• Episode 29: When QuickBooks Starts Touching Real Money: Payments, Invoices, and Bank Feeds
    Jun 10 2026
    Episode 29: When QuickBooks Starts Touching Real Money: Payments, Invoices, and Bank Feeds

    In this episode of QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success, father-daughter team Erica Northrup and Lee Davis talk about what happens when QuickBooks becomes more than a place to organize your books.

    Once you start using QuickBooks Payments, invoice payment links, ACH payments, bank feeds, and billable time, QuickBooks is no longer just helping you track numbers. It is connected to real money movement inside your business.

    That can be incredibly helpful, but it also means business owners need to understand what QuickBooks is actually doing before they click certain buttons.

    The biggest lesson in this episode is the difference between Record Payment and Charge a New Payment. Lee shares a real client situation where a customer was accidentally charged twice because the business owner thought they were simply recording a payment that had already happened, but QuickBooks understood the action as a new payment request.

    This episode is especially helpful for small business owners who send invoices through QuickBooks, accept ACH or credit card payments, use bank feeds, or want a cleaner workflow for tracking billable time.

    Key Takeaways
    • QuickBooks Payments allows customers to pay invoices electronically through a payment link.
    • When QuickBooks is connected to payments, business owners need to understand the difference between recording activity and initiating money movement.
    • Record Payment means the payment already happened.
    • Charge a New Payment means QuickBooks is being asked to process a new payment.
    • Choosing the wrong option can lead to duplicate charges, fees, frustrated customers, and extra cleanup.
    • Bank feeds are powerful, but they work best after the QuickBooks file is properly set up and reconciled.
    • Bank feed issues may be caused by browser problems, bank-side issues, QuickBooks-side issues, or open support cases.
    • Time tracking inside QuickBooks can help service-based businesses capture billable work and create cleaner invoices.

    Questions to Reflect On
    • Do you know whether your QuickBooks payment workflow is simply recording payments or actually processing new payments?
    • Are your invoices, customer balances, and payment settings set up clearly enough to avoid duplicate charges?
    • Have you connected your bank feed before your QuickBooks file was properly set up?
    • Are you reviewing bank feed transactions carefully, or are you relying too heavily on QuickBooks suggestions?
    • If you bill for time, do you have a consistent process for tracking and invoicing billable hours?

    Mentioned in This Episode

    Free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard

    Download at: https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecard

    Send Us Your Questions:

    support@leedavisandcompany.com

    Lee Davis & Company:

    leedavisandcompany.com

    Timestamps

    00:56 - What Happens When QuickBooks Starts Touching Real Money

    02:10 - How QuickBooks Payments Help Businesses Get Paid Faster

    12:48 - How Invoices and Payment Links Work Together

    20:49 - Record Payment vs. Charge a New Payment

    25:47 - The Duplicate ACH Payment Client Story

    31:07 - Why Bank Feeds Should Not Be Set Up Too Early

    35:01 - How to Troubleshoot QuickBooks Bank Feed Issues

    38:34 - Using QuickBooks Time Tracking for Cleaner Invoices

    42:13 - Final Reminder: Record Payment Is Bookkeeping, Charge a New Payment Is Payment Processing

    Call to Action

    If you enjoyed this episode, hit subscribe and stay connected with us at leedavisandcompany.com.

    Download our free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard to see whether your QuickBooks setup is giving you the financial insight you need.

    Have a QuickBooks question? Send it to support@leedavisandcompany.com — your question may be featured in a future episode.

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    47 mins
  • Episode 28: How QuickBooks Turns Everyday Transactions Into Financial Reports — Part 2
    Jun 3 2026
    Episode Title

    Episode 28: How QuickBooks Turns Everyday Transactions Into Financial Reports — Part 2

    In this episode of QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success, father-daughter team Erica Northrup and Lee Davis continue their conversation on how everyday QuickBooks transactions become the financial reports business owners rely on.

    Part 1 focused on QuickBooks forms like invoices, sales receipts, bills, checks, and expenses. In Part 2, Erica and Lee move deeper into what happens after the right form is chosen.

    They explain why categories matter, how the Chart of Accounts organizes your numbers, what flows to the Profit & Loss, what belongs on the Balance Sheet, and why the bank feed should never replace proper bookkeeping judgment.

