WSW - Podcast Modern Reports in QuickBooks Online
===
[00:00:00]
Introduction and Greetings
---
Dan DeLong: Welcome to another workshop Wednesday, all about casual conversations for serious workflows brought to you by school bookkeeping.com, which is where you can keep learning QuickBooks your way, however you see fit. How are you, Rachel?
Rachel Dauchy: I'm good. How are you?
Dan DeLong: [00:01:00] Excellent, thank you. Thank you.
The Importance of Modern Reports
---
Dan DeLong: Before we get into our topic of today, which is all about modern Reports, because we.
We love reports as accounting pro professionals, and when somebody changes reports, ooh that's a touchy subject.
Rachel Dauchy: Yeah. I was just fighting with a report minutes ago.
Dan DeLong: We're we'll get into that in, in, in a minute.
Intuit Login Security Concerns
---
Dan DeLong: But we wanted, I wanted to talk a little bit about, e. I, I don't know how to describe it, but, we've been talking about your Intuit login and, how your Intuit accounting professionals are, susceptible to log in logins being compromised.
And when that happens, especially in QuickBooks, on the QuickBooks online [00:02:00] space that is, that's the center of a spider web for bad actors that are out there. Now, I'm, now, I'm not talking like Matthew McConaughey bad actors. I'm talking about, that was the first name that popped up.
I, that's not, he's not a bad actor.
Rachel Dauchy: How dare you? But
Dan DeLong: I'm not,
talking about horrible actors on screen. I'm talking about. Bad actors, hackers, right?
People who are looking to take advantage of, people who are susceptible to. Providing getting, their login compromise and we had talked.
Rachel Dauchy: Yeah.
Hacking Vulnerabilities in QuickBooks
---
Rachel Dauchy: And hacking is always usually gone in through the username in that way. I, recently learned.
Dan DeLong: Yeah. And, big, the big thing is that as an accounting professional with access [00:03:00] to, several, if not hundreds of QuickBooks online subscriptions. And now that Intuit is, doubling down on integrated services like QuickBooks Payments, QuickBooks Bill Pay real money movement payroll, that.
Allows people to have access to that.
Real-Life Security Breaches
---
Dan DeLong: And, there, there's a lot of posts and horror stories on social media where their login was compromised and it, just made a terrible mess. Yep. And last last weekend or last Friday on the unofficial QuickBooks Accounting podcast, which I'm a.
Special guest host is with Alicia Katz Pollock. We had we had a very good discussion [00:04:00] about, security and the log, the login security. After that was recorded, a new thing started happening.
Rachel Dauchy: Oh boy.
Dan DeLong: Because of, because of the, The, fear and the fear is re is not false.
Evidence appearing real. This is a real thing where people have posted that they have, their login has been compromised and it such a headache. And the, unfortunately the Intuit stance is you should be more careful
Rachel Dauchy: Right, now. Okay. Now let me make sure I understand clearly. So do, are you referring to, business owner users of QuickBooks Online or accountant users that may dealing with multiple QuickBooks [00:05:00] files?
Dan DeLong: Both, right? Both.
Rachel Dauchy: Okay.
Dan DeLong: Anyone that has a login to a QuickBooks Online subscription is, susceptible.
Rachel Dauchy: Okay.
Dan DeLong: Because even
Rachel Dauchy: accountant users, we have one login and we go into QuickBooks online. We then have access to many different QBO files. But I'm guessing if me A-Q-B-O-A. QBO online accountant, not advanced user has their login compromise.
That person may have access to all the different QBO files that I do. Yeah.
Dan DeLong: Yeah. And
Rachel Dauchy: That's a total nightmare.
Dan DeLong: Oh yeah. And now, recently QuickBooks has, put as part of their, In the know updates is that, QuickBooks bill [00:06:00] pay for the free one is already included in all QuickBooks online subscriptions.
