Frequently Asked
Questions
The new EFS eStatement Site is Live!
Starting in July 2008, the University of Minnesota is using a new
Enterprise Financial System (EFS) from PeopleSoft to handle virtually
all University Financial transactions. The old department identifiers
(Area/Org etc.) were replaced with a new set of identifiers, so
eStatement has been updated to handle the new fields. Transactions
entered before July 2008 will remain available for search by Area/Org,
but after that time records have only the new PeopleSoft identifiers,
such as Department ID.
Questions or problems with the new site? Email us at eStatement@umn.edu.
Disclaimer: These FAQs have not been updated since the move to
PeopleSoft. If you have a question about the new site, email us at eStatement@umn.edu and we will get
back to you as soon as possible.
General Issues
Do I really need to read all this?
No.
At the main page, click on "Select Statement by Department". Type in
your area/org and click "Submit".
This is what you bought last month.
The rest of the select criteria default to what we think most customers
will look for: last month's documents, regardless if they've cleared
CUFS or not, and from all vendors currently feeding the site.
Who do I contact for help?
For questions on individual charges, first note
which vendor the charge is from (ex: Fleet, Parking, Mailing). Then
click on "Contacts", which is at the upper left of all pages. That has a
table of departments, along with home page, contact name, phone number,
and email.
For questions on the site itself, or with suggestions on how to improve
it, contact Chris Ryan (c-ryan@umn.edu, 612-624-6821). Please spend a
little time beforehand going over this FAQ to see if your question has
already been asked by someone else.
Select Criteria
This site may eventually house tens of millions of
transactions. We require area to prevent you from accidentally pulling
all charges, which would otherwise happen if you clicked "Submit" before
entering any select criteria. Our server would handle the request, but
your desktop tools might quit after a hundred thousand records.
We recognize however that some central areas, like Audits or the
Controller's Office, may have a responsibility to periodically review
charges across multiple areas. If you work in one of these areas and
need this access for an audit, please contact Chris Ryan for assistance
(c-ryan@umn.edu, 612-624-6821). These larger queries would likely need
to be done onsite, using our server-side tools.
Why are there no drop down lists on area/org,
or look-ups by department name?
There are no drop down lists for area/org because
those department identifiers change over time. We wanted to make sure
that you could type in an area/org even after it's no longer used (and
so not available in a current drop-down list), in order to inquire
against historical charges
Similarly, historical inquiries also make it hard to include department
names next to area/org values. For example, over the last ten years
591-2000 has switched from Support Services to University Services to
Auxiliary Services.
What does the select by month refer to (month
ordered, month invoiced)?
You are selecting on the fiscal year and period that
these documents were posted to CUFS. That is usually, but not
necessarily, the month when you purchased the goods or services. If the
documents are not yet posted, you are selecting on the fiscal year and
period that they were submitted to post.
This date is shown as calendar month and year, rather than fiscal period
and year. We thought the former would be clearer to non-financial
customers. We spell out the month name so financial staff will not
mistake it for the fiscal period.
What does the posted flag mean?
The posted flag represents the status of a document
at CUFS. Unposted means that the document has not yet been processed,
posted means that the document has cleared through CUFS.
Posted documents cannot be changed. If the dollars are wrong on a posted
document, you don't fix them, but send through another document to
adjust. Information on unposted documents however is subject to change.
That's why it's only worth reconciling those documents that have already
posted.
By including a select on posted flag, we are attempting to simplify your
reconciliation of our charges to CUFS. When you de-select the "Include
Unposted" check box, only those charges list out that have posted to
CUFS, and so only those that appear on your CUFS general ledger listing
(the UA611).
Why offer a select by vendor?
In our initial interviews we learned that some
larger departments assign different staff to different vendors. Perhaps
you are responsible for mailings in your area, but not vehicle rentals.
If so, you might de-select Fleet Services.
The Standard vs Normalized (who/what/when/where/why)
Format
What is the standard format?
The standard format is what you've been receiving
from us for years. It has vendor-specific headings.
For example, when you look at fuel transactions, there are columns for
fuel type and number of gallons. A loading zone permit has a column for
contract. All three columns are not normalized into single column of
"what you bought".
What is the normalized
(who/what/when/where/why) format?
The normalized format is a new concept. It abstracts
spend across vendors into common columns.
As mentioned in the section
"Why
are you doing this?", we started out this project by talking to our
customers. Many seemed to be normalizing their spend across vendors,
creating packets sorted by who made the purchase. The "who" would then
be asked to write down the "why".
We also read through the University procedure on inter-departmental
charges. A link to that is on the upper left of our main page. The
procedure directs internal vendors to establish "who, what, when, where,
why". Several customers even quoted this phrase to us, or abbreviated it
as "the five W's".
In the end we decided that we could only answer four of the W's: who,
what, when, and where. Why a customer purchased something would have to
be filled in by them. But we could offer a utility for the customer to
type in a "why", and have that fifth W display along with the other
four.
Which format should I use?
