Posted on September 23rd, 2009 by Kevin Partner
FreeAgent Accounting software: a year in the life
It seems to me that there’s only any point commenting on Account
s software once you’ve been using it for a year. Well, just over a year ago, I made the switch from Sage to FreeAgent in the desperate hope that I might find something less labyrinthine, easier to understand and, perchance, actually useful on a day to day basis.
When I set my main business up in 1999 there was really only one choice for accounting software: Sage and you’d be forgiven for thinking that this was still the case given their marketing budget and visibility.
The consequences of choosing Sage were that I needed to employ someone specifically to use that one piece of software and that I got very little use out of it because I would have needed to buy an extra licence to view the information. I confess that I experienced many instances of “Sage Rage” as every useful feature (such as my being able to share my book-keeper’s information) involved an extra licence at huge expense. In my view, Sage abuses its position as the de-facto standard but, having now used an online service, I will never go back to any desktop software, least of all Sage.
Overall, my conversion to FreeAgent has been an utter joy. As an illustration, I’ve gone from having to employ someone three days a week to do the books on my main company to doing the books myself in no more than one hour a month. In fact, I also do the books for another business and that takes 30 minutes a month and now have FreeAgent setup for all my companies.
Here’s how it works (having set up your account) -
- Download your statements from your online banking account
- Upload them to FreeAgent. FreeAgent then tries to work out what each entry means and only asks for explanations of those it can’t be sure about. It gets progressively better at this over time and I typically only have a dozen or so transactions to explain per month.
…that’s it.
Doing the VAT? Just make sure your statements have been uploaded, click Taxes, VAT, and there it is: a visual version of the paper form for you to fill straight in.
FreeAgent handles invoicing, estimating, contacts, expenses, dividendsand regular bills along with a complete array of other features. All of these work efficiently and intuitively and I like the fact that the developers are constantly adding new tweaks and features.
How about sending the books to the accountant? Easy: under Accounting you’ll see a range of reports to send to your accountant along with the ability to export the whole lot to Excel.
Accountants are a conservative lot and many of them are tied to the Sage treadmill (of course it suits them to perpetuate the air of complication and mystery around accounting that Sage encourages) but I’ve persuaded my accountant to accept information in FreeAgent format (you could even add them as a user on your account). If they don’t, then I recommend you find an accountant that does and remind them who works for who.
FreeAgent ranks in my top couple of web applications of any sort. As an extremely busy person, I confess to almost enjoying doing the accounts now!
It’s rare that I feel able to recommend a product unreservedly: this is one of those occasions. FreeAgent starts at £15 per month for a sole trader and, given the range of features and ease of use, could easily become your most important application for administering your business.
Tags: accounting, freeagent
Posted in: Online business
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12 Responses to “ FreeAgent Accounting software: a year in the life ”
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September 23rd, 2009 at 10:40 pm
I briefly contemplated writing a web-app that interfaced with Sage, and quickly discovered from their website that their software is neither open nor extensible, and the documentation is not publicly available it seems. Heck, it’s not even cross-platform. Sage seems to be stuck somewhere back in the dark-ages of proprietary software, and I sincerely hope I never have to use it.
September 24th, 2009 at 9:58 am
I switched to FreeAgent a month ago and I genuinely DO enjoy doing my accounts now!
My accountants were some of the “Sage Treadmill” types that you described, so I’m now happily switching to some accountants who are”FreeAgent Friendly”.
I’d recommend this application to absolutely EVERYONE who is a freelancer or runs a small business.
September 24th, 2009 at 11:02 pm
I’ve been furtling with both MoneyDance, and Accountz. MoneyDance is quite a nice piece of work, but very US-centric.
Sage actually are now so deeply embedded in UK business that it’s practically a CV item to “know your sage” if you are a book-keeper. Not that this is a good thing…
September 25th, 2009 at 8:36 am
@Chris: No Sage software isn’t open but is extensible. For a start you have the ODBC driver that gets installed with Line 50. Whilst this is read only its great for easy access to the data. Then if you want to write data you need the SDK, its quite extensive and well documented but of course you do need to pay for the privelege!
I myself did an alpha prototype of Line 50 in a web browser, you can see it at http://sage50web.domorewithsage.com
September 25th, 2009 at 8:44 am
Steve: yes I know what you mean but I live in hope that things will move on with time, especially in small businesses where the business owner needs to be closer to the day to day accounts. Maybe Sage will wake up and smell the coffee and develop an easy to use online service of their own. Aha ha.
John: I think there’s a vested interest for both accountants and Sage in keeping the quid pro quo. It was a genuine paradigm shift for me to to use a piece of accounting software that is as easy to use as all other software.
Fortunately my accountant is more flexible than many and accepts the data in the format I provide.
September 30th, 2009 at 3:34 pm
To be honest, I would rather have a download version of this program. I am not a fan of having information such as accounting online.
October 10th, 2009 at 4:24 pm
For online accounting, estimates, invoicing etc. Moobiz http://www.moobiz.com is worth a look, pricing also starts at £15/month.
You also get project management including to-dos, file management etc and a CRM.
November 27th, 2009 at 2:42 pm
HI
We are a taxi company Hummingbird Cars in London. We provide Airport Transfer service from all london airports.
We are new in the business and we require to buy a good accounting software. Can anyone please advice which software will be suitable for us as we are a small business and also which one will be relaiable and affordable.
http://www.hummingbirdcars.com
Thank you
December 21st, 2009 at 3:23 pm
Take a look a Xero- http://www.xero.com . It seems to be similar to Free Agent in some ways but you can create batch payment download files to send to your bank. There is an API that could be very useful to online businesses and also it can Intergrate directly with your PayPal statements and accept bank feeds directly from HSBC. Pitty I closed my HSBC business account quoting bad IT facilities as my main reason for closeing my accounts just one months before this feature went live!
March 20th, 2010 at 11:59 pm
Hi Kevin,
I know you are a flash/php fan, so another online accounting app that you may be interested in is http://www.accountsportal.com – its written in flex with a php backend.
30 days free trial and only £8 / month thereafter.
March 29th, 2010 at 9:29 pm
Sage may still be the market leader, but not because it’s the best. The main reason is simply lethargy/fear of the unknown on the part of business owners, bookkeepers and accountants.
I strongly recommend people wavering to give FreeAgent’s 30 day free trial a go. Give it a try and I doubt you’ll stick with Sage/complex spreadsheets.
October 23rd, 2010 at 12:53 am
Im not sure why sole traders want the unnecessary extras that clog up the pages and confuse the user all together. Sole traders should look for the simplest option, I tried and tested many of these accounting systems, and my choice out of all of them was http://www.contraccount.com. It has all of the invoicing features required as well as straightforward and simple layout for accounting tasks.
Many of these systems have limits, Contraccounts has none. For a self employed builder such as my self, Contraccounts is definitely the way to go, as it contains only the tools you need.