« XBRL is a Knowledge Graph | Main | Effective Automation of Record to Report Process (Iteration #4) »

Streamlining Personal Financial Reporting using XBRL

Personal finance is very disjointed and provides an excellent example of the power of something like XBRL to streamline processes.

First, you can think about a personal financial statement as somewhat of a "dashboard" into your personal finance. Your personal finance might include your checking accounts, savings accounts, credit cards, investments, your home, any student loans, your retirement plan, life insurance, family and estate planning, social security, and so on.  People such as Suze Orman and organizations like Charles Schwab and others can help you create a financial plan.  Basic accounting software like Quickbooks, Xero, and Wave among others can help you keep track of things. TurboTax and H&R Block and Taxly can help you file your tax returns.

There are different formats for personal financial statements.  The U.S. Small Business Administration has their personal financial statement form. Lots of different personal financial statement templates exist. Here is one, another, and another.

All of this tends to be very disjointed, few things "talk" to each other.  Why is that? A big part of this is that each software vendor or service provider wants to "own" the customer.  Another reason is the application centric mentality that software vendors tend to have. What if software were more data centric?

Google might be changing all this.  Apparently Google wants to be the "operating system of personal finance".  Apple seems to be after this also.

What if: (a) more standards where used, (b) better coordination existed, (c) metadata and models were defined to help things along this process, (d) artificial intelligence was used to make software smarter, (e) automated quality checks were built into processes where possible.

As I pointed out in my effective automation of the record to report process prototypes, there is a lot that can be automated.  If it can be, it likely will be.

If you want to get your head around the possibilities here, read Computational Professional Services.

What I am going to do is create an XBRL taxonomy for creating personal financial statements.  Stay tuned! (Here is the first installment of the XBRL taxonomy for personal financial statements.)

######################################

Quickbooks Online Test Drive

Posted on Tuesday, January 26, 2021 at 10:39AM by Registered CommenterCharlie in | CommentsPost a Comment

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.