Which format gets used will vary by person, and even
within a person.
For example, I manage a smaller department at the University, with about
a dozen people and annual revenue between one and two million.
For me, the standard format is most useful in spreadsheet. Here I can do
analysis like whether one should be purchasing fuel onsite or with a
fuel card, or whether it makes more sense to keep renting vehicles or
maybe switch to a lease. At least for me, the normalized format puts too
much data into spreadsheet cells. A person can total a column for
gallons of fuel. But how do you total a column called "what"?
In display and print however, I prefer the normalized format. Regardless
of transaction type, the columns are all the same. So it's easier on the
eyes as I scan down the pages. Who bought the stuff is always on the far
left, followed by what the stuff was.
It's true that a vendor's identity starts to blur in the normalized
format. But as a manager, I don't really care about our vendors. I just
care about how much of our money they now have, who gave it to them, and
what we got in return.
Your preferences will likely be different, tailored to the work that you
do at the University.
Do both formats total the same?
Yes.
They are the identical transactions (same dollars, CUFS document numbers
and so on), and come from the same table.
Spreadsheet
Why doesn't the spreadsheet work for me?
The spreadsheet button creates a comma delimited
file, with an extension of "csv". This is the most generic of
spreadsheet formats (unlike say "xls" for Excel, "wk*" for Lotus, and
"wb1" for Quattro Pro), and so the most likely to be recognized by
whatever spreadsheet software you prefer. So if you can't see the
spreadsheet, maybe check these two things first:
1. You might not have any spreadsheet software on your computer. The
University has negotiated reduced pricing for Microsoft Office
(including the spreadsheet software Excel). But this license is only
valid (at least at the time of this writing, January 2005) for computers
owned by your employer. That probably does not include your home
computer. If you cannot or do not want to use Excel on your computer,
there are other spreadsheet packages available. Many of these are "open
source", and so low cost or even free. All should read a "csv" file as a
spreadsheet.
2. Even if your machine does have spreadsheet software, your computer's
operating system or internet browser might not launch the spreadsheet
software when opening a document ending in "csv". The default settings
should associate "csv" with spreadsheet software, but those settings can
be changed. The ideal would be to fix those settings, but you should
still be able to view the spreadsheet without doing that. First save the
spreadsheet off into a directory, and then launch the spreadsheet
software manually. Open up the file you just saved.
And of course if your computer is tied into a University network, please
talk to your network administrator before downloading software or
changing settings.
What can I do with the spreadsheet?
You can use the spreadsheet for analysis.
The following are a few quick ideas for Fleet and Parking transactions.
Our intent is not to get you to run these specific analyses. Many will
not make sense for your department. Instead we're just trying to get you
into a mode of thinking where you will come up with your own analyses,
ones that will help your department.
1. Many University departments operate 24x7. But perhaps yours does not.
If not, you might want to know if parking was getting charged against
your account during the evening hours. Those could be charges for
personal business, rather than departmental. To check that quickly,
maybe sort the budget charge card transactions by transaction time, and
look for times greater than 20:00 (8pm).
More than likely any late night parking was legitimate, someone just
came in to check on a project or experiment. So maybe you agree in your
department to type in a reason why for transactions that could be
questioned. That way you save the staff time discussing these things,
while also keeping your department free from any hint of impropriety.
2. Are people buying snacks with your fuel card, or paying sales tax
when the University is exempt? Sort and subtotal the fuel card
transactions by product code.
3. Is it cheaper to buy fuel at our pumps (with a fuel key) or at a
private gas station (with a fuel card)? Build a formula over gallons of
fuel and dollar amount, and perhaps graph by purchase date to reflect
changes in market prices.
4. Is your department working for a cleaner environment? Find out how
heavily you're drawing on alternative fuels, like ethanol or natural
gas. Sort, subtotal, and maybe direct the results to a pie chart.
5. Should your department be leasing vehicles rather than renting them.
This is a little trickier than a simple sort and subtotal. A single
leased vehicle will not replace two rented ones, if both are rented
during the same time period.
6. Would it be cheaper for your department to purchase a Quarterly
Individual Vehicle contract, or should you stick with paying for
individual instances of parking. This is similar to a lease vs rent
analysis. A contract could replace one budget charge card, but not two
that are used on the same days.
7. You held a conference and made parking reservations for the
attendees. But many of those people showed up halfway into the first
presentation. A formula or two will give you the max, min, and mean
times of when people entered the ramp. Use that to adjust your
conference literature, to tell people what time they need to arrive.
8. Did you reduce the vehicles that your department leases, but forgot
to also reduce the official vehicle permits? Or maybe it's the opposite,
since work has picked up and you're now leasing more. Run a count on
both blocks of transactions.
That is the default name of the spreadsheet, as
generated off the web.
If you save the spreadsheet, you will want to name it something more
meaningful. Also the spreadsheet software that you're using may prompt
you to save it with its proprietary extension (ex: "xls" for Excel,
"wk*" for Lotus). This shouldn't harm anything, and doing so will allow
you to use more advanced features in that software.