I hope I'm not giving bad actors some ideas, but hey, if they access a, an accountant's login, who has access to, 50 different QuickBooks online subscriptions that now have a free bill pay service already enabled.
Rachel Dauchy: Yeah. Or half
Dan DeLong: enabled. It's not the, accountant or the, somebody needs to fill out the rest of the, information. But assuming that is already set up or activated, somebody could go pretty much down your client list and go, okay, I'm gonna create myself as a vendor and I'm gonna send myself $999 because a thousand dollars is a felony.
Yeah. And they'll just do that down the list and now they've got, yeah. $500,000 essentially coming to them out of their [00:07:00] clients. Only because they were able to get into a login. Yep. So it's very paramount for an accounting professional to make sure that their login is secure. Yep.
So after all of this, issues were brought up of people being, and there, there is. There is a login vulnerability, for people to be able to reset some of that contact information, the email phone number by forging documents because you, the only thing that you need to be able to reset that if you don't have it is the email.
The contact information, which you pretty much make available on your website, right? Yeah. As, an accountant and a government id. [00:08:00] And, there's been a whole business of falsifying documents, and
Rachel Dauchy: you're saying somebody could take those things to Intuit and potentially reset your password.
Dan DeLong: Yeah, they can they can reset the contact information, the email address or phone number that the codes go to the the m FFA codes.
Multifactor Authentication Explained
---
Dan DeLong: And that's what we wanna talk about is the changes there, because that leads into the new sky is falling panic du jour. Is, revolving around the multifactor authentication.
There's, this new thing called a passkey, and we have a blog article about what the Passkey does and, we talk about it on the unofficial QuickBooks Accountant Podcast, which will be coming out probably either this week or next. So look forward to that. But, if they have those two [00:09:00] pieces of information, even just the email address, which is pretty much available, it's easy.
And then all they have to do is go in and provide a government form of ID identification, ah, to be able to prove who you, who they are. As you, and then they change the email. So now all those, wait, so you're saying
Rachel Dauchy: they can even present a falsified ID because they're not, it's not like they're zooming with you, looking at you and verifying that the ID is you.
Because they do that with Amazon. Just FYI if you're an Amazon accountant going in that way. But anyway.
Dan DeLong: Yeah,
Rachel Dauchy: so Intuit doesn't do that bad,
Dan DeLong: right? So really something really should change, 'cause I, I was like what's the problem? But on banks, right?
So if you've, forgotten your password and, it's on a bank, you have [00:10:00] to provide some other information. In order. In order to go through the process. Process of resetting your password or your, yeah. Don't they need two
Rachel Dauchy: forms or something like that? They need
Dan DeLong: usually they'll ask something that is account related.
Like your debit card number or your,
Rachel Dauchy: yeah.
Dan DeLong: That you would have from a statement or,
Rachel Dauchy: And if it were really yours, you would have those things readily available.
Dan DeLong: It's just not, it's just not contact information that might be. Readily available. It is something about the account. So if Intuit asked the company ID or something last four of the EIN or something that would be a little bit more, more another layer of.
Unfortunately for, people doing it is another layer of complexity.
Rachel Dauchy: It's, but I see. I would gladly do that. I, would've thought they would at least ask for a company [00:11:00] id.
Dan DeLong: No. No. The, only thing, like when you. When, if you don't have access to the email address like your office manager for some for, example, set up your payments account because you delegated that to to, to an employee and then they leave the company.
So now you don't have access to that email address, right? Yeah. The only way to do that is to reset that email address and all you have to provide is the email address, the old email address, the new email address that you want it to, and then a form of identification. Now. I don't know. Because even when I worked there, I didn't even know, you know what they do after they get that to confirm that you are who you say you are.
Again data mining is a real thing. The black, the dark web Yeah. Is a real thing. It's
Rachel Dauchy: breaches. I feel like I'm a step ahead though because I don't, I use an. Unknown email address. [00:12:00] My what's on my website and things like that. But I can see how maybe some not as tech savvy folks don't.
