Describe the order-to-cash process
The Sales and marketing module in Supply Chain Management manages the order-to-cash process. This process involves converting prospect to customer, maintaining sales orders, and confirming product delivery. The process ends after processing the sales invoice. The following diagram describes the order-to-cash process.
The major transactions in this process are as follows:
Sales quotation
Sales order
Packing slip
Sales invoice
Return order
Sales quotation
A sales quotation is a formal business document that displays the cost involved for a potential customer in purchasing a specific service or product. It initiates a business transaction cycle providing an itemized list of products and services along with the price per item/service, terms of sale, and acceptable payment methods.
A quotation can be prepared for an existing customer or for a prospective customer. If the quotation is confirmed, the prospect can be converted to a customer.
Sales order
A sales order is a commercial document generated by an organization. The sales order specifies the details of the products and services ordered by a customer and confirms the delivery within the given terms and conditions. Once the sales quotation is approved, a sales order is created. You can also create a new sales order from the Sales order page.
A sales order contains two main sections: sales header and sales lines.
A sales header holds the sales order number, date, customer information, and other details applicable to the entire sales order. Each sales order can have one or more sales lines. Sales lines consist of items, units of measurement, sold quantities, prices, and other information related to each line. Other information like discounts, taxes, changes, and delivery addresses are available in both the header and line.
Sales packing slip
After the sales order is confirmed, the delivery process gets triggered. First, the goods to deliver should be picked in the warehouse through a picking list process. The items are blocked in the inventory following the picking list process and prepared for shipment. The shipment process may contain a transportation delivery document providing information such as the shipping contractor, owner of the goods, and shipment loader. After the order is shipped, the packing slip is posted, which changes the sales order status to Delivered.
Sales invoice
When a sales order is delivered, the sales order lines can be processed for invoicing. Invoicing a sales order increases the accounts receivable balance by posting the transaction to the appropriate ledger book. In addition to the product price, a sales order invoice also considers tax, charges, commissions, and other fees involved in the sales order process. When posted, the sales order status is changed to Invoiced.
Return order
Customers can return items for various reasons. For example, an item might be defective, or it might not meet the customer's expectations. The return process starts when a customer issues a request to return an item. After the customer's request is received, a return order is created.
There are two types of return orders, as follows:
Physical return: This return order authorizes the physical return of the item, impacting the inventory on hand.
Credit only: In the credit-only return order, only customer credit is authorized, without any physical return of the product.
When the return material authorization (RMA) is registered, you can create another associated sales order referred to as a replacement order. The replacement order has the same functionality that is associated with a sales order.
In the following video, you learn how to create a sales order and incorporate tax and charges on the sales order.
After the sales order creation, the subsequent processes are inventory picking, registration, and packing. These processes are discussed in the video about inventory transactions in this learning path.