    This conversation is especially important for business owners who open their Profit & Loss or Balance Sheet and wonder, “Is this actually right?”

    Because good reports do not happen just because transactions were entered into QuickBooks. Good reports come from using QuickBooks correctly.

    Key Takeaways
    • A correct dollar amount in the wrong category can still create a wrong financial report.
    • Categories connect transactions to the Chart of Accounts and determine where they show up on the Profit & Loss or Balance Sheet.
    • Loan payments, owner draws, equipment purchases, credit card payments, and transfers need to be recorded carefully.
    • The Profit & Loss shows business performance over a period of time, while the Balance Sheet shows what the business owns, owes, and has built at a specific point in time.
    • Bank feeds are helpful, but they do not always know whether a transaction should be matched, split, excluded, or categorized differently.
    • Reconciliation, Accounts Receivable, Accounts Payable, uncategorized transactions, and unusual entries are great places to start checking whether your reports are accurate.

    Questions to Reflect On
    • Are your QuickBooks transactions being categorized correctly, or are you relying too much on the bank feed?
    • Do your bank and credit card balances in QuickBooks match your statements?
    • Have you reviewed your Profit & Loss and Balance Sheet together, or are you only looking at one report?
    • Do you have uncategorized income, uncategorized expenses, old unpaid invoices, or old unpaid bills that need to be reviewed?
    • Are your reports giving you the information you need to make decisions about hiring, equipment, taxes, debt, and paying yourself?

    Mentioned in This Episode

    Free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard

    Download at: https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecard

    Send Us Your Questions

    support@leedavisandcompany.com

    Timestamps

    00:56 – Continuing the conversation from Part 1

    02:34 – How categories connect to the Chart of Accounts

    09:34 – Why Cost of Goods Sold matters on the Profit & Loss

    15:52 – What shows up on the Balance Sheet

    30:06 – Why the bank feed helps but can also create problems

    34:24 – Simple places to check if your reports are accurate

    40:49 – How good reports lead to better business decisions

    Call to Action

    If you enjoyed this episode, hit subscribe and stay connected with us at leedavisandcompany.com.

    Download our free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard to see whether your QuickBooks setup is giving you the financial insight you need.

    Have a QuickBooks question? Send it to support@leedavisandcompany.com — your question may be featured in a future episode.

    Show More Show Less
    46 mins
  • Episode 27: How QuickBooks Turns Everyday Transactions Into Financial Reports, Part 1
    May 27 2026
    Episode 27: How QuickBooks Turns Everyday Transactions Into Financial Reports, Part 1In this episode of QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success, father-daughter team Erica Northrup and Lee Davis begin Part 1 of a two-part series on how everyday activity inside QuickBooks turns into the financial reports business owners rely on.Your Profit & Loss, Balance Sheet, Accounts Receivable, Accounts Payable, and other QuickBooks reports do not appear out of nowhere. They are built from the transactions entered every day: invoices, bills, checks, expenses, sales receipts, payments, deposits, payroll, and journal entries.In Part 1, Erica and Lee focus on the transaction level: what QuickBooks needs to know, why the form you choose matters, and how choosing the wrong form can create duplicate income, duplicate expenses, unpaid invoices, unpaid bills, and reports that do not reflect what really happened in the business.This episode is especially helpful for small business owners who look at their Profit & Loss or Balance Sheet and wonder, “Can I actually trust these numbers?” As Lee explains, QuickBooks is only reporting back what it has been told. If the information going in is wrong, the report coming out will be wrong. Next week, in Part 2, Erica and Lee will continue the conversation by looking at how the categories and accounts you choose affect what shows up on your Profit & Loss and Balance Sheet — and why this is where a lot of QuickBooks messes really begin.Key TakeawaysQuickBooks reports are only as reliable as the transactions behind them.Every invoice, bill, check, expense, payment, deposit, payroll entry, and journal entry affects the books.QuickBooks needs context, not just an amount. It needs to know who the transaction connects to, what type of transaction it is, where it belongs, when it happened, and whether it should be matched.Choosing the wrong QuickBooks form can create duplicate income, duplicate expenses, unpaid invoices, unpaid bills, Accounts Receivable problems, Accounts Payable issues, and inaccurate reports.The bank feed is helpful, but accepting QuickBooks recommendations without understanding the transaction can create a bigger mess.If your reports feel wrong, the first place to look is not the report itself. It is the transactions behind the report.Part 2 will go deeper into how categories and accounts affect your Profit & Loss and Balance Sheet.Questions to Reflect OnAre your QuickBooks transactions being entered through the right forms?Are customer payments being matched to invoices instead of entered as new deposits?Are vendor bills being paid through the correct bill payment process instead of duplicated with checks?Are you adding transactions from the bank feed that should actually be matched?Do your reports reflect what actually happened in the business, or are they only showing what QuickBooks was told?Mentioned in This EpisodeFree QuickBooks Clarity ScorecardDownload at: https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecardSend Us Your Questionssupport@leedavisandcompany.comWebsiteleedavisandcompany.comRecommended ResourcesQuickBooks Clarity ScorecardUse this free resource to start identifying whether your QuickBooks file is giving you clarity or confusion.Timestamps00:55.000 - Introducing Part 1: how QuickBooks turns everyday transactions into reports02:55.000 - Why accurate transactions lead to accurate reports07:24.000 - What QuickBooks needs to know when you enter a transaction14:15.000 - The main QuickBooks forms business owners need to understand25:32.000 - How choosing the wrong form creates duplicate income and expenses29:55.000 - Why reports are built from the transactions behind them30:45.000 - What’s coming in Part 2: categories, accounts, the Profit & Loss, and the Balance SheetCall to ActionIf you enjoyed this episode, hit subscribe so you do not miss Part 2 of this conversation.And if you are listening and thinking, “I’m not sure if my QuickBooks file is actually set up in a way I can trust,” we created a free resource for you.Download the QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard to start identifying where your file may be strong, where it may be messy, and what might need attention first.You can download it here:https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecardHave a QuickBooks question? Send it to support@leedavisandcompany.com. Your question may be featured in a future episode.
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    34 mins
  • Episode 26: Accounting 101 for Business Owners, Part 3: Where the Foundations Show Up in QuickBooks
    May 20 2026
    Episode Title:Episode 26: Accounting 101 for Business Owners, Part 3: Where the Foundations Show Up in QuickBooks