And oh my gosh, that's a nightmare.
Dan DeLong: Yeah. I I, remember when in. QuickBooks Online accountant. I was one of the first four agents to support QuickBooks Online Accountant when it first came out. And the main thing that it was solving for was to separate accountants from using their client's login.
Because that's what they would do, is they would just all right, let me log into your QuickBooks online. Gimme your login.
Rachel Dauchy: Yeah. I'll
Dan DeLong: just do it as you and. Blah, blah, blah. So we started to Intuit started to segregate the Intuit or the accountant from the user and to incentivize them, let's give you some accountant only tools.
Yeah. And yeah, and undo the reconciliation, which was a [00:13:00] big thing, a pain in the behind when when you had to undo the reconciliation. So that was like the first feature that. Accountant Scott, that was like, okay, alright I'll get my own login. Yeah. So that was the whole thing back in 2013.
So I'm dating myself there. So fast forward to today. Okay, so we've gotten this, login vulnerability potential, right? So on the heels of that, people are like, okay, I really should, make sure that my, my login is secure. Great. So what do they do? They go into QuickBooks or they're Intuit account, which you can access it either from inside of QuickBooks online directly, or you can go to Intuit accounts, right to accounts.intuit dot.com.
And there you can manage your, [00:14:00] your, login, all of the things, right? So you can change your password, you can update your email address. You can verify
Rachel Dauchy: yes, and I've been there. Yeah, with the help of you
Dan DeLong: now there's two things that are in there and it's caused another fervor about, oh my goodness.
Something, was hacked at Intuit, right? I reached out to the folks at Intuit and they've created a really nice article, which I've shared in the comments. And so let me just go ahead and let me get rid of. Lemme get rid of that QR code there for the earmark, and we'll share the screen here.
And this is all about the difference between multi-factor authentication and two-step verification, right? So there actually is a difference, right? So what would happen is people would go in and, log in to make sure that. [00:15:00] Two factor authentication was turned on and see that it was turned off and go, oh my goodness, somebody hacked my, account because they've turned off the two factor authentication, the end result.
Of multifactor authentication and two-step verification is the same. When you sign in, you get a code, and we've all seen that. You get a uhhuh you get a code six, mid six digit code can sent either to your email or your phone number. But the, when you sign in to QuickBooks or the account, excuse me.
I'm getting all choked up when you sign in to QuickBooks or Intuit your Intuit account and check that preference. There are two things in there and one is multi-factor authentication and set up two step verification, right? So [00:16:00] this article here. Explains very nicely the difference between the two, right?
So multifactor authentication, and it's really hard to read because they decided to put in a lighter colored font here. But multifactor authentication is not optional, right? You'll always get a code when you log in for the first time on something, right? So when something is new, you will get a code.
To verify who you are. Yeah. And that will either come to your email or your phone. So this is a mandatory feature. You don't have the ability to turn this on or off. And
Rachel Dauchy: are you saying that's usually always in the beginning set up? Yeah. With the bank? Yeah.
Dan DeLong: I get this a lot because as someone who lives and works in a fifth wheel, I am [00:17:00] always.
We, next week we'll go to Chicago. And so I'm gonna sign into QuickBooks online and it's gonna de detect that I'm signing in from Chicago, not from Michigan anymore. And so it will ask me for a code, right? You may have daily purges of your internet. Cookies and temporary internet files, which will basically the next day, right?
You sign into QuickBooks online, it appears as if you're signing in for the first time. Yeah. So that is, that's falling into the bucket of multifactor authentication. Okay. So anytime that you are doing something new to Intuit with Intuit, by signing in, it will ask you and send you the code.
