Billing: Difference between revisions

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*'''Billing''' is how you can report to customers on activities performed for them, and the outstanding charges. A Charge in Commit can be set as Billable or not-Billable. Billable Charges can be marked as Billed, upon which they become read-only.
*'''Billing''' is how you can report to customers on activities performed for them, and the outstanding charges. A Charge in Commit can be set as Billable or not-Billable. Billable Charges can be marked as Billed, upon which they become read-only.
==Overview==
As a computer services business, it is essential that you control customer debts, and keep track of services provided to each specific customer according to their service contract.
Commit helps you do this by managing three types of entities (see Glossary):
#Items
#Contracts
#Charges
Tracking Charges is a key factor for running your service business efficiently and improving its performance. Using the Contracts/Charges/Items in Commit simplifies the important task of tracking Charges.
==Work Flow==
The following is a common work flow which may be used in your business when working with CommitCRM:
<div class="center">'''I: Log a problem'''<br>When a customer reports a problem, open a Ticket in CommitCRM
->
'''II: Solve the problem'''<br>Handle the Ticket remotely (e.g. by the phone or remote control) or by dispatching a technician for an onsite visit
->
'''III: Log the work done (Charging)'''<br>Log Charge records for the time spent, work performed or parts used in order to solve the problem (resolve the Ticket)
->
'''IV: Billing'''<br>Bill the customer for the relevant Charges recorded (unless covered by a contract)
</div>
The work flow explained in this document focuses on the Charging phase (III) and the Billing phase (IV).
===Alternative Work Flows===
The flow above assumes you will be working with Tickets in order to report on a customer issue.
Alternatively, it is possible to add Charges for an Account (customer) directly in the Account or Contract (see [[Using Contracts]]). This can be helpful in certain cases, such as, when a customer visits your office/repair shop and purchases products or parts, or where you offer consulting services and need to track the time spent on consulting.

Revision as of 07:15, 5 August 2009

Commit is a complete software solution for managing computer services businesses, targeted at small to mid-sized IT service providers. Commit manages your service processes using Tickets management and Intelligent Dispatching

In this document, you will learn about Items, Charges and Contracts in Commit, what they mean, how you use them, and the impact they can have on your business work flow while using Commit.

Glossary

  • Accounts in Commit can be customers, vendors, business partners, friends, leads, and so on. Each Account holds related data which is any other information related to the Account, such as scheduled Appointments, open Tasks, Tickets/incident history, Assets, Charges, linked Documents and so on.
  • Tickets in Commit are used to represent any incident, problem, or job you handle for a given Account (customer). While viewing Ticket information, you can see all data-related to the Ticket. This includes scheduled technician visits, open tasks, special service notes, the Account’s service Contract (see below), linked documents, Charges for labor (see below), expenses and parts, etc.
  • Items in Commit are where you define each individual service and product you offer. The Items list in Commit acts as your price list. In Commit there are three types of Items: Labor, Expenses and Parts.
  • Contracts in Commit are the service agreements you have with your customers, that determine how you will charge your customer for services, and track the status of the agreement.
  • Charges in Commit are work/parts replacement completed for the customer, and the cost of that service or product. A charge may be used to bill the customer later, but it can also be used for documentation purposes.
  • Custom Pricing lets you set special prices for selected Accounts or Contracts. Once you set custom pricing for an Account or Contract, all Charges created for those Accounts or Contracts will be based on the custom price.
  • Billing is how you can report to customers on activities performed for them, and the outstanding charges. A Charge in Commit can be set as Billable or not-Billable. Billable Charges can be marked as Billed, upon which they become read-only.

Overview

As a computer services business, it is essential that you control customer debts, and keep track of services provided to each specific customer according to their service contract.

Commit helps you do this by managing three types of entities (see Glossary):

  1. Items
  2. Contracts
  3. Charges

Tracking Charges is a key factor for running your service business efficiently and improving its performance. Using the Contracts/Charges/Items in Commit simplifies the important task of tracking Charges.

Work Flow

The following is a common work flow which may be used in your business when working with CommitCRM:

I: Log a problem
When a customer reports a problem, open a Ticket in CommitCRM

->

II: Solve the problem
Handle the Ticket remotely (e.g. by the phone or remote control) or by dispatching a technician for an onsite visit

->

III: Log the work done (Charging)
Log Charge records for the time spent, work performed or parts used in order to solve the problem (resolve the Ticket)

->

IV: Billing
Bill the customer for the relevant Charges recorded (unless covered by a contract)


The work flow explained in this document focuses on the Charging phase (III) and the Billing phase (IV).


Alternative Work Flows

The flow above assumes you will be working with Tickets in order to report on a customer issue.

Alternatively, it is possible to add Charges for an Account (customer) directly in the Account or Contract (see Using Contracts). This can be helpful in certain cases, such as, when a customer visits your office/repair shop and purchases products or parts, or where you offer consulting services and need to track the time spent on consulting.