Hopefully you’re not keeping receipts in a shoebox and have to scrounge around at tax time to get everything in order. And I hope you won’t have to pay your accountant for the extra hours it’ll take to get everything organized.
When I started my business almost 11 years ago, as part of the Accounting section of my filing system, I had a folder for each vendor I spent money with regularly (e.g., gas, light, Office Depot, etc.). When I found myself sticking receipts in a To Be Filed folder, I knew my system was too tedious. Because I was procrastinating about filing everything, I knew I needed to simplify my system.
Here is a simple solution that works for me.
This system is simple so it’s easy to maintain.
One thing though, I had to figure out a way to quickly find receipts for higher-priced products in case I needed repair, etc. I created a contact in Outlook called “Big Ticket Items.” In the text area of the contact I have a 2-column table that is similar to the one below. If I ever need to find a receipt, I’ll know which month/year bank statement to pull. (To create the table: if you use Outlook as your email editor, create the table in Word and paste it into the text area of the contact. Once it’s there, you can click inside the cells and type as you normally would. When you need a new row, click inside the last cell of the table and tab. Once this table fills up, you can quickly find what you need by using Find. Open the Big Ticket Items contact, click anywhere in the body, then press F4. Type whatever you’re looking for in the resulting Find what box and press Enter.)
| Date Purchased | Description |
| 5/15/2008 | HP Laptop, Best Buy |
| 5/29/2008 | Office Telephone, Office Depot – ATT |
| 8/6/2008 | Luggage at TJ Maxx |
| 8/23/2008 | Headset for ATT phone, Office Depot |
| 8/29/2008 | Took iPhone back and got BlackBerry, AT&T |
What system have you developed that works for you? Let us know.
-Peggy Duncan, SCORE Atlanta
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Peggy DuncanVisitor
OK. Four choices: learn how to scan (as easy as using a copier); get someone to come in to scan (cheap labor like a kid); don’t worry about scanning and just separate everything as I described in the article; or, of course, use the service you suggested.
Going forward, put a system in place so that it doesn’t pile up again. Get to it!
DianaVisitor
yeah, i just don’t really know how to use a scanner. and i have a big box (maybe hundreds) that i need to back up… that would take a really long time to scan.
Peggy DuncanAuthor
Hi Diana, the concept at shoeboxed.com requires me to mail them all of my receipts. I’d be worried they’d get lost. I use my Neat Receipts scanner when I want to create a softcopy of anything. I’d rather do this and keep everything in-house.
Other readers: what do you think?
DianaVisitor
have you tried http://www.shoeboxed.com for organizing receipts?