Keeping
track of your assets when you are a large business, such as a university with
several campuses or a company with far-flung offices can be a genuine
challenge. Realistically, you cannot assign more than one or two people to take
stock of all of your assets and even this could take weeks or months resulting
in a costly venture.
Whereas
in the past, manual tracking and stocktaking was the only option, there are now
programs designed to facilitate and streamline the monitoring, verification and
management of fixed assets. Strong asset
register software supplemented with the idu Assets Module should be able to
accommodate multiple companies, asset books, cost centre and asset hierarchies,
making this process a non-issue for your company.
A
few simple extras can make the world of difference to how you manage your asset
register, so be sure to look out for the following automated options with your
software…
The cost centre manager should be notified of new assets that have been assigned to
them. Selecting the new asset view should allow the cost centre manager to
allocate it to a location and a person responsible
There should be a function that enables users to
perform asset verification aimed at
physically verifying the company’s assets on a periodic cycle. If assets have
not been verified, it should send users an overdue asset verification reminder,
noting whether it is current, 30 days, 60 days or 90 days overdue.
Existing
assets should be displayed by asset group, clearly showing
the asset cost, accumulated depreciation and book value. Selecting an asset
group should display the assets within the group and the relevant information
pertaining to the asset.
There should be an asset disposal option, allowing the user to dispose of an asset
giving a reason and any additional comments. Once the submit button has been hit,
the administrator should be automatically notified of the disposal.
If an asset is transferred internally, between branches
for example, the cost centre receiving the asset transfer should be required to
accept or reject this inward transfer.
When logging on to the application the user should be notified that an asset
has been transferred and that it needs to be accepted or rejected, and the cost
centre that originated the transfer should be notified of the result.
You should be able to view detailed asset
information, either by an asset view or cost centre at various levels within
the cost centre structure dependent on user access. The summarised asset details should be displayed in the selected
structures and by drilling down through the structure, the user should be able
to see cost and depreciation figures at the various levels for a selected
period.
The system should also go a long way to automating
the reconciliation of assets from
budgeted CAPEX to actual spend and support a many to many reconciliation
environment.
There are a number of reasons you might need to
track your assets from allowing the cost of the asset to be spread over its
“working life”, to meeting Financial Regulation requirements, to providing
details such as their location and who the responsible person for it is or even
simply for insurance purposes.
But with advanced
technology that is easy to use and navigate, this should not be a chore for you
or your staff; the people responsible for each asset should keep the system up
to date and your administrator should simply be notified if anything changes,
ensuring your asset register is always current and ready for review.
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