Two step verification is something optional, right? And that is something that you have to set up and turn [00:18:00] that on. But that basically means that every time that you sign in, you want to get that code regardless of whether you've done it before or not. Got it. So that is a setting that you can turn on, and by default. It's turned off, right? So people may be getting these codes due to multifactor authentication because they are doing something new for at Intuit for the first time, whether it's. A new day, a new location, a new login, a new whatever, right?
Rachel Dauchy: Or sometimes I am even in the same Google Chrome profile, but I'm going back and forth between my desktop and laptop, and oftentimes it'll make me,
Dan DeLong: yeah,
Rachel Dauchy: redo the whole thing again.
Dan DeLong: Every, every time I do a conversion, even though I've signed in on the same damn computer. Yeah. It asks me to prove who I am. Yeah. And that's multifactor authentication, not the two step verification. [00:19:00] So this article and this this community post here is really nice explanation of the two.
They even have a nice video from some Intuit folks embedded in here to talk about what it is.
Passkey: The New Security Feature
---
Dan DeLong: And then on top of that, there is this new sign in option called the passkey. And as we talk about on the unofficial QuickBooks Accountant Podcast Passkey actually are designed to replace both your password and that multifactor authentication code that you get.
But that's a
Rachel Dauchy: browser thing though, isn't it?
Dan DeLong: It is a computer thing and a, and an Intuit server thing. So basically, oh, okay. The way we explained it is like war games like where you need two different keys in order to Yes. To launch the nuclear weapons, right?
So [00:20:00] that's what it is. There's something that you have on your machine or your mobile device, and there's something that Intuit has, and then. They get matched. Oh. And then that allows you to get in.
Rachel Dauchy: Oh, that's actually how that works. Okay. Yeah, I always actually thought it was at the browser level, but shows how much I know.
Dan DeLong: Because I, am requesting or like. When we talk about logging in on doing conversions, I'll log in on my Windows machine using the same login that I've set up a pass key for, and it asks for the pass key. And I don't have it because I'm not using my Mac, right? So I can't use my fingerprint on my other computer because it's stored on my, other device, right?
So you can't use pass keys in that regard. So it is actually is a little bit more. Secure. But in that case, I have to sign in using the password, which then sends some multifactor authentication code and then I'm able [00:21:00] to get in.
Rachel Dauchy: Cause you can bypass the pass key. That's usually what I do.
Multi-Factor Authentication Insights
---
Rachel Dauchy: And then I can, I'll request the code.
Exactly. And that's fine. I'm so used to requesting codes many times per day that I, it's just like part of Yeah. My existence now.
Dan DeLong: But in the grand scheme of things multi-factor authentication and two-step verification are still. Reliant on the current login method, which is a providing a password.
And that is, that is still susceptible, right? A lot
Rachel Dauchy: of them now you can do the authenticator, which actually I prefer.
Dan DeLong: Yeah, there's a, there, there's a fourth thing. I feel like it's more secure
Rachel Dauchy: than, therefore it's of
Dan DeLong: the authenticator app. It
Rachel Dauchy: makes you feel that way.
Dan DeLong: Yeah. Especially if you're using Google, because Google is really good about proving who you are.
Rachel Dauchy: Yeah.
Dan DeLong: Which is annoying that you have to go into a YouTube app or open up [00:22:00] something,
Rachel Dauchy: open up your Gmail app. Yeah,
Dan DeLong: exactly. But those types of things are just those extra steps to again, prove who you are and presumably those devices or those applications you would have access to.
But again, if you're login is compromised regardless of where it is, even with Google, that is only as secure as that login that you have. Yeah, it's
Rachel Dauchy: true because a lot of times, even the authenticator you can, say, although I don't know if once it's set up that you're using authenticator, can you go back to say, no, I just wanna put in password.
No, I don't think you can do that. I know in the setup you can say, no, I just wanna stick with password and I don't wanna use an authenticator. But I don't know if you can go if somebody can just say, you know what, like somebody can get a hold of my. Account and then go, no, you know what I decided, I don't wanna use the authenticator.
