Bradmark Wholesale General Supply
An ACL™ Case Study
Bradmark is a wholesale general supply company that ships to business customers throughout Northeast Pennsylvania, New York state, and Southern Connecticut. Bradmark has developed a competitive edge by offering a wide variety of quality products at competitive prices. The company’s products range from paint to watering cans.
Bradmark is a publicly owned company, whose board of directors has retained your firm to conduct the annual audit. You are the in-charge auditor who is currently examining Bradmark’s revenue and expenditures procedures and related accounts. Bradmark’s main offices are in its Allentown, PA warehouse. The following describes your client’s system
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Warehouse
Each morning Walker reviews an automatically generated inventory status report from his office terminal. He determines the items that need replenishing and selects suppliers from the Vendor file. Walker then adds a record to the purchase order file. The system assigns each new record a unique number (PO Number) as the primary key. Walker manually enters the date, the product to be ordered, order quantity, expected unit cost (the extended cost is automatically calculated by the system), and the ID number of the selected vendor. The purchase orders are then printed on Walker’s terminal, signed by him, and mailed by his secretary to the respective suppliers.
Receiving
When the products are received at the receiving dock, a receiving clerk counts and inspects them. The clerk adds a record to the Receiving Report file from the terminal in the receiving area. The system assigns a unique key (RR Num) to each record. The clerk manually enters the purchase order number, product number(s), quantity received, vendor ID number, and the date of receipt. The receiving system is not particularly user friendly. If errors are made during data entry, the clerk must void the receiving report and begin over with a new receiving report record. The voided record is then automatically purged from the Receiving Report file and
The Process is that when received, all items are counted manually and taken to the warehouse - loaded on to special shelves. Information is recorded on the computer. Each department identifies goods needed. A list is made and items taken for display and sale in the shop. Department staff replenish the shelves when needed under close supervision and management in order to supply a high class service to customers.
The ordering process begins with the decision of the customer to submit their order simply by either calling, faxing or mailing their order information. When a customer calls in their order, the customer service representatives takes down pertinent customer information, which includes the customer's name, billing and shipping address, product number and description, quantity and shipping instructions. While taking down the order, the customer service representative access the company's order entry system where inventory checks are conducted as well as credit checks are processed. In addition, delivery options are advised to the customer. Here the customer decides
Sales invoices are prepared in batches on a daily basis using numbered sales invoices. Sales invoice numbers are automatically generated by the company’s computer system. The accounts receivable clerk does not have appropriate computer rights to override the computer-generated invoice number. Upon preparing sales invoices, the accounts receivable clerk verifies that the first invoice number of the batch is consistent with the last invoice number of the previous batch. Inconsistencies or skipped sales invoice numbers are investigated and resolved before new sales invoices are prepared. The items shipped are compared to the items billed for proper quantity, price, and other sales order terms.
Two copies of the form are generated - one copy is for the warehouse personnel so they may adjust the property book data base and file, and one copy is for the customer who will be receiving the equipment. The transaction will also be logged out in the warehouse log out book.
All goods purchased pass through a receiving department under the direction of the chief purchasing agent. The duties of the receiving department are to unpack, count, and inspect the goods. The quantity received is compared with the quantity shown on the receiving department’s copy of the purchase order. If there is no discrepancy, the purchase order is stamped “OK—Receiving Dept.” and forwarded to the accounts payable section of the accounting
The super computer, Telson records all the sales. The order is automatically generated that evening. At midnight, the warehouse fills that order and it sits back on
Once the customer complete the entry form and all information is received correctly the customer will receive a printed version of the information provided to ensure all records were correctly entered. If for some reason the was an error in the information inputted the customer will have a chance to correct the information and reprint the document.
An important decision for any shareholder is deciding whether or not to do business with that company. When a business is audited, the operations are reviewed to make sure that nothing is being hidden. An auditor will review the company’s financial statement and practices to confirm that each are direct and correct. The financial statements are the business’s way of representing them and showing that they are following the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. The audit process is an important one because it provides a platform for the auditor’s opinion concerning the financial statements of the company. As part of the audit process the auditor will conduct an audit plan that outlines a number of actions that he or she will be perform while also detailing the reason for those actions. With every audit, the business’s management is in charge of handing over the financial statements that the auditor will review; while the auditor will review the statements for any material or immaterial misstatements.
A supply chain solution to ordering would be to invest in purchasing software set up on a network for KFF management and store managers to access at anytime. This software would allow all stores to place orders cohesively. Each store manager can see how much product is being sold in each store and compare sales. If there is an overstock in one store, managers can move inventory to another store by looking at the data on the network. Kathy can implement a Just-in-Time (JIT) system. This is the concept behind creating the firm 's product in the least amount of time (Gomez-Mejia & Balkin, 2002). Kathy and the management team will develop a smooth and integrated production process. Possibly in the future KFF can use the same type of JIT inventory systems as Wal-Mart. The inventory reorders are generated as products are scanned at check out. As soon as an items hits a certain number in stock, the information is sent to the supplier for reorder
The system will automatically update data inventory for raw material once a shipment has been confirmed from an approved manager’s wireless device. The System shall provide a large data server for all invoices to be scanned in and stored for record purposes. Invoices scanned in will be stored by a Date-Time-Company Code-Order Number, as well as a search function providing employees the ability to retrieve original invoice forms. The system will update all data servers for receiving, shipping, raw materials used and final products produced continuously throughout day-to-day operations.
The assessment of Bradmark’s internal controls over its revenue cycle procedures were done through the
Trace items returned to the receiving report, taking note of quantity and date received (S‑4).
After he completes his manual analysis, he then prioritizes which suppliers should be called first. Mr. Watkins manually phone, fax or email the purchase order to the suppliers.
point of sale system. The POS system is a perpetual inventory counting method that electronically records items immediately upon their point of sale (Stevenson, 2015, pg. 552). In other words, as a cashier scans a customer 's groceries, each scanned item is automatically recorded in the system and deducted from the store’s inventory. Implementing a point of sale would benefit a business’s inventory management function in several ways. First, the POS system will provide managers with a continuous flow of updated information (Stevenson, 2015, pg. 552). As a result, the information will provide more accuracy when used for sales forecasts and analysis, which substantially affect inventory decisions. Continuously, this inventory system would also allow greater flexibility in the sense that it can be wirelessly linked to the main company’s inventory system, creating a network of the company’s inventory systems. The POS system is capable of tracking many operations at once and can be modified according to management’s needs (MacCarthy, n.d.). This flexibility would undoubtedly benefit a large company like Wegman’s with many store locations. Lastly, the system is able to help businesses maintain a high level of customer service. Because the system gives customers a receipt with the price and quantity of each item purchased, the customer is able to see exactly what he or she purchased. This practice