Why don't you also offer an Excel spreadsheet,
with formatting tailored to that?
To keep things simple, there is just one spreadsheet
button and one printout button.
If you're using Excel, the software will translate the "csv" into an
"xls" for you. You can then select out the columns needed and add in
your own formatting.
Why are the amounts in the middle, rather
than the far right?
The amounts are in the middle so that you can total
them across transaction type, with just the summary function on the one
column. Some transactions have under thirty columns while others have
more than forty. Putting the amount at the rightmost column of a
transaction would have placed it in different columns based on
transaction type, and so prevented that easy summation.
Why is the spreadsheet sort different than
that of the display and printout?
The spreadsheet sorts first by vendor, then vendor
transaction type, then by the same sort that the printout, display, and
CUFS GL listing do (i.e. CUFS document type, CUFS document number, etc).
There were a few reasons why we sorted first by vendor and vendor
transaction type.
The spreadsheet puts data into columns. To be understandable, the
columns need headings. People found the spreadsheet distracting when the
same headings kept recurring. Sorting first by transaction type allowed
us to just write the heading once, at the beginning of that transaction
type.
Printout
Why doesn't the printout work for me?
The printout is an Adobe "pdf" document. So if you
can't see the printout, maybe check these two things first:
1. You might not have the Adobe Reader product on your computer. This is
a free product, shipped on most computers. If the product is not on your
computer, it can be downloaded for free from www.adobe.com.
2. Even if you have Adobe Reader, your computer's operating system or
internet browser might not launch Adobe when opening a document ending
in "pdf". The default settings should associate "pdf" with Adobe, but
those settings can be changed. Of course the ideal is to reset those
settings. But even without the default settings, you should still be
able to view the printout in Adobe Reader. First save the printout off
into a directory, and then launch Adobe Reader manually. Open the file
you just saved.
If your computer is tied into a University network, please talk to your
network administrator before changing its settings or downloading
software.
What can I do with the printout?
With the printout you can print, navigate, and
annotate.
1. Print
Don't print the display. The display cuts off text on the bottom and
right, and leaves too much white space on the left. Things are not much
improved if you switch from portrait to landscape orientation, or shrink
and expand margins.
Don't print the spreadsheet (or at least not until you've selected out
the columns and rows you're going to do calculations on). Some
transaction types have forty columns. Those won't fit on any page, or at
least not in a font size that you could read.
Do print the printout. The printout has page numbering, a table of
contents, subtotaling, and coherent page breaking. When you have a long
list of transactions, the totals and header information are re-printed
at the top of each new page. Most importantly, when you print the
printout, everything fits on the page.
2. Navigate
In addition to printing the printout however, you can also navigate
through it.
To do this, first generate the printout. That should launch Adobe Reader
from within your web browser. Now click on some of the Adobe arrow icons
pointing left and right. These will move you to the next page or last
page, or back one and back to the beginning. Some other icons look like
a piece of paper with a corner folded. Try these out. One shrinks the
page so that you can see its layout in your browser. Another widens it
to the width of your browser, making the text easier to read. A plus and
minus allow you to zoom in and out of text, in case you're working with
a smaller monitor.
Perhaps the most useful icon however is the "Find". It looks like a pair
of binoculars, and there's a similar "Find Again" icon with binoculars
and a curvy arrow over it.
We create each of your printouts as full text indexed. That adds a few
seconds onto the generation of your printout. If you're running a
hundred page printout, that indexing may add quite a few seconds.
Hopefully it's worth the wait however, because that indexing allows you
to search through the printout.
Click on the "Find" icon, those little binoculars. A window pops up.
Type part of the CUFS document that you want to research. Click the
"Find" button and you jump to there. Maybe you don't know what document
you're looking for, but are just researching a discrepancy. You could
type in the missing dollar amount. Do you want to make sure that a Fleet
work order or Parking reservation cleared through CUFS? Search on the
work order or reservation number, or even the name of who placed the
order.
3. Annotate
After printing the printout and navigating the printout, you may want to
move onto the next step--annotating the printout. Some annotations
require software from Adobe, the Distiller product in addition to the
free Reader product that you're viewing the printout with. The Distiller
may already be on your machine. It's inexpensive software, so some U of
M network administrators install it as a matter of course.
When you annotate a document, you are making changes to it so that the
document is more understandable to your co-workers.
For example, perhaps the simplest annotation is yellow highlighting. You
can certainly email the printout to co-workers for review. Rather than
email it plain however, you might first highlight the half dozen
transactions that you have questions about.
The green underlining could serve a similar purpose.
A little more threatening might be the red strike-out. These could be
transactions that you're disputing, or ones that you feel another
department should reimburse you for. You could even combine that red
strike-out with note. These function like the paper post-it notes that
you may now be sticking onto documents.
There is also a stamp tool, with a blue "Draft", a green "Approved", a
red "Final", and a green "For Comment". You might find a use for these.
