Businesses of all sizes naturally enjoy seeing sales and payments roll in on Shopify, Amazon, Square, and Paypal, etc. And as the business grows, it’s natural to add more selling and payment channels so that sales can increase exponentially. However, each additional channel adds another layer of fiscal monitoring that you’ll need to plan for. As a business owner, you place a lot of trust in the selling and payment platforms when you sign up and configure your account. One of the key steps is to enter your company bank account, so your payouts can be deposited on a timely basis. From there it should be smooth sailing, right?Well…. most of the time, it does. However, there are some key situations that can arise with (most of) the major selling and payment platforms that can cause your Payouts to not hit your bank account as you had intended. In this article, we will shine a light on a few of the things the Bookkeep team sees each month when our customers call us to get help with tracking down their payouts from Square or Shopify. (We will cover other platform payouts in a future article.)But first, it’s important to take a step back and explain HOW we are able to see where the payouts went, and how we can help hone in on the exact sales day in question. Because Bookkeep bases its automated daily journal entries on the SALES data, we are able to parse out what is owed on each day’s sales by channel. The software separates all of those payments and books them as a Debit to a designated Asset Clearing account, with one entry for each payment channel. Here is a simplified example - if you had $4500 in sales (plus sales tax) on Shopify, and $2000 was paid using Paypal, $1000 on checks and cash, and $2000 from Shopify’s payment solution, our entry would look like the entry below. (Note - we are making this very simple and assuming there are no returns, coupons, discounts, that the platform fees are zero, etc and we’ve used an even number for the sales tax in our example for easy math). DEBITCREDITSales $4500Sales Tax Owed $500Paypal Clearing Account $2000Credit Card Clearing Account $1000Shopify Payment Solution $2000TOTAL: $5000TOTAL: $5000 THEN, when the payment hits your bank account from PayPal, the entry looks like this: DEBITCREDITPaypal Clearing Account $2000(Your bank name here) Account $2000TOTAL: $2000TOTAL: $2000 Lather, rinse, and repeat for each payment received, as they come in. In this way, you can always see which payment channels owe you, and how much they owe you. If a balance is left in a clearing account that does not get zeroed out, it's really obvious and you will know which day’s sales to look at.So if things are progressing normally, and you use the logical process that our software automates for you, or you create a manual one that mimics the same process, you will always be able to identify if a payout is missing. That’s the good news. But what if a payout is just “missing”?
Payouts can “go missing” in several ways. Here are some of the more common ones we’ve seen.
In this case, there are two likely culprits.
Shopify has some good guidance about when Payouts hit, and lists several reasons that can cause them to be delayed or “missing”.
NOT listed in the Shopify Payout help topic above, is the effect that the new Shopify Balance account will have on your payouts. If you set up a Shopify Balance Account, the money will no longer be deposited into your original designated bank account. Because Shopify wants you to do everything within their platform, including keeping your money there and paying your bills, they have rolled out a new product called Shopify Balance. Once set up, all your payouts will go to that account instead of your old bank account. You’ll earn interest on your funds. And, you are expected to pay your bills from there as well. Just like a regular bank account. According to the Shopify Balance help center, you can still direct a portion of your sales to a payroll account. It’s therefore very important to understand the full ramifications of creating the Shopify Balance account (before you pull the trigger), as it may cause you to have to alter how you pay your bills and manage your money. You’ll also need to ensure you give your accounting team the reports each month so they can manually code the expenses and fees to your accounting system. For this reason, we recommend you speak with your accountant before doing this.
What if your payout reaches your bank account but it is LESS than you expected? This could be for a variety of reasons.
We hope this article has been helpful! The bottom line is that your Payouts need to be carefully monitored, and you should have a system to ensure you are reconciling your payouts to your deposits, regularly. ******************************Automating your accounting using an automation tool like Bookkeep will ensure your revenues, sales tax, platform fees, discounts, coupons, refunds, returns and chargebacks, third party promotions, and expected payouts will be booked correctly to your accounting system. When the payout hits, the use of an asset clearing account will surface any missing monies due to you. Automating this process makes this effortless and sustainable for even the busiest multi-channel business.