    In this episode of QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success, father-daughter team Erica Northrup and Lee Davis wrap up their Accounting 101 series by showing how accounting foundations actually show up inside QuickBooks.

    This conversation picks up where last week’s episode left off. Erica and Lee move from accounting terms like income, expenses, assets, liabilities, equity, accounts receivable, accounts payable, Profit & Loss, and Balance Sheet into the practical QuickBooks forms business owners use every day.

    They explain why an invoice is not the same as receiving a payment, why a bill is not the same as paying a bill, why a credit card payment is not automatically an expense, and why owner draws, loan payments, sales tax, and payroll liabilities are often misunderstood.

    The big idea of this episode is simple: QuickBooks forms tell the accounting story.

    When the wrong form, account, or category is used, QuickBooks may still produce reports — but those reports may not be reliable. This episode helps business owners understand where mistakes happen, why they matter, and what to look at first if their QuickBooks file feels unclear.

    Key Takeaways
    • QuickBooks forms are not just data entry screens — they tell QuickBooks what kind of accounting event happened.
    • Invoices, payments, bills, bill payments, expenses, checks, sales receipts, and journal entries all affect your books differently.
    • A customer payment is not always new income if the invoice already recorded the sale.
    • A bill payment is not a new expense if the bill was already entered.
    • Credit card payments reduce a liability; they should not duplicate expenses.
    • Loan payments often include both principal and interest, which affect different parts of the books.
    • Owner draws are usually equity transactions, not regular business expenses.
    • Sales tax collected is typically a liability, not income.
    • QuickBooks reports may look official, but that does not mean they are accurate.
    • Business owners should regularly review their Chart of Accounts, Profit & Loss, Balance Sheet, bank feed, and reconciliation reports.

    Questions to Reflect On
    • Are you using the correct QuickBooks forms for invoices, payments, bills, expenses, and checks?
    • Do your reports look complete, but still feel difficult to trust?
    • Are credit card payments, loan payments, owner draws, or deposits being categorized incorrectly?
    • Does your Chart of Accounts clearly support your Profit & Loss and Balance Sheet?
    • Are you matching transactions in the bank feed, or simply adding them without understanding where they belong?

