![]() They have a certification course as well that you can go through with quizzes and stuff. You can start running your own books with that, or follow along with grocery receipts or something. Quickbooks and Hubdoc are free for your own account if you set them up as a bookkeeper. The combination of thigns I use are Quickbooks Online, Receipt Bank and Hubdoc. ![]() I have a diploma in accounting but it wasn't essential. 95% of my clients I don't have to do any travel for at all, and the other 5% is just picking up documents. I run a completely cloud-based bookkeeping business. I just want to get to a place where I can provide for myself reliably and help my family out. It's just that in the big scheme of things I have absolutely no prospects. Any advice, any pointers in some kind of direction, any personal anecdotes, anything at all, would be greatly appreciated.Īlso for the record, I know that getting the requisite education will take time, and even though I desperately need a quick fix I'm not asking for one, because they don't exist. I've been looking on Youtube for tutorials but without relatable context a lot of it is going over my head. I can't work an in-person job, and I can't even get remote reception jobs because they all require fluency in Quickbooks. If so, how did you get your education and training? If it was something I was interested in, would I need a bachelor's degree? My options look to be extremely limited here, I'm down to my last couple bucks, I'm paying some of my parents' bills as well as my own, and I have literally no idea what I'm gonna do. Please message the mods with any thought, ideas, etc (including feedback on the side-bar rules you just finished reading). We'd like all major changes to /r/bookkeeping to be made with community involvement. Finally, /r/bookkeeping functions as a democracy and we encourage all subscribers to propose ideas for the sub.If you have questions that specifically regard tax-law or accounting school/career planning, you will likely find better answers in /r/accounting.We do encourage using professional designations as your flair. Frequent contributors will be granted flair, with the default being "frequent contributor." Once granted flair, you have the power to tell us to make your flair say anything that you'd like.If someone is being an unconstructive jerk or spamming, please use the report button to let the mods know.(If a post is irrelevant, it will receive few up-votes and be quickly buried anyway, but comments that make someone feel dumb for posting are rude and accomplish nothing.) We want /r/bookkeeping to be a place where everybody feels welcome to post. If you feel that someone's post is irrelevant, or stupid, or something you've already seen posted, please keep it to yourself.If you feel that someone is giving incorrect advice or behaving rudely, please correct them respectfully.Please be respectful to others, whether they are bookkeepers or not. If you are being a jerk, you had better be offering some genuinely constructive comments in your jerk-y tone, or we won't think twice about banning you.Be respectful, offer constructive criticism, keep debates civil. Rare exceptions may be made for comments where the link is clearly relevant to the post's discussion. ![]()
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