{"id":2424,"date":"2025-07-18T12:00:00","date_gmt":"2025-07-18T12:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.blissfulyogaandmassage.com\/?p=2424"},"modified":"2025-07-24T12:56:10","modified_gmt":"2025-07-24T12:56:10","slug":"accounting-basics-that-will-help-your-business-grow-better","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.blissfulyogaandmassage.com\/index.php\/2025\/07\/18\/accounting-basics-that-will-help-your-business-grow-better\/","title":{"rendered":"Accounting basics that will help your business grow better"},"content":{"rendered":"
Most sales pros think their job ends when the deal is signed. But if you don\u2019t understand how<\/em> those deals affect your company\u2019s bottom line, you\u2019re selling blind.<\/p>\n When I studied accounting in college, I didn\u2019t realize how useful it would be later on as a solopreneur. But now? It\u2019s helped me price projects more confidently, negotiate with more context, and understand exactly how much a \u201cyes\u201d is worth.<\/p>\n You don\u2019t need a finance degree to sell smarter. But you do need a grasp of a few key accounting concepts like profit margins, cash flow timing, and cost structures. Once you connect the dots between what you sell and what the business keeps, your role becomes a whole lot more strategic. Let\u2019s walk through the key concepts.<\/p>\n Table of Contents<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/a> <\/p>\n Accounting is the process of systematically recording and interpreting your financial information. That includes summarizing spend, seeing where revenue comes from, and reporting transactions. Like many careers, accounting is a mix of tactical and analytical tasks. Accountants think about what your financial records will mean to regulators, agencies, and tax collectors.<\/p>\n I like to think of accounting as the backbone of any successful business, especially when it comes to sales. It provides the data showing whether the deals you\u2019re closing are profitable \u2014 and whether you\u2019re getting paid fast enough to keep your cash flow healthy.<\/p>\n Through careful analysis and reporting, accounting turns raw financial data into actionable insight, guiding not just operations and planning, but pricing, commission structures, and sales strategy, too.<\/p>\n Business accounting involves recording transactions and analyzing finances. It\u2019s a means to gain insights into cash flow, profitability, and overall financial performance.<\/p>\n For sales professionals and business owners, accounting helps connect the dots between revenue targets and real-world outcomes. It shows which products or services are most profitable, where discounts start to hurt margins, and how payment terms affect your ability to reinvest in growth.<\/p>\n You might not think about accounting when you\u2019re negotiating with a client or chasing a quota \u2014 but it\u2019s in the background of almost every sales decision.<\/p>\n Here\u2019s where it quietly plays a role:<\/p>\n Rather than being limited to behind the scenes, accounting shapes how you and your team evaluate, close, and support deals.<\/p>\n Accounting is more than staring at balance sheets all day. It shows up in how you price a deal, offer a discount, or decide which clients are worth pursuing. There are different types of accounting that support different parts of the business \u2014 and as someone who sells and delivers, I\u2019ve learned to lean on all of them in small ways.<\/p>\n Below, I\u2019ll walk through the types of accounting you might encounter and how they can directly support smarter selling.<\/p>\n Tax accounting involves maintaining and keeping track of your business\u2019s taxes. This can include filing yearly taxes, tracking spend and tax rates, as well as assisting employees with setting up tax forms.<\/p>\n Where this comes up in sales: I\u2019ve had to factor in local sales tax and VAT compliance when selling to international clients, especially in SaaS. Understanding how different jurisdictions treat digital services helps avoid surprise liabilities later. If you\u2019re quoting prices across borders, tax accounting isn\u2019t optional \u2014 it\u2019s foundational.<\/p>\n Financial accounting focuses on the value of the company\u2019s assets and liabilities. These accountants make sure that a company\u2019s accounting follows the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), which I\u2019ll describe below. They also work with cash flow statements and balance sheets.<\/p>\n In sales, this is what helps you understand what kind of revenue is truly profitable. I once closed a large deal that looked great on paper \u2014 until I realized how much of it was being eaten up by platform fees, contractor costs, and unpaid client invoices. Financial accounting helped me see the real<\/em> value of that deal.