1 / 16

Record Keeping for Fruit Farm Businesses

Record Keeping for Fruit Farm Businesses. Developed by: Alison M. De Marree Cornell Cooperative Extension Lake Ontario Fruit Program, Winter 2014 Adapted by: Virginia Carlberg Cornell Cooperative Extension Chautauqua County. Why Keep Records?.

carsyn
Télécharger la présentation

Record Keeping for Fruit Farm Businesses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Record Keeping for Fruit Farm Businesses Developed by: Alison M. De Marree Cornell Cooperative Extension Lake Ontario Fruit Program, Winter 2014 Adapted by: Virginia Carlberg Cornell Cooperative Extension Chautauqua County

  2. Why Keep Records? • Required by law and government agency regulations • IRS, DEC, DOL, Organic Certifiers, Food Safety (GAP) Certifiers • To PROTECT your business against government agency audits (non-compliance fines) and lawsuits. • To increase profits, efficiencies, return on investment by monitoring labor use and expense as related to the income generated by various enterprises. • To evaluate progress by comparing set standards from one year to the next • For insurance reasons (to make claims) • To obtain a loan – required by financial institutions

  3. Two Categories of Records • Production Records: • Items that relate to quantities of inputs and levels of production by enterprise and/or by resource type: yields per acre, varieties planted and harvested, pounds or bushels sold

  4. Two Categories of Records • Financial Records: • Justify or prove farm income or expense transactions: Product sales, operating expenses, equipment purchases, accounts payable, accounts receivable, inventories, depreciation records, loan balances and price information. • Production and Financial Records are put together for a complete picture of your farms’ performance.

  5. Financial Record-Keeping

  6. Enterprise Record-Keeping

  7. Types of Records • Paper • Account books • Electronic Records • Use of spreadsheets (& smart phones) • Summarizing daily records on spreadsheets • QuickBooks, Quicken, Red Wing & Other Accounting Software • Back Ups! • Keep Hard Copies & Physical Receipts in Files

  8. QuickBooks • Version • Payroll features • Print Checks • Chart of Accounts • Assistance with getting started

  9. Cornell Farm Account Book • Paper- classic (green) • Excel

  10. What do you use?

  11. What tools do you use to record production data?

  12. What do you use to record labor information? • Labor is often the largest expense for farm operations • Are you gauging how well your labor force is performing? • What data can you have your field help gather for you?

  13. Employee Timecards • Hours • Job • Field/Orchard • Variety • Yield/Quantity

  14. Food Safety: Traceability Records • Increasing regulatory environment • Traceability- from field to fork • Good Agricultural Practices (GAP) Certification • Packaging labels

  15. Summary • Record-keeping is important for various external and internal factors • Financial Records and Production Records • Many tools available, paper and electronic • Consider labor logs • Consider food safety records and traceability

More Related