You should know that these annotations only stay with your copy of the
printout. We don't store them in our file of transactions, since other
staff may want to view the transactions without your annotations. So
make sure you save your work.
Why is the printout so plain?
The printout is in black and white so that customers
aren't tempted to print it on a color printer. The total cost of
printing in color (not just paper, but also ink cartridge and printer
depreciation) can reach $0.50 per page. Printing black and white runs
around $0.10 per page. Printing black and white at a centralized printer
(like at our copy centers) costs even less, around $0.02 - $0.03 per
page.
The printout is devoid of logos, gophers, grid lines, watermarks, and
other features in order to leave you plenty of white space for
annotation. Most people may use pen and highlighter for this. But you
might also want to try the Adobe products, and so save the annotations
to your electronic copy.
The printout is in a non-proportional font (Courier), so that letters
remain in fixed columns. The hope was to give the clarity of grid lines,
without cluttering up the report with the actual lines.
Getting Monthly Reports via Email
What reports are sent out?
Currently we just email out the standard printout.
We wanted to keep the email sign-up very simple at first. But if there
is interest, we could adjust our sign-up to also send out the normalized
printout, or allow clients to choose between the two or get both.
When do the emailed reports go out?
Reports are emailed after the soft close of each
CUFS month. That means you should get each month's email on the fifth or
sixth working day of the following month. The June report might come a
little later, since that is the last month of the fiscal year.
We need to wait until after the CUFS soft close in order to download the
transactions that posted in that month. We then cross-reference these
CUFS transactions against their detail in eStatement, and mark that
detail as posted. We also update CUFS data on eStatement detail (ex:
area/org, object, amount, month/year posted), in case those were changed
on CUFS before posting.
Why is there no select by vendor on
the email sign-up?
We are adding vendors monthly, and so didn't want
people to miss out on the new vendors simply because they didn't update
their sign-up.
Why don't you also email out the
spreadsheets?
The spreadsheets are for analysis, and we thought
that the analysis would be most productive when done interactively and
across multiple months.
Adding "Reasons Why" to Documents
How do I add a reason why?
Find the CUFS document at the top of the display.
Click on the button for "Add Reason Why". Type in your comments. We
limit them to 540 characters, but a counter will decrement as you're
typing so that you know how much space is left. If you have a very long
comment, just finish off the first thought and add a second.
If needed, reference the CUFS line or sequence number in your comment.
We initially thought to put comments next to each detail line. That
cluttered up the screen however, and made it difficult for people to
comment on the entire purchase.
When you are finished typing, click submit. The screen will refresh, and
your comment will display along with your x.500 identifier and the date
and time you entered the comment. Your comment will have that heading in
bold, to make it easy to distinguish from the comments of others.
Don't worry if you made a mistake. A void button appears next to any
comment that you have made (whether in this session or a previous one).
To remove your comment, click on that void button followed by its
confirmation screen. The comment still stays in our files as an audit
(just like a voided financial transaction), but does not show up on any
reports.
Why can't I add attachments to my comments?
We originally intended to allow this, but none of
our test customers thought it was necessary.
Leaving off attachments may have made this communication over purchasing
more streamlined. All justifications get typed in, where they are
immediately visible when you call up the transaction. You don't have to
open up attachments to see why a purchase was made.
Can people add comments to
transactions that they have no association with?
Yes. There is no cost effective way for us to track
who should or should not be able to comment on a purchase.
However an employee's x.500 identifier is stamped on those comments.
This provides the same control over inappropriate comments that exists
for inappropriate emails.
Please use clean, professional language when commenting purchases.
If you accidentally type in something inappropriate, just click void to
remove it.
Why don't comments appear on the
printouts?
We had originally planned to do this, or offer
separate options (one for a printout with comments and a second for a
printout without comments).
However our initial customer group did not see value in it, and thought
multiple print options only made the site more complex.
Requested Enhancements
Integrate this into UM Reports.
This was most often articulated as a drill-down from
the UM Reports general ledger listing. Clicking on the CUFS document
there would bring up the detail from our site.
The thinking here seems to be this.
This site aggregates transactions across vendors, and we encourage
vendors to provide as much detail as possible on those transactions.
That creates substantial data for analyses.
Currently we only offer a spreadsheet download for this. Customers get
the data, but have to write their own analyses.
But perhaps we could take things a step further and build some "business
intelligence" into the site.
Say we code several dozen stock analyses into a canned report. After
inquiring on a set of transactions, clients could click on a button
called "Analyze Spend" or "Save me Money". In theory, this could save
dozens of clients from building their own spreadsheets.
But there are also arguments against building in that business
intelligence.
Before starting such a report, we'd want to understand if clients are
even doing analyses. If so, we'd want to catalog the questions that they
are asking. If few are common across areas, then a common report would
be less useful.
Also the spending needs of departments can vary widely. Patterns that
makes sense for one may not make sense for another. A common report
might obscure that, unless it was worded with considerable caveats.
