The bookkeeper records what happens.
A bookkeeper’s job is to:
- Record income, expenses, and deposits
- Categorize transactions correctly
- Maintain the chart of accounts
- Reconcile bank and credit card accounts
- Keep financial records accurate and organized
- Generate basic reports (Profit & Loss, Balance Sheet)
What Bookkeeping IS And What Bookkeeping Is NOT
Bookkeeping is the daily, weekly, and monthly process of recording financial activity accurately and consistently.
It includes:
- Recording income (sales, donations, payments received)
- Recording expenses (supplies, fees, utilities, services)
- Categorizing transactions into the correct accounts
- Keeping bank and cash accounts up to date
- Reconciling accounts so the books match the bank
- Organizing records so reports make sense
In simple terms:
Bookkeeping tells the story of what happened with the money.
For ministries and small businesses, good bookkeeping helps you:
- Know where your money is going
- Make wise decisions
- Stay accountable and transparent
- Prepare clean reports for leaders, donors, or tax professionals
- What Bookkeeping Is NOT
- Filing taxes (that’s tax preparation)Giving legal or tax adviceCreating financial strategy or forecasting (that’s accounting or consulting)“Fixing” bad financial decisionsGuessing or estimating numbersJust looking at a bank balance
Bookkeeping does not:- Tell you what to spend money on
- Replace a CPA or tax professional
- Automatically make a business profitable
A Simple Way to Explain It Bookkeeping records the facts.
Accounting and tax professionals interpret those facts. Or: Bookkeeping answers: “What happened?”
Accounting answers: “What does it mean?”