I just wanna go back to using a password. I don't know. Can you do that? [00:23:00]
Dan DeLong: I believe you can. I'm gonna double check that when we're done, I'm not going to sign in, because now. I, I ha I was doing a video or editing a video that I did really long, a long time ago, and I realized that my social security number was in the YouTube video.
I'm like, oh my goodness. Anytime anything is, involving me signing in. I probably don't want to do that. Yeah. But I went back and blurred it out. Those bad actors are like, okay, what video was that? I, it's already obfuscated. All right, we, ended up spending 25 minutes talking about something that, that I just wanted to chat about and yeah, but that
Rachel Dauchy: is really important though because it's super important.
If something like that were to happen and somebody got into your QBO. [00:24:00] Excuse me, account. That could be total disaster. And I take my access to many different accounts very seriously. So for me, that's a very big deal. Yeah.
The Importance of Unique Passwords
---
Rachel Dauchy: And
Dan DeLong: there's best practices of using just a unique email address for, your QuickBooks change best practices of, using a unique.
And a unique password for, everything. Don't use the same thing.
Rachel Dauchy: Yeah.
Dan DeLong: As, you do all the time, because one password then leads to others. And all of those things. But yes, take, safeguard. Your data because it's not just your data it's your client's data. If you're a provisor or accounting professional and QuickBooks Online, 'cause they could feasibly have access to that because you are the tip of the iceberg.
Rachel Dauchy: Yeah. And that's why I always, say use the [00:25:00] password manager. I don't scribble passwords on a Post-IT people.
Dan DeLong: Yeah. Okay.
Introduction to Modern View Reports
---
Dan DeLong: So let's now talk about the topic that we're supposed to talk about, which is all about the migration or the change to modern view reports here. I've, shared a couple firm of the future articles in the comments, so you can go in and, check on those.
But the, main thing is, what, why is this even happening, right? So my this is. This is not the first time that reports have undergone a change, right? And as I was there, and it was probably like the, third or fourth time that reports have undergone a, an overhaul inside of QuickBooks online.
But you know what? The people that are complaining today are not. [00:26:00] Complaining about the original version of reports that got an upgrade, right? So this is what happens is that every time that it changes, there is an outcry of this is pointless. This is why are we why are we breaking why, are we changing things that aren't broke?
And and then they don't see the value of it because it's basically a step backwards because and I think we mentioned that a little earlier, or. Before about the modern view doesn't have the same, values as the classic view. And so of course if you can't, if you see a profit and loss in one view as opposed to another, and they've got different, different numbers which one's, right? Like how do you know? Yeah. Like that is I can already
Rachel Dauchy: see some of the little descriptions underneath advanced, and I'm like, what? That's crazy. [00:27:00]
Dan DeLong: Yeah.
Challenges with Classic Reports
---
Dan DeLong: So the big thing and there the whole reason of why this change is, happening to begin with is because large reports, it can't be run right? So inevitably every year we would get around tax time, we would get accountants calling in to Intuit. I'm like, I'm trying to run a general ledger report which is basically every transaction, in their QuickBooks. And it stops, right? And they can't even send it to Excel.
So the, workaround was, okay, you gotta send it to you, you gotta. Do a shorter time period and send that to Excel, do another time period, send that to Excel and then and, that was the typical response that I got when, yeah, that's the worst thing ever. [00:28:00] Because here's the thing about QuickBooks online, there is no way to pur.
Old data, right? So as you're entering in QuickBooks online data into QuickBooks online, it's just getting bigger and bigger and bigger There is no condense right? Or purge off old information like there is in desktop. They have to make things bigger, right? Like it's just you know what you do with computers when you fill them up with pictures, right? You don't go through and go and delete old pictures. Why don't you just get another computer or another hard drive or whenever, right? That's the same thing that's happening with data inside of QuickBooks Online is that we're just trying to, there are, I keep saying we I still work there.