Integrate this into the departmental
sites.
Like many web sites on campus, this one is
integrated into the x.500 signon. So if you've already authenticated to
look up your place on the parking waiting list or make sure your last
paycheck was correct, you shouldn't need to re-authenticate at this
site.
But there are other forms of integration that are more tailored to the
vendor application. If you bought stationary and business cards, it
might be nice to click on the charge to view the Adobe pdf of those
items or even re-order more. You might not want to do that with a
parking charge, but perhaps you'd like to change the contact name and
phone on a permit.
Of course in both cases you could just email the contact with your
request, and attach a printout from this site as an attachment. At this
point we're not sure if something more refined would really get used.
Get my name spelled right.
In addition to putting multiple vendors onto one
site, we're also increasing the amount of data for the vendors. So
you're not only seeing a charge for a vehicle rental, but also
everything we could find about that transaction (ex: vehicle
make/model/year, license plate, contact name and number, department,
where the car was driven to, the date and time of both arrival and
departure). Not all that data may be spelled correctly, especially the
new stuff that you're seeing. That should improve over time.
The question of spelling names right however has triggered additional
thoughts. If we captured x.500 identifier at order, we could
cross-reference it against central demographics. That would get
everyone's name spelled right, plus provide a contact phone number and
email address.
In addition however that x.500 identifier would also allow us to start
offering reporting by individual, rather than just by department and
document. That is, you could inquire on your own personal spending with
us, regardless of what department it went against. Alternatively your
department could request that people who made charges against it get a
monthly email, with those charges attached. This is similar to how the
purchasing card currently works. Reports are broken out not only by
department, but also by individual.
Implementing such a report however would require some extensive process
change, across a dozen or two departmental systems. Before making the
investment, we'd want to be sure that the reporting would be used.
Let me post my own thoughts.
Currently requests for enhancement are mailed to
Chris Ryan (c-ryan@umn.edu). We aggregate them and post summaries here.
We could move to a discussion group format, where you could post and
respond to each others postings.
The upside is that your thoughts would be articulated exactly as you
expressed them. The downside is that issues can get scattered (i.e. the
same thoughts expressed one day and then three weeks later, rather than
summarized into one posting), and use could drop off after the initial
roll-out.
Longer Topics
We met with financial staff from our customer
departments. They described a process that many of you may be familiar
with. Each month they get their UA611 CUFS report, the list of general
ledger documents that posted in the previous financial period. Next they
start digging for the details behind the expense documents--tracking
down paper billings from Parking, making print-screens off the Mailing
site for courier trips, downloading a spreadsheet from the U Market site
for supplies, and leaving a voicemail at Fleet to see who rented a van.
The University has several dozen internal providers, who all report with
various tools (paper, web inquiries, both, neither, emails) and at
various intervals (weekly, biweekly, monthly, quarterly, annually).
Often our customers are digging for "who"--which employee, not just
which department, parked at that ramp or rented that vehicle. That's
rarely on any invoice, whether paper, web, or email. Sometimes the
"where" will help out (what ramp, which copy center), or maybe the
"what" (ethanol or unleaded).
After the digging comes the reporting--drafting up internal spreadsheets
or making photocopies. These get used to justify cross-charges, to try
and identify who's doing all that excess parking, or maybe just detail
out what another mailing might cost. Often this reporting is broken out
according to the "who", and distributed to each "who" to verify.
At this point the "who" gets to fill in the "why". Sometimes this is
done with an email from the purchaser to the accountant, with a short
conversation before and after, and with the process repeated when the
accountant's supervisor asks. Other times the "who" writes the "why"
down onto the paper bill or web print-screen. The annotated pages are
copied and distributed, with the annotations later adjusted or disputed,
but maybe not on every copy.
Anyway the whole process seemed to be consuming a good amount of
University labor. Indeed for grants we had even built an infrastructure
to do this, with Principle Investigators and a department called
Sponsored Financial Reporting.
So our group started thinking about how to reduce this labor, to
streamline this communication over purchasing. Our experience had been
that communication went quickest when centered around a common report.
That one common report was worth more than a dozen individualized ones.
The trick of course was in designing that one report.
For example, we didn't want just accountants and analysts getting the
report, but also managers, auditors, academics, researchers, and our own
customer service staff. That meant that the report would have to be very
simple to generate, which drove design decisions. So, for example, we
decided that there could only be one date to select on, not a choice of
order date, ship date, invoice date, and so on. And the date would be
the only financial one common across the University--the CUFS posting
period. Since this is a month rather than a date, the select would be
even easier. An advanced user of the site could still accomplish all
that reporting by order date, ship date, invoice date, and whatever. But
he or she would have to first direct the output to spreadsheet, and
there sort and subtotal by the desired columns.
In the end we decided on nine broad requirements:
1. Make the report easy to access
Serve it off the web, after passing x.500 validation. Even better, put
in an email sign-up so that staff could get monthly reports without even
visiting the site.
