We recommend that the three primary purchase order reports in Blackbaud Financial Edge NXT—Open Purchase Order, Purchase Order Detail, and Purchase Order History—be enhanced to allow reporting as of a specified post date, rather than being driven solely by order date.
Rationale
From a financial reporting and audit perspective, post date is the appropriate driver for reporting under U.S. GAAP, as it reflects when a transaction is recognized in the accounting records. In contrast, order date represents an operational milestone (when a PO was created), but does not determine when financial activity is recorded or recognized.
Why Post Date Matters for GAAP
Accrual Basis Accounting
Under GAAP, transactions are recognized in the period in which they are incurred—not when they are initiated. The post date aligns with the accounting period in which the obligation or activity is recorded in the general ledger.
Period-End Accuracy
Financial statements are presented “as of” a specific reporting date (e.g., fiscal year-end). Reporting open purchase orders as of a post date (e.g., 09/30/2025) ensures:
Inclusion of all obligations recorded in the system through that date
Exclusion of transactions recorded after period-end, even if the order date is earlier
Consistency with the General Ledger
The general ledger is driven by post dates. Reports based on order date can create discrepancies between subledger (PO reporting) and GL balances, complicating reconciliations and audit support.
Encumbrance and Commitment Tracking
For organizations utilizing encumbrances, the financial impact is tied to when entries are posted—not when the PO was originally created. Post date reporting provides a more accurate view of outstanding commitments at a point in time.
Example
If management or auditors request “Open Purchase Orders as of 09/30/2025”, the report should reflect:
All POs with remaining balances posted on or before 09/30/2025
Exclude any activity posted after 09/30/2025, even if the PO was created earlier
Using order date in this scenario could:
Include POs that were not yet recorded in the financial system as of year-end
Exclude adjustments or activity posted after the order date but within the reporting period
Conclusion
Enhancing these reports to be driven by post date (with an “as of” reporting capability) would:
Align purchase order reporting with GAAP and accrual accounting principles
Improve reconciliation to the general ledger
Strengthen audit support and period-end reporting accuracy
Provide more meaningful and reliable financial information for management and governance