Into it is trying to make it more usable. So when you are running a really large report, the [00:29:00] classic reports would either stop and it would just say, load more at the bottom, and then you'd load more. And eventually you get to a point where it's I'm outta room. Like I don't,
Rachel Dauchy: that's so frustrating,
Dan DeLong: right?
So modern reports.
Advantages of Modern Reports
---
Dan DeLong: Are solving that, right? So the speed of which reports are being run, regardless of the amount of data modern reports are answering that. And while they're at it they are. Basically unlocking a lot of things that that accountants and bookkeepers and power users of QuickBooks have been asking for, a long time.
Really? '
Rachel Dauchy: cause I'm looking at that list, not in advance, but just in the regular and I don't care about those things. Okay. The reason I say that is because it's not doing anything that like I really would need, it's not giving me a [00:30:00] custom report, which is what I really want more than anything, and I would still have to use an some kind of external app if I didn't have advanced for spreadsheet sync.
And although I do the. Convert reports into pivot tables. That's really cool. But expanded view and compact view and optimized view I don't care about that.
Dan DeLong: Yeah. It depends, right? Like how are you using reports? So yeah. So for all across all online products, this is probably for plus essentials ledger and simple start, right?
This is probably where most people are running into what? WTF. Why are we doing this? Yeah, exactly. 'cause they're not, seeing the value of that because. A lot of the cool stuff is in QuickBooks Online Advanced, right? Yeah.
Rachel Dauchy: And I already [00:31:00] have clients that want that they don't say, oh, can I have an expanded view?
No. They want customization, right? They want to be able to rearrange things in the way that they need in something that I know can be done easily into an app. Plugged into QBO why would I not recommend that? You know what I mean? If it's gonna solve their problem,
Customization and Export Options
---
Dan DeLong: The, coolest thing that I like about modern Reports is the ability to group and total and subgroup.
Yeah. That is, that's cool. That's one of the things that, that, that was really lacking, that you couldn't really, you, could either total. By, right? Like you could group by in the classic view by one thing. Yeah. So if you wanted subtotals you were relying solely on the report if it did that or not.
If it gave you Yeah.
Rachel Dauchy: Or just export it into Excel, which is always a pain because [00:32:00] then you have to reformat it.
Dan DeLong: Exactly.
Rachel Dauchy: But yeah I, that's, that is helpful. I like that.
Dan DeLong: And being able to add columns and rearrange them. I think the user interface of customizing the report is a little bit more cleaner.
And because you will have, especially in advanced in, in, in advanced, you're gonna have a lot more customization or column options. Now that being said, the columns aren't always. Usable, right? So just like any report that's inside of QuickBooks, it really depends on what's, what side of the transaction you're looking at, of whether that's even usable, right?
Probably the, easiest example is this, this is a desktop thing, but there is a column in desktop called source name, [00:33:00] right? Which if you are looking at. The line item detail of transactions, source name will always be blank because the source is the, source. It's the actual name.
So source name actually does bring in that. Customer, right? If you're looking at, if you're running at running reports that look at invoices, it will bring in the customer name that's on the source of the transaction because it is there, right? So that's one of those fields or columns that if you're.
You could see name and source name and they say the exact same thing. But if you're looking at that source side of the transaction, of course you're looking at the same thing, right? So that's one of those things that if you are looking at certain reports, columns that are in there that say full account name or distribution account name, or like [00:34:00] what does that actually mean?
That's one of these. That's one of the things that while we're in this transition period, which this has started from last July and still is not finished.
Rachel Dauchy: Okay.
Dan DeLong: So we're, in this grace period of, you'll still potentially be able to see things in classic reporting view, and you may see some things that are only in modern view.
So you'll see a smattering of. Reports that are in classic view versus reports that are in modern view. And if they don't have the same information on them, then it's it's frustrating. It's understandably frustrating. So does it
Rachel Dauchy: have the does it mention anything about the, what Does it give you more options for [00:35:00] export?