2. Make the report simple enough for anyone to generate
Use very few select criteria, and default them to what most people would
want.
3. Allow the charges to take annotation, to communicate why a
purchase was made
Do this on a public annotation, so everyone involved with a project or
department could see the same information, and clients could reduce the
emails and notes that are currently used to justify spending. But keep
the annotation controlled, by stamping comments with x.500 identifier
and date/time. And of course don't allow dollar amounts or other posted
information to be changed.
4. Eliminate the UA611 reconciliation by making the report
transparently reconcile to CUFS
Stamp charges with CUFS document numbers and sort by them. Pattern the
select criteria after the same select criteria used for CUFS general
ledger listings (ex: area/org, object/sub, fiscal period, and posting
status).
5. Within the constraints of a central GL listing, provide the
cohesion of a vendor invoice
Populate CUFS documents so that detail within logical entities (ex:
Fleet work orders, Parking reservations) all come under the same CUFS
document line. That way the entity header information (ex: vehicle
make/model/year, work order total) doesn't get repeated across different
document lines.
6. Make the report detailed enough to answer non-financial questions
Don't just show how much the parking was, but also what time the car
entered and exited the ramp. Let people see who signed for a courier
order, and when their package showed up.
7. Consolidate the report across vendors
Don't just offer the parking charges, but also the vehicle rental,
mailing, catering, and whatever else is out there.
8. Offer the charges in an optional, normalized view
Don't just display charges in the traditional vendor-specific columns
(ex: fuel type for Fleet, facility for Parking, pick up time for
Courier). But also offer to normalize that spend across vendors, and so
reduce the normalizing that customers seem to be doing on their own
(i.e. re-entering charges from multiple vendors into spreadsheets, and
then sorting by who made the purchases). These normalized columns would
be who/what/when/where/why, the "five W's" that clients kept quoting to
us, and that are spelled out in U of M procedures on documenting
internal charges.
9. Make the report available in multiple formats
Don't offer just a display for quick look-up and print-screens, but also
a spreadsheet for analysis, and (perhaps most importantly) a formal
printout. The printout should accommodate both those who prefer to read
online and offline (i.e. on paper). So, for example, for offline reading
create a table of contents with chapter headings by vendor, so people
could flip to where they needed to go. But for online reading, full-text
index the invoice, so that people could search for document numbers.
Why do I get an invoice
from Home Depot, but a statement from U of M Parking?
This is a recurring question at the University, and
perhaps worth addressing in detail. First we'll need to work through
some terms.
Invoice--only the first half of a financial event
An invoice lists your charges. Completing the event requires a response
from you (ex: payment by mailing in a check).
Sometimes both halves of the event happen right next to each other, so
are not always understood as two transactions. But you can still see
them both if you slow things down a bit. At the grocery store you're
"invoiced" with the cash register slip. Payment happens before you can
take the bags of food out to your car.
Statement--a completed financial event
Unlike an invoice, a statement is a list of completed financial events.
If you've taken out a house or car loan, each year you may get your
monthly payments listed out in a statement. Sometimes these statements
list both the charges and their payments, or sometimes only the
payments. Nevertheless each month saw two transactions: charge and
payment.
Again, you don't need to respond to the events listed in a statement.
They have already completed.
Buying and Selling
So far we've only been talking from the view of the buyer (getting
charged and paying). That event also triggers two mirror transactions
for the seller (charging and getting paid).
The accounting terms for those four transactions reflect that mirroring:
receivable and receipt, payable and payment. A sale from the hardware
store to you generates a receivable for the hardware store, which is
satisfied by the receipt of your cash. That same sale generates a
payable for you, which is satisfied by the payment of your cash.
Of course your response to the payable need not be payment. The response
might be a complaint (if you disputed the quality of the goods), a
return (if you bought the wrong goods), or just nonpayment (if you
didn't have any money). This forces the seller to respond to the
non-receipt of his or her receivable. The hardware store owner might
accept back the goods, write-off the bad debt, assess late fees, or sell
the receivable to a collection agency.
Transferring
Not every financial event is buying and selling. Some are purely
transfers. Every spring that hardware store owner may move the snow
shovels from the display window to the basement. That inventory wasn't
purchased into the store or sold out of it, just transferred within.
Similarly, pretend that you're one of those people who sets up multiple
savings accounts: one for holiday spending, another for vacations, and a
third towards savings for a new car. Moving money between these accounts
isn't buying or selling. You're just transferring.
Buying, Selling, and Transferring
Two upside down triangles might illustrate this:
Hardware Store
Your Household
Buying Selling
Buying
Selling
Transferring
Transferring
Draw a line from your Buying to the Hardware Store's Selling,
both marked in bold above. That's you getting a new snow shovel.
By now anyone with an accounting degree has started to cringe. That
transfer of shovels isn't the single transaction that we've implied so
far, but really two (a debit of inventory at the first location followed
by credit of inventory at the second). Similarly, when the hardware
store owner receives payment, he or she is really processing two
transactions (credit to cash, debit to outstanding receivables).