    Mentioned in This Episode

    Free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard

    Download at: https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecard

    Send Us Your Questions:

    support@leedavisandcompany.com

    Website:

    leedavisandcompany.com

    Timestamps

    00:00 – Why this episode concludes the Accounting 101 series

    01:53 – How QuickBooks forms connect to accounting terms

    04:07 – Why receiving payments correctly matters

    07:26 – Bills, accounts payable, and paying vendors

    10:18 – Why paying a bill is not the same as writing a check

    17:34 – Common QuickBooks mistakes with credit cards, loans, owner draws, deposits, and sales tax

    25:42 – Why reports can look complete but still be wrong

    29:30 – Practical places to check inside QuickBooks

    33:21 – Final takeaway: accounting terms are built into QuickBooks

    Call to Action

    If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success and stay connected with us at leedavisandcompany.com.

    If your QuickBooks reports feel confusing, unclear, or hard to trust, download our free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard. It will help you identify where your QuickBooks file may be clean, unclear, or unreliable.

    Have a QuickBooks question? Send it to support@leedavisandcompany.com — your question may be featured in a future episode.

    Show More Show Less
    38 mins
  • Episode 25: Accounting 101 for Business Owners, Part Two: Where the Foundations Show Up in QuickBooks
    May 13 2026
    Episode TitleEpisode 25: Accounting 101 for Business Owners, Part Two: Where the Foundations Show Up in QuickBooksIn this episode of QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success, father-daughter team Erica Northrup and Lee Davis continue their Accounting 101 conversation by showing where the basic accounting foundations actually appear inside QuickBooks.Last week, Erica and Lee covered the core accounting terms every business owner should understand: income, expenses, assets, liabilities, equity, the Profit & Loss, the Balance Sheet, and why your bank balance is not the same thing as profit.This week, they take those concepts one step further and connect them directly to QuickBooks.You will learn how the Chart of Accounts organizes your financial information, why choosing the right category matters, how income and expenses build your Profit & Loss, and how assets, liabilities, and equity show up on your Balance Sheet.This episode is designed to help business owners understand that QuickBooks is not just asking for labels when it asks you to choose a category. It is asking where each transaction belongs in the accounting system.And when those choices are made correctly, your reports become clearer, more useful, and more trustworthy.This is now part two of a three-part Accounting 101 series. Next week, Erica and Lee will continue the conversation by explaining how QuickBooks forms — invoices, bills, checks, expenses, sales receipts, and payments — connect to what actually happened in your business.Key TakeawaysThe Chart of Accounts is the backbone of your QuickBooks file.Every transaction in QuickBooks connects to an account.Income, expenses, and cost of goods sold affect the Profit & Loss.Assets, liabilities, and equity affect the Balance Sheet.A clean Chart of Accounts makes reports easier to understand.Too many accounts, duplicate accounts, and wrong account types can create confusion.Loan payments, owner draws, payroll, and personal expenses are often miscategorized.QuickBooks categories determine where transactions show up in your reports.If your reports look wrong, the issue is often hidden in the transactions that fed the report.This episode sets up next week’s final part on QuickBooks forms.Questions to Reflect OnDo you understand what your Chart of Accounts is doing inside QuickBooks?Are your income and expense categories simple, clear, and useful?Do you know which transactions belong on the Profit & Loss versus the Balance Sheet?Are loan payments, owner draws, payroll, and credit card balances being handled correctly?If you opened your Profit & Loss or Balance Sheet today, would you trust the story your numbers are telling?Mentioned in This EpisodeFree QuickBooks Clarity ScorecardDownload at: https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecardSend Us Your Questionssupport@leedavisandcompany.comWebsiteleedavisandcompany.comRecommended ResourcesQuickBooks Clarity ScorecardEpisode 24: Accounting 101 for Business Owners, Part OneEpisode 26: Accounting 101 for Business Owners, Part Three — coming next weekTimestamps00:53 - Welcome to Part Two of Accounting 101 for Business Owners03:05 - Why the Chart of Accounts is the foundation inside QuickBooks05:46 - Common Chart of Accounts mistakes business owners make10:40 - How income and expenses connect to the Profit & Loss19:00 - What belongs on the Balance Sheet in QuickBooks22:06 - Why liabilities, credit cards, and loans matter27:35 - Why miscategorized transactions make reports tell the wrong story29:10 - Why this conversation is becoming a three-part series30:48 - Free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard and final call to actionCall to ActionIf this episode helped you better understand where accounting foundations show up inside QuickBooks, make sure you subscribe so you do not miss the final part of this three-part Accounting 101 series.And if you are wondering whether your own QuickBooks file is giving you clear, reliable numbers, download our free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard.It will help you take a step back and identify where your QuickBooks file is clear, where it may be confusing, and where there may be gaps affecting your numbers.Download the free scorecard here:https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecardHave a QuickBooks question you would like us to answer in a future episode? Send it to:support@leedavisandcompany.com
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    33 mins
  • Episode 24: Accounting 101 for Business Owners: The Simple Terms Every Owner Needs to Know
    May 6 2026
    Episode TitleEpisode 24: Accounting 101 for Business Owners: The Simple Terms Every Owner Needs to Know

