BH AccountingProduct introduction

BH Accounting overview

Start here to understand what BH Accounting solves, how its modules connect, and why the product matters inside the broader operating model.

Prerequisites

Before using this guide, make sure the user has access to the module and the initial portal setup is consistent.

1. Process introduction

BH Accounting organizes the financial and accounting backbone of the operation, connecting journals, balances, exchange rates, fixed assets, and analytical structures.

BH Accounting should be understood as a connected product, not as isolated apps. Its modules work better when users read them as part of a shared operating sequence.

2. Shared foundation

Before entering the business flow, these shared modules usually define the operating context: Companies, Accounting Entities, Business Units, Employees.

3. Business flow modules

The business flow of BH Accounting is organized around these modules: Exchange Rate Types, Exchange Rates, Chart of Accounts, Finance Document Types, Finance Document Items, Journal Entries, Journal Entry Items, GL Account Balances, Fixed Assets, Cost Collectors, Revenue Collectors, Cost Tracking Objects, WBS Elements, Summarizing Calculator.

Use the manuals that follow this introduction in order to understand the logic of the product before going into individual operations.