This is perhaps the part that causes the most heartache for the FI Configurer. For some reason, although it is an integration area, the FI team always ends up with responsibility for it. To do a good job you need a reasonable understanding of :
Sounds daunting doesn't it ? Here is a suggested approach ...
The IMG section under GL / business transactions / integration will take you through all the necessary account determination for the automatic postings that the system may need to post. You may not need all of these.You could maintain on an as needed basis. As the project teams test or prototype their expanding functionality, the SAP system will look for the accounts to which it should post. The error message and the SAP documentation and configuration does not always explain clearly which piece of account determination is used for which type of functionality, so it is sometimes difficult to be pro-active.
Being reactive has the benefit that hopefully each side (eg: MM and FI) can develop an understanding of what the business transaction is and therefore where it should be posting. Otherwise the MM person may not even be aware that he has generated a certain type of posting ! (You'd be amazed at some of the lack of ownership from a logistics consultant for the financial postings that they generate).
I will be explaining each account determination area simply and clearly with posting examples
In the meantime, some general warnings:
This is known in the IMG as "revenue account determination", but it covers a lot more than that (discounts, taxes etc). This is what determines how the financial impact of your SD Billing document is posted into the FI General Ledger.
The integration is controlled both in SD and in FI.
In SD there is a awesome area of configuration called the pricing procedures. The pricing procedure determines the final price quoted to the customer for a particular product. This could be a complicated calculation taking into account the base price, any special prices or discounts that may apply to that scenario, taxes, freight charges etc. These prices or charges are called 'condition types'. This condition technique is used in a number of areas of SAP.
For now all we need to know is that each condition type is assigned to an account key (or in the case of rebates two account keys). You can assign multiple condition types to the same account key. There are a number of account keys that are pre-defined in the system. For example:
Now we start getting to the integration by mapping the account keys to GL accounts. But it is not as simple as that. It can be as flexible (ie: as complex) as you want. Start off with the most simple approach. Generally if one is using a good sales / revenue reporting tool (eg: CO-PA) then one does not need a lot of flexibility and variety in the GL accounts that are posted to. The level of detail that you need in GL should be determined by your financial statement reporting requirements - you may end up with only one Revenue account - it is a good bet!
So, taking the simple approach we would ignore most of the configuration possibilities : procedures, access sequences, condition tables etc (Yes it is that 'condition technique' kicking in again. Once you have worked through it once in one area and encounter it in another then hopefully you will be comfortable in knowing that most of the standard configuration can be left as is. )
We have to decide which access sequences we want to use (Five access sequences are defined in the standard SAP R/3 System). To keep it simple, let us assume we just use one - for example: the access sequence "chart of accounts/sales org./account keys".
The chart of accounts part is standard in all account determinations, so let us look at the rest. This access sequence allows us to specify different GL accounts for different Sales Organisations.
So if we had a billing document line item where the customer had some special deductions for one of the products he purchased, we could map accounts by Sales Organisation. To make it even simpler a document is within one Sales Organisation so we have an overall mapping as follows:
1 | Sales deduction for being such a nice guy | $10 | ERS | 1000 | 800010 - Sales deductions for 1000 |
Sales deduction for special promotion on particular product | $15 | ERS | |||
Base Revenue | $200 | ERL | 800000 - Revenue for Sales Org 1000 | ||
Total for item 1 | $175 | ||||
2 | Base Revenue | $100 | ERL | 1000 | 800000 - Revenue for Sales Org 1000 |
Total for item 2 | $ 100 | ||||
Document Total | $ 275 |
So the invoice that the customer gets (and that you can view in SD) will look something like:
Item 1: | $175 |
Item 2: | $100 |
Total owing , 30 days terms etc: | $275 |
The GL document posting that the system will make to FI will look something like this though:
1 | Debit (PK=01) | Customer (AR Account) | $ 275 |
2 | Credit (PK=50) | Revenue (GL Account) | -$ 300 |
3 | Debit (PK=40) | Sales Deduction (GL Account) | $25 |
Balancing to 0 as all GL documents must.... |
$0 |
Note : There is no direct relation between an SD Line item and an FI Line Item - they are different things.