    In this episode of QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success, father-daughter team Erica Northrup and Lee Davis go back to the basics with a plain-English Accounting 101 conversation for business owners.

    This episode is not about turning you into an accountant. It is about helping you understand the basic accounting language behind your business numbers so that QuickBooks, financial reports, bookkeeping, and conversations with your accountant feel less confusing.

    Erica and Lee break down the accounting terms every business owner should know, including income, expenses, profit, loss, assets, liabilities, equity, bookkeeping, accounting, the Profit and Loss report, the Balance Sheet, cash, and profit.

    If your QuickBooks file feels overwhelming, your reports feel confusing, or you are not sure what your numbers are actually telling you, this episode gives you the foundation you need to start making sense of it all.

    Key Takeaways
    • Business owners do not need to become accountants, but they do need to understand basic accounting language.
    • Bookkeeping records what happened; accounting explains what it means.
    • Income is money the business earns, but not every bank deposit is income.
    • Expenses are the costs of running the business, but not every payment is an expense.
    • Assets are what the business owns, liabilities are what the business owes, and equity is what is left for the owner.
    • The Profit and Loss report shows business performance over time.
    • The Balance Sheet shows what the business owns, owes, and has in equity at a specific point in time.
    • Cash in the bank is not the same as profit.
    • Understanding basic accounting terms helps business owners read reports, ask better questions, catch mistakes, and make stronger financial decisions.

    Questions to Reflect On
    • Do you understand the difference between money coming into your bank account and actual business income?
    • Are you looking at both your Profit and Loss report and your Balance Sheet, or only one piece of the financial picture?
    • Do you know whether your QuickBooks numbers are helping you make decisions or leaving you more confused?
    • Are you relying only on your bank balance to decide whether your business is healthy?
    • Could your conversations with your accountant or bookkeeper improve if you understood the basic accounting language better?

    Mentioned in This Episode

    Free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard

    Download at: https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecard

    Send Us Your Questions:

    support@leedavisandcompany.com

    Recommended Resources
    • QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard
    • Future Episode: Applying Accounting 101 Terms Inside QuickBooks
    • Lee Davis & Company QuickBooks training and consulting resources

    Timestamps

    00:55 - Why Accounting 101 matters for business owners

    08:17 - Bookkeeping vs. accounting explained in plain English

    11:29 - Income, expenses, cost of goods sold, and profit

    18:45 - Assets, liabilities, and equity made simple

    29:20 - Profit and Loss vs. Balance Sheet

    36:50 - Why cash in the bank is not the same as profit

    41:41 - How accounting terms help business owners make better decisions

    46:18 - Simple Accounting 101 takeaways every owner should remember

    Call to Action

    If you enjoyed this episode, hit subscribe and stay connected with us at leedavisandcompany.com.

    Download our free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard to see whether your QuickBooks setup is giving you the financial insight you need.

    Have a QuickBooks question? Send it to support@leedavisandcompany.com — your question may be featured in a future episode.

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    53 mins
  • Episode 23: The 3 QuickBooks Workflows Every Business Owner Needs to Get Right
    Apr 28 2026
    Episode TitleEpisode 23: The 3 QuickBooks Workflows Every Business Owner Needs to Get Right

    In this episode of QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success, father-daughter team Erica Northrup and Lee Davis break down the three core QuickBooks workflows every small business owner needs to understand: money in, money out, and month-end.

    They explain why messy QuickBooks files are often not caused by one big mistake, but by inconsistent workflows repeated over time. Lee shares how business owners often rely too heavily on the bank feed, skip important steps, mix up forms, or fail to close out the month properly.

