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Complying with Sarbanes-Oxley
How Microsoft Navision
Can Help Companies Meet The Newly Adopted Legal Requirements
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
was signed into law in response to a series of corporate
financial scandals involving companies such as WorldCom, Global
Crossing, and Enron. These companies and others admitted to
misrepresenting their financial statements by billions of
dollars. As a result, the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission launched investigations into these frauds, and the
U.S. Senate created new regulations in an attempt to prevent
history from repeating itself.
From an accounting system
standpoint, a key to compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley is the
presence of an extensive audit trail, complete with drill-down
and drill-around functionality. The idea is to provide the
ability to trace source documents through the accounting systems
to the final financial statements, and back to the original
source documents. This is where Microsoft Navision can help.
With Navision you can drill from the customer setup screen, to
all customer transactions, to the posted sales journal, to a
posted sales invoice, to an item on that invoice, to the
inventory listing, to pictures and statistics for that item. To
users who want to be able to track down transactions and dig for
underlying data, Microsoft Navision offers an impressive
solution.
Of course an audit trail would
be incomplete without an assortment of drill-down and
drill-around tools. For this reason, Microsoft Navision includes
the following drilling tools:
PowerDrill Tools
navigate detailed transactions to the various modules and down
to the originating documents. The PowerDrill tools can also be
used to build lookups.
PowerSeek Tools
sort the data in any order you prefer.
PowerFilter Tools
build specific queries combining multiple fields of data. For
example, you can build a query that summarizes customers in
specific states, cities, and zip codes. You can also build
queries that summarize assigned territories, salespeople, and
other important data for use in direct mail campaigns.
NavisionFilter Tools
slice your numbers across departments, projects, dates, and
other parameters important to your business.
TrendScape Tools
display trends in your numbers on an annual, quarterly, monthly,
weekly, or even daily basis. You can also define your own set of
periods to analyze the results of promotions, special offerings,
or the impact of major economic events. The TrendScape tools can
handle many years of data.
These tools provide a window
that can display only the accounts, customers, entries, or other
records that fulfill a particular condition. For example, with a
simple click of a button, you can have the system display only
the customer cards under the jurisdiction of the San Francisco
office. The user can easily produce a Customer List that has
been filtered to display only the desired customers (those in
San Francisco). This type of functionality is provided
throughout Microsoft Navision.
You can set and remove a
restriction on any record field. This is because filters remain
in effect until you remove them or replace them with new ones.
To remove a filter, select the function View -> Show All.
To place a restriction on one
field, you can use what’s known as a field filter. To filter
more than one field at a time, you can use a table filter
function. Field filters and table filters perform exactly the
same function. However, a field filter places a filter only on
the field that contains the cursor.
If you are in the habit of using
only field filters, it can be good to use the table filter
feature occasionally to get an overview of all the filters that
have been placed on a window. When you enter a filter, you can
use all the numbers and letters that you can ordinarily use in
the field. In addition, you can use some special symbols or
mathematical expressions.
Sarbanes-Oxley has raised the
bar for public companies, and failure to comply can result in
harsh penalties. A key to compliance with this law is to
implement an accounting system that offers an extensive audit
trail, including extensive drill-down and drill around
capabilities. As suggested in this article, Microsoft Navision
does a good job of meeting this requirement. Microsoft Navision
users would be wise to embrace these capabilities.
This article by J. Carlton
Collins, CPA, is reprinted by permission from the Accounting
Software Advisor. Carlton Collins, an independent author,
lecturer and analyst,, is president of ASA Research, LLC. He has
installed more than 200 accounting systems and delivered 1,800
lectures around the world on the subject of accounting systems
and technology.
For more information on using
Navision for Sarbanes-Oxley compliance, or to see a demo of
these features in Navision, contact an SCS Account Executive at
(800) 655-5284.
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