Want an easy, free way to make your business look more professional and polished? Customize your forms. QuickBooks® has the tools.
Whether or not you think you do, most people make judgements on businesses based on collateral materials. You might notice that there’s no company logo, or that there are unnecessary blank fields. Maybe the print is very light or blurry, and there’s no message at the bottom thanking you for your business and your payment.
Getting Started
To see what forms are available for customization, open the Lists menu and select Templates to open this window:
QuickBooks will then take you back to the Templates window, and you’ll see a new entry labeled Copy of: Intuit Product Invoice. Right-click on it and select Edit Template from the menu that opens. This will open the Basic Customization window.
There are two parts to this screen. The editing options for the template you selected will appear on the left, and a preview of your invoice will display on the right. As you make modifications to the template, the preview will change to reflect them.
The best, most noticeable thing you can do to customize your invoice is to add a logo. Click the box in front of Use logo, and locate the file in the computer directory that opens. Double-click it. You logo will appear to the left of your company name and address in the upper left corner of the preview.
• Selecting a new color scheme,
• Changing fonts,
• Deciding how much of your contact information should appear, and
• Indicating whether the Print Status Stamp (PAID, PENDING, etc.) should appear where appropriate on your invoices.
Note: You can choose to use the same modified design on multiple types of forms. This is a little complicated; let us help you.
More Customizing Options
The changes you just made were fairly superficial. However, QuickBooks offers tools that let you go much further, modifying the actual content of the invoice itself, its columns, and its fields. To get started on this, click the Additional Customization button at the bottom of the screen. The window that opens displays a preview of your invoice on the right side, just like in the previous window.
Your customization options appear on the left side, divided into five different sections. You’ll work primarily with three of them for your invoice:
Header. This includes all of the information that appears on about the top third of the form, like Bill To, Terms, Due Date, and Project/Job.
Columns. What are you billing the customer for? Item, Description, Quantity, Rate, etc.
Footer. What information will you want to enter after you’ve completed the invoice’s product or service content? You’ll likely want fields like Total, Balance Due, and Payments/Credits, perhaps a Message.
Of course, you may not be printing many invoices at all if you’re set up to email them and accept payments online. But your customers, of course, will still see how carefully you’ve crafted your forms, which will feed into their overall perception of you. Let this impression be a good one.
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