write "ST" instead of "TS". We can live with that.)
    • Stamp each check with the endorsment stamp.

Count the money

Verify that the cashier who last used the till filled out the end of shift form correctly.

  1. "Face" the bills and the checks. (That is, put all the bills face up with the dead presidents' heads pointing in the same direction. This makes counting easier and it makes it easier to spot a five in the tens, for instance.)
  2. Count the checks, the bills, and the coins
    • If your count doesn't match what the paperwork says, double check your work and then correct the paperwork by crossing out the incorrect amount and clearly writing in the correct amount.
    • If the counts match, then put a check mark next to the amount on the paperwork.

Verify the paperwork

There are places on the paperwork for all the kinds of transactions that typically happen in the course of a day. Verify that they are correct and put a check mark next to them or correct them as necessary. These are:

  • Money receipts -- These are standard receipts from the office supply store and are used for miscellaneous sales or donations that aren't covered by the standard receipt.
  • Reimbursement records -- for when money goes out of the till to buy something for Free Geek
  • Transfer records (both transfers in and out) -- for when money goes from one till to the other or into the safe. (There should be a transfer out of the till that loses money and a transfer in for the till that gains money.)
  • Unpaid IOUs -- For when someone borrows money from a till (typically to buy something for Free Geek) and hasn't paid it back at the end of the day. (IOUs that are paid up at the end of the day can be discarded. If someone borrowed money to buy something though, there should be a reimbursement record.)

Transfer out excess money

Leave a standard till.

  1. Transfer the money from the tills to an envelope
    • Transfer all checks, and all 20s, 50s, and 100s.
    • Transfer whatever else you need to to make the remaining till come out right ($100).
    • Try to leave enough ones and quarters. (See Standard Cash Drawer for details on how much of each denomination is needed for each till.)
  2. On the envelope, write:
    • The date the till was active
    • The amount of money enclosed
    • Which till (Front Desk or Thrift Store) was being counted.
  3. Put the envelope in the safe alongside the cash box. Make certain the safe is locked.

Making Change

You may find yourself short of the denominations needed to fill out a decent cash drawer.

If you are counting two tills at the same time, you may be able to "buy" change from one till into the other. (Be sure to count the money and check/correct the paperwork before doing this, or we won't know where the till adjustments came from.)

Also, the cash box in the safe should have spare coins and bills of denominations that are usually needed for making change. You can "buy" change from this cash box from the till you are working on.

Whoever is preparing the deposit will try to keep an adequate supply on hand. We typically have in the cash box:

Ten dollar bills:   6 ($60.00)
Five dollar bills: 18 ($90.00)
One dollar bills:  50 ($50.00)
------------------------------------
TOTAL:               ($200.00)

There are also will also be a varying supply of coins. Once in a while we get too much change and deposit all of it except:

Pennies:   15 ($ 0.15)
Nickels:   15 ($ 0.75)
Dimes:     15 ($ 1.50)
Quarters: 120 ($30.00)
------------------------------------
TOTAL:        ($32.40)

See Also