There is an awful lot good about QBE as we like to call
it. But the single best thing about QBE
is its price. It is four times cheaper
than the average mid-market accounting system.
Four times, not four per cent, four times ! A 20 user version of a Sage or Iris Exchequer
mid-range system will cost about £20,000.
QBE costs £5,000.
Having got your attention I hope to keep it before you start
thinking about what to do with the remaining £15k in your budget.
For me the remaining top 4 benefits are:
- Easy to use. Yes they all say that but some systems really are very difficult to use. QBE is well designed to make it simple, it has an active technical community forum and it has tips and movies for most of the functions.
- Well connected. Quickbooks has a huge base of users, most in the US but nevertheless this has resulted in a large number of independent business applications that connect to QuickBooks and the Enterprise system, QBE. They all connect through the QBE web connector so it’s a consistent and fairly simple set up. We use an on line web time sheet system which took about 2 hrs to set up. It has connections to CRM systems like Salesforce, Sage CRM, Sugar and a few CRM applications designed specifically for QuicBooks. There are also a number of plug-in ecommerce applications and point of sale systems.
- Great filing. QBE has an integrated document management system. You can drag an email attachment onto the transaction or account and its available for look up at any time. Besides this, QBE provides a click through to the original transaction from all of its reports.
- Smart financial report writer. Its called QSW. It completes the reporting job that many other systems leave undone. Apart from enabling you to create the report through a designer in Excel it recognises the need to pull a number of reports into a financial pack. Typically this would be a Balance Sheet, P&L, Cashflow, some divisional reports, a commentary etc, Each of these are on separate tabs, Once you are ready you run the report and it combines the lot into a PDF.
There are many other benefits and in the next post I will cover 6 – 10.
It’s important however to point out some negatives.
1.
You won’t look
so good at a dinner party with other business leaders when the subject of
ERP systems come up. The others who
preside over SAP, Sage, Microsoft and Exchequer may have a guffaw at your
expense when you tell them that QBE is running your multi million pound
business. You will have to wait till the
end of the evening for your payback as you drive off in your Porsche paid from
the saving in switching to QBE. (Calculated saving over 5 years including maintenance and consulting fees).
2.
There is only
one field that controls the fiscal period allocated to a transaction. That is the document date. For those of us who are used to the older
systems this is a big weakness.
Typically, almost half of the supplier invoices are not posted into the
period that corresponds to the date of the invoice. There are two main reasons for this;
·
invoices are received late
·
there is a delay in getting them approved and
entering them in the system.
To a large degree, businesses are
sending invoices out promptly, particularly in this economic climate, so it’s
not as big a problem. Nevertheless we would
still opt for a separate fiscal period field.
3.
Certain accounts are fixed, their position cannot be
changed. This applies to the Exchange
Gain or Loss account. We would like to
split it by currency and between gains and losses.