<\/p>\n Management accountants present financial data to stakeholders and senior leadership at a company. They play a greater role in reviewing what products or services a company needs, as well as how these efforts can be financed.<\/p>\n From a sales lens, this is the group that asks: Are we selling the right thing at the right price to the right people?<\/em> If I\u2019m pitching a new offer, the numbers from management accounting help me back up the business case. It\u2019s less about what sounds<\/em> good and more about what actually holds up financially.<\/p>\n If forensics brings up images of NCIS crime scenes, your deductive skills are up to par! Forensic accounting does require a certain degree of digging and detective work.<\/p>\n This type of accountant investigates and analyzes financial information for businesses. Think compliance breaches or shady contract clauses. I once had a deal fall through because the client\u2019s team flagged an irregularity in our pricing model. A forensic-style review saved us from rolling out a flawed system to future clients.<\/p>\n Cost accountants create a constant record of all costs incurred by the business. This data is used to track where the company spends and to improve the management of these expenses. Cost accountants are responsible for finding redundancies and places where the company could cut costs.<\/p>\n This is where you sharpen your pricing instincts. Early on, I priced a fixed-scope project too low because I didn\u2019t account for how many revisions it would realistically require. Once I reviewed the real costs (time, tools, subcontractor input), I built margin buffers into all future quotes. Cost accounting taught me to protect my margins without guessing.<\/p>\n Auditors are accountants who specialize in reviewing financial documents to see if they comply with tax laws, regulations, and other accounting standards. These professionals evaluate organizations\u2019 financial documents to make sure that they are accurate and follow legal guidelines.<\/p>\n For sales teams, auditors can feel like the last line of defense. If you\u2019re closing enterprise deals, especially with public companies, be prepared to provide compliant paperwork \u2014 pricing breakdowns, historical revenue data, even commission policies. Auditors don\u2019t just review your numbers \u2014 they sometimes determine whether the deal moves forward.<\/p>\n International accountants focus on working with businesses that operate around the globe. They know about trade laws, foreign currency rates, and the accounting principles of other countries.<\/p>\n When I started working with clients in the E.U., I had to adjust how I invoice, apply taxes, and account for exchange rate fluctuations. International accounting helped me ensure I was quoting and collecting the right amount \u2014 and not losing money in the conversion process.<\/p>\n Bookkeeping is a tactical financial process that includes recording and organizing financial data. That includes what\u2019s being spent and what money the business is making. This work can be done either by an accountant or a bookkeeper. Bookkeepers focus on tracking spend. Accountants go beyond, advising leaders on what to do with this data.<\/p>\n For sales, bookkeeping helps you answer key questions: Which client hasn\u2019t paid? How much recurring revenue do we actually have? What percentage of closed deals end up canceled or refunded? Before I make any sales push or launch a new offer, I look at the books. Otherwise, I\u2019m building a strategy on assumptions.<\/p>\n The simplest explanation still holds: An accountant can be a bookkeeper, but not all bookkeepers are accountants. But when you\u2019re in sales, either one can help you close smarter.<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/p>\n Sales directly impacts your margins, cash flow, and long-term profitability. Accounting knowledge helps you understand how deals affect the bottom line, so you sell more strategically and build a healthier business.<\/p>\n When you understand your cost structure, margins, and overhead, pricing stops being a guessing game. Accounting helps you see which products, pricing models, or discounts are actually making money and which are quietly eroding your margins.<\/p>\n According to McKinsey, top-performing B2B companies that use data and analytics to inform sales strategies see a 2% to 5% increase in sales<\/a>.<\/p>\n Why? Because they make pricing and deal decisions based on facts, not gut feel. By tracking cost-to-sell by channel, product, or customer, you can structure smarter offers, negotiate more confidently, and protect your bottom line with every deal you close.