    This episode helps business owners see QuickBooks as a system — not just a tool — so they can build cleaner books, more reliable reports, and better financial clarity.

    Key Takeaways
    • Most QuickBooks problems are really workflow problems.
    • The three essential workflows are money in, money out, and month-end.
    • A consistent money-in workflow helps prevent missing or double-counted revenue.
    • A clear money-out workflow helps business owners understand what they owe versus what they have already paid.
    • Month-end review turns QuickBooks from data entry into decision-making.
    • Consistency matters more than perfection when building better QuickBooks habits.

    Questions to Reflect On
    • Is your money-in process consistent every time revenue enters your business?
    • Are you clearly tracking the difference between bills, expenses, checks, and payments?
    • Do you close out each month, reconcile accounts, and review your reports?
    • Are your QuickBooks reports giving you clarity — or creating more confusion?

    Mentioned in This Episode

    Free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard

    Download at: https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecard

    Send Us Your Questions:

    support@leedavisandcompany.com

    Related Episode:

    Episode 22: Bill, Check, or Expense? Choosing the Right Form in QuickBooks

    Recommended Resources
    • QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard
    • Episode 22: Bill, Check, or Expense? Choosing the Right Form in QuickBooks

    Timestamps

    00:00 — Why QuickBooks Workflows Matter

    01:04 — Why QuickBooks Problems Often Start with Workflow

    05:27 — Workflow #1: Money In

    14:23 — Workflow #2: Money Out

    22:06 — Workflow #3: Month-End Process

    37:59 — Where to Start if Your QuickBooks Feels Inconsistent

    Call to Action

    If you enjoyed this episode, hit subscribe and stay connected with us at leedavisandcompany.com.

    Download our free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard to see whether your QuickBooks setup is giving you the financial insight you need.

    Have a QuickBooks question? Send it to support@leedavisandcompany.com — your question may be featured in a future episode.

    Show More Show Less
    42 mins
  • Episode 22: Bill, Check, or Expense? Choosing the Right Form in QuickBooks
    Apr 21 2026
    Episode 22: Bill, Check, or Expense? Choosing the Right Form in QuickBooks

    In this episode of QuickBooks Mastery for Small Business Success, father-daughter team Erica Northrup and Lee Davis break down one of the most misunderstood foundational concepts in QuickBooks.

    They explain why bills, checks, and expenses are not interchangeable—and how using the wrong one can quietly create messy books, inaccurate reports, and confusion in your workflow.

    If you've ever wondered:

    “Does it really matter which form I use?”

    This episode will give you a clear, practical answer.

    Key Takeaways
    • QuickBooks forms represent real-life financial events—not just data entry
    • A Bill is for tracking what you owe before payment (Accounts Payable)
    • A Check is for money going out immediately by cheque
    • An Expense is for money going out electronically or by credit/debit card
    • Using the wrong form can distort reports, duplicate expenses, and create confusion
    • The simplest rule: match the form to what actually happened in real life

    Questions to Reflect On
    • Am I tracking bills before I pay them—or skipping Accounts Payable?
    • Do my QuickBooks forms reflect how money actually moves in my business?
    • Where might using the wrong form be creating confusion in my reports?

    Mentioned in This Episode

    Free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard

    Download at: https://lee-davis-and-company.aweb.page/unlock-clarity-free-scorecard

    Send Us Your Questions:

    support@leedavisandcompany.com

    Timestamps

    00:00 – Introduction and why this topic matters

    01:17 – Why QuickBooks forms are not interchangeable

    04:12 – What a bill actually means (Accounts Payable explained)

    07:00 – Restaurant example: tracking food invoices properly

    10:30 – What a check represents in real life

    14:15 – Expense vs check (credit card vs cheque clarity)

    20:15 – The simplest rule: pay now vs pay later

    21:00 – What goes wrong when you use the wrong form

    25:15 – What to do if your workflow is incorrect

    Call to Action

    If you enjoyed this episode, hit subscribe and stay connected with us at leedavisandcompany.com.

    Download our free QuickBooks Clarity Scorecard to see whether your QuickBooks setup is giving you the financial insight you need.

    Have a QuickBooks question? Send it to support@leedavisandcompany.com — your question may be featured in a future episode.

    Show More Show Less
    28 mins