Nevertheless, an understanding of double entry accounting really isn't
needed to explain the original question--why Home Depot gives you an
invoice while U of M Parking sends a statement. So we'll continue to
talk as if we practiced single entry accounting, without debits and
credits, in order to keep the discussion accessible to a wider audience.
AP, AR, and GL
Remember that the buyer really underwent two transactions at the
hardware store (generating a payable when he received the goods, and
satisfying that with a payment when he handed over the cash). The seller
underwent two mirror transactions (generating a receivable when he
handed over the goods, and satisfying it with a receipt when he accepted
the cash). Institutions, and even many individuals, write these
transactions down. That not only helps them understand where their money
is flowing, but also tracks what financial events haven't yet completed
(ex: receivables that aren't yet receipted, which is money owed to you).
Those institutions are really careful however not to mix up the buying
and selling, and so confuse the money owed to them with the money that
they owe to others. So they enter their buying transactions into one
book, and their selling transactions into a second book.
Accountants call these books ledgers. The book for buying has payables
and their payments, and so is referred to as the Payables Ledger. The
book for selling has receivables and their receipts, and so is referred
to as the Receivables Ledger. Often the word "Account" is prefaced and
the word "Ledger" dropped off, giving Accounts Payable and Accounts
Receivable. They are abbreviated AP and AR.
There is a third ledger for transfers--moving those snow shovels from
the display window into the basement, or switching savings dollars from
the holiday account to the vacation account. This is called the General
Ledger, abbreviated as GL.
These two upside down triangles would then be equivalent:
Financial Transactions
Buying Selling
Transferring
Financial Transactions
AP AR
GL
Once again if you're an accountant, you're probably starting to cringe.
Reality is more complex than an upside down triangle. AP and AR
transactions are summarized in the GL by account. Indeed sales and
purchases are usually done in ledgers further up the tree (Sales Order
and Purchase Order), summarized by customer/vendor plus account into AR
and AP, and summarized further from there by just account into GL. And
although the movement of savings dollars is a pure GL transaction, that
movement of shovels would be more elegantly captured by transactions in
an Inventory Ledger, which would also summarize by account into the GL.
But this write-up is directed at a non-financial audience, and the above
paragraph may have just lost half of them. The key issue here is that
buying, selling, and transferring happen in three different ledgers.
That's captured in the upside down triangle.
Satisfying internal AP and AR through a shared GL
With this background we can now move onto the original question--why you
get an invoice from Home Depot, but a statement from U of M Parking.
Pretend that you and the hardware store owner get along well enough that
you decide to form a co-op. A few other local businesses join, along
with most of your neighbors. Rather than invoice each other for goods,
you'll just email each day's transactions to the local credit union.
Since you all bank there, the credit union can execute your internal
buying and selling as transfers. Each month the credit union sends you a
statement of transfers in and out of your account, and posts a
consolidated statement for the entire co-op.
There are great advantages to this, primarily in control, cost, and
convenience:
Control
Maybe you were never really very good at writing down your transactions
before. If so, this central list could give you a clearer idea of where
your money is flowing.
Cost
Much of the overhead of buying and selling has been removed. The
hardware store owner doesn't need to worry about collections when
selling to fellow co-op members. So he or she can remove that cost out
of the pricing to them.
Convenience
Your children can pick up goods from co-op members, without you taking
the risk of giving them cash or a blank check.
But along with these advantages comes an opportunity for confusion.
Within the co-op, internal AP and AR are now settled through a shared
GL. However you may still be keeping your own three books at home, one
each for buying (AP), selling (AR), and transferring (GL). After all,
whether you buy a snow shovel from the hardware store or from Home
Depot, you're still buying. Co-op or no co-op, at the end of either
financial event you've got more shovels and less money. So you enter a
purchase from either Home Depot or that hardware store into your
Accounts Payable Ledger.
But something has changed. Unlike before, getting that snow shovel no
longer means drawing a line from your buying to the hardware
store's selling. Instead, that line crosses through the co-op's transferring.
All three are marked bold below.
The Co-Op
Buying Selling
Transferring
Hardware Store
Your Household
Buying Selling
Buying
Selling
Transferring
Transferring
The first change is that the shovel from the hardware store is showing
up in the General Ledger of the co-op, not in the co-op's Accounts
Payable Ledger for your purchase, and the co-op's Accounts Receivable
Ledger for the hardware store's sale. After all, as far as the co-op is
concerned, this is just a transfer between members. And that GL
transaction is what is in the statements sent to both you and the
hardware store, again not AP and AR transactions.
The second change is that this transfer is a single transaction event. A
transfer is not broken into two halves like buying (payable and payment)
and selling (receivable and receipt). This means that when you purchase
from a fellow co-op member, your payable and payment (and the seller's
receivable and receipt) happen simultaneously when entered at the credit
union. They are one transaction, a single GL transfer. You don't get to
make sure the shovel works before sending in a check.