Dan DeLong: Yeah, and you definitely will have more options in advanced where you can send it to Google Sheets or you can send it to Yeah
Rachel Dauchy: that's,
right. What I wanted to touch on, because I feel like I see, I never know if it's a right tool thing or if it's actually in QBO, but yeah, that I remember, yeah, you can export to Google Sheets now.
And and, yeah QBOA accountant, we have advanced, so yes, you can do that, but I guess you can't do that in the lower ones.
Dan DeLong: You can't send it to Google Sheets now. You can No Google
Rachel Dauchy: Sheets. Okay. Yeah. You
Dan DeLong: can send it to Excel or you can send it to CSV and then, or PDF got a file.
Yeah. Yeah. And then you can put that in, into your Google Sheets at that point. Okay. It's just some, extra time. But here's a link to an article that's available from from this article that I shared about, what's changed [00:36:00] and utilizing the modern reports as best you can.
But this is one of those things that. We're not gonna hold on to classic reports. So there, there's too much at stake with regards to needing to go to modern reports. It's, really very similar to like the new invoice experience, right? Yeah. When we talked about that a couple months ago you're not going to stop it from changing, right?
And unfortunately because it's something that accountants, bookkeepers, and ProAdvisors use on the regular, it's gonna be a nuisance just like the, whole new user interface thing, right? So all of those things at the same time is pretty maddening, I think, to, to, folks.
Because you know the last thing you wanna [00:37:00] do is learn something new when you're trying to. Find a quick answer for your client or something like that. Yeah. Okay, where is it? I can't even find it. To bring it up or or cer certain reports in the classic view, had the credit and debit column already there, or very easily to find in the modern view.
It's now taking five extra seconds to, to. To add the credit and debit columns that would drive Hector Garcia bonkers. Because yeah.
It's all about saving precious seconds with with Hector.
Rachel Dauchy: Yeah. If all else fails and if it doesn't do what you like, it's QuickBooks online and you can always plug in something different.
And that's why I love it, because you don't have to do all the things inside QBO if you don't want to.
Dan DeLong: Yeah. Yep. There's plenty of reporting add-ons [00:38:00] that, that you can use or integrate into your QuickBooks to that that wouldn't change at the same rate as as count as yeah.
As Intuit would, at their mercy.
Rachel Dauchy: And you can. Some of these you can do managerial accounting, which I'm in the middle of right now. Ah, and it's very complex. Yeah. And that's certain things you can't do in, QuickBooks Online reporting. Even in fancy advanced.
Yeah.
Feedback and Future Updates
---
Dan DeLong: So what do you think about, anybody that's watching what, do you think about the new modern reports? Do you like them? Use them. Tell us some successes. Tell us the, tell Intuit the things that are that are needed. They do respond to feedback. They've just got a lot of people to.
To talk to, right? Or, to listen, right? So there's millions of [00:39:00] people that are putting in feedback. Make sure your feedback is actionable replicatable and duplicatable because they can't fix what they can't duplicate. And if it's just a temporary thing, it'll go away with the next time that you reset your, your, temporary internet files.
Lo and behold, you'll get a MFA code for that when you sign in. So see how we just tied all that together and put it in a bow for you? All right, cool.
Conclusion and Upcoming Topics
---
Dan DeLong: So next week again, I don't have my schedule up, but
Rachel Dauchy: I, can look.
Dan DeLong: What are we doing next week?
Rachel Dauchy: QuickBooks Accountant tool updates. Oh
Dan DeLong: yeah,
So we'll talk about some of the new things that are in,
Rachel Dauchy: I love account tool,
Dan DeLong: EOA accounting, for QuickBooks Online Accountant. And we hope you all have a great week ahead [00:40:00] and we'll see you next time on the workshop Wednesday today.
[00:41:00]