<\/p>\n Understanding your revenue data is a lens into customer behavior. By looking at where your income is coming from, which products are repeatedly purchased, and which customers are the most profitable over time, you see patterns that can shape your entire sales strategy.<\/p>\n Marty Bauer<\/a>, director of sales and partnerships at email marketing platform Omnisend<\/a>, puts it well: \u201cThe reason for understanding accounting is that any good salesperson or customer-facing role in general must be able to put themselves on the same side of the table with the customer. By understanding the customer\u2019s position and business needs \u2014 most of which run through accounting \u2014 you can be more adaptive to the customer\u2019s needs.\u201d<\/p>\n That perspective shift is powerful. Revenue data tells you what matters most to your customers \u2014 not just what they buy, but how and when they buy it. It helps you personalize conversations, anticipate objections, and position your offer as a smarter business decision.<\/p>\n Accurate forecasting starts with knowing your actual costs, cash flow patterns, and historical sales performance. Accounting gives you the inputs to build forecasts grounded in reality, not guesswork. For example, if your financial data shows that Q3 consistently brings in 30% of annual revenue, you can plan your outreach, hiring, and ad spend accordingly.<\/p>\n It also sharpens how you manage your sales cycle. When you know your average cost to acquire a customer, your average deal margin, and how long it takes to close, you can prioritize high-impact deals and avoid chasing leads that burn time without delivering profit. Accounting turns your pipeline into a business tool, helping you align revenue targets with actual financial outcomes so your sales strategy scales with stability, not just speed.<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/p>\n If you\u2019re an aspiring entrepreneur, running a small business, or leading sales in your own company, here\u2019s an overview of how accounting underpins the work you do. It starts with this conceptual understanding: Accounting is to financial management what a foundation is to a building.<\/p>\n It\u2019s what tells you if your sales are actually<\/em> profitable \u2014 not just impressive on paper.<\/p>\n Accounting helps you keep track of three important things:<\/p>\n Whether you\u2019re handling finances yourself or working with a bookkeeper, these phrases will come up. Understanding the language makes you sharper when pricing, forecasting, or evaluating a deal. These 24 terms will create the foundation on which you\u2019ll build your knowledge.<\/p>\n Some may not apply to your business right now, but if you\u2019re planning to grow or shift into higher-value deals, you\u2019ll want a holistic view.<\/p>\n Not to be confused with your personal debit and credit cards, debits and credits are foundational accounting terms to know. I remember the difference like this:<\/p>\n A debit<\/strong> records the money coming into<\/em> my business. A credit<\/strong> records the money going out<\/em>.<\/p>\n Let\u2019s say I invoice a client for a consulting package. The revenue that hits my account? Debit.<\/p>\n Now say I pay a contractor to help me fulfill that project. That payment? Credit.<\/p>\n When you operate out of a cash account \u2014 a business bank account holding your liquid assets \u2014 every transaction is recorded using this method.<\/p>\n For example, if I pay for ad spend out of pocket, the cash account is credited<\/em> (money is leaving), and the advertising expense is debited<\/em> (to reflect the cost incurred).<\/p>\n Why does this matter for sales? Because understanding how every quote and expense gets logged helps you avoid pricing errors, underestimating delivery costs, or burning through cash without realizing it.<\/p>\n Here\u2019s a simple visual to help you understand the difference between debits and credits:<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
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Accounting Fundamentals<\/h2>\n
What is accounting?<\/h3>\n
<\/p>\n
What is business accounting?<\/h3>\n
How Accounting Shows Up in Sales<\/h3>\n
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Types of Accounting<\/h3>\n
Tax Accounting<\/h4>\n
Financial Accounting<\/h4>\n
Management Accounting<\/h4>\n
Forensic Accounting<\/h4>\n
Cost Accounting<\/h4>\n
Auditing<\/h4>\n
International Accounting<\/h4>\n
Bookkeeping<\/h4>\n
<\/p>\n
The Importance of Accounting in Sales<\/h2>\n
Improves Pricing Decisions and Deal Profitability<\/h3>\n
Leads to Better Customer Understanding Through Revenue Data<\/h3>\n
Helps Forecast More Accurately and Manage Sales Cycles Smarter<\/h3>\n
Essential Accounting Concepts<\/h2>\n
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1. Debits & Credits<\/h3>\n