That hardware store is U of M Parking, you are your department, the
credit union is the Controller's Office, and the co-op is the University
of Minnesota. Home Depot is still Home Depot.
Currently the central university is moving to a new financial system,
and both buyers and sellers at the university are continually replacing
their local systems. Yet it's important to understand that new software
will not change these relationships (unless it's accompanied with a move
to internal AR/AP, which essentially disbands the co-op). You are
buying, we are selling. Those financial events normally have two halves
(payable and payment for you, receivable and receipt for us), and
normally we'd both have discretion over executing that second half. But
that financial event is settled via the central university's GL. And
there we are neither buying nor selling, but transferring. And
transferring does not break into two halves.
And that's why you get an invoice from Home Depot, but a statement from
U of M Parking.
Why does the report look so weird?
This report (whether in display, spreadsheet, or
print) is a blend of two financial documents. On the one hand it's an
invoice generated out of our accounts receivable ledger and entered into
your accounts payable ledger. On the other hand it's a transfer executed
on the university's general ledger. Click
here for
a write-up on why that is.
Blending a departmental invoice and a central transfer was perhaps the
trickiest piece of design work. The less you notice this blend, the more
we have succeeded. But if the report is looking weird, maybe we didn't
succeed too well.
Attributes in the report, especially the printout, reveal that blending.
Some central transfer (CUFS GL) attributes
1. We sort by central (i.e. CUFS) document number, not by vendor and
then vendor document numbers.
2. We total at the top (as in a GL listing), and repeat those totals
(document, document line, etc) after page breaks.
3. There is little vendor identity (ex: no logos, or notes of an
upcoming sale).
4. Transactions look the same across vendors (ex: all are in the same
font, with sequence numbers).
Some departmental invoice (your AP, our AR) attributes
1. We only accept documents that we can prefix (ex: IV
PKG12345678),
to allow a sort within document type by vendor.
2. We page break after change in vendor prefix, allowing headings by
vendor within document type.
3. We create a table of contents by vendor, which includes contact
information and vendor totals.
4. We allow select by vendor, to replicate the individual vendor
invoices that staff used to receive.
5. We work with the vendor application to group items in the same entity
(ex: Fleet work order, Parking budget charge card) under the same
document line. This allows for the sub-totaling (ex: by work order, by
parking card) that you'd expect from an invoice.
In general, we have subordinated the invoice attributes to those of the
central general ledger. This seemed to be what customers wanted. However
we spoke more to accountants than to managers. The former would be more
concerned with reconciling to CUFS.
That subordination means that the invoice attributes suffer in at least
two cases:
1. Where there are multiple CUFS seller area/orgs for a single vendor
For example, a parking budget charge from the Washington Avenue Ramp is
sold out of 592-1020, while one out of the Church Street Garage sells
from 592-1160. When you buy parking from us, this area/org is stamped on
the CUFS document and your area/org on the CUFS document line. A CUFS
document can have only one area/org. This will probably hold true for
PeopleSoft too, as it does with the other financial systems we're
familiar with. What that means is that your parking budget charges can
spread across multiple CUFS documents, even if they're all on the same
card.
A long term solution would be for our Parking department to drop to one
area/org, similar to what Printing did several years ago. Whether you
buy from the Chemistry Copy Center or the Coffman Copy Center, your CUFS
document has a seller area/org of 591-2500. That allows them all to show
up under the same CUFS document.
Reducing to one Parking area/org would provide you with this same
coherence, and also drop documents at CUFS. However it would also reduce
reporting abilities centrally. The central university could no longer
break out ramp vs garage revenue on CUFS, but would just see both lumped
together under Parking.
A short term work-around might be for you to direct this report to a
spreadsheet. Highlight the budget charge card transactions (listed
together on the spreadsheet, since they share common column headings).
Sort and subtotal by budget charge card number. That's all the
transactions bought under the card, regardless of which area/org sold
them to you, and so also regardless of which CUFS document the money was
transferred under.
2. Where there are multiple CUFS objects for items in a single entity
When you buy from us, your area/org is stamped on the CUFS document
line. A CUFS document line (and to our knowledge, a document line in
PeopleSoft or any other financial system) can only have one object. The
object describes the account or category that the money is charged
against (ex: office supplies or fringe benefits). We currently charge
all items in a Fleet work order to CUFS object 8020-30. That allows us
to aggregate the items together under the same CUFS document line, and
preface them with work order header information (ex: work order number,
total, date started).
Pretend however that either Fleet or the central university decided that
labor and parts on work orders should be broken out on CUFS. Maybe the
former stays as 8020-30, while the latter goes to 8020-40. This would
split the work order items across two CUFS document lines, removing our
ability to aggregate them on the statement.
As with the multiple seller area/orgs for Parking, a short term
work-around would be for you to direct the output to a spreadsheet.
There the work order transactions could be sorted and subtotaled by the
work order number column.
But it's fair to say that both work-arounds would be a hassle for you,
and not an option available on the display or print formats.