If you can nail your understanding of GRN, you're going to save yourself a lot of hassle in the long run.
Every company will have a slightly different invoice processing method, especially if they're automating and using different systems. However, there's one thing that every company must do, regardless of the organisation's size or whether they're using some fancy software, and that's using a Goods Received Note (GRN). For a seemingly simple document, they play a pretty big role in the accounts payable process. If you can nail your understanding of them you're going to save yourself a lot of hassle in the long run.
In essence, a Goods Received Note acts as the official receipt of goods or services by customers to their suppliers. Both the suppliers and customers can keep and refer back to this document as proof that the ordered good were delivered. Usually sent along with an invoice, the GRN should always be kept and saved so each company's finance team can refer back to it at any time.
There's no strict guideline to follow as to the style of your GRN, but there are a few key things that must go on every one:
The name of the supplier and their supplier number
The date and time of delivery
A note stating which products were delivered
The quantity of each product (eg. toilet plunger, 15)
The name and signature of the procurement manager
The name and signature of the supplier manager
You may encounter a Goods Dispatched Note, and there's no need to be confused about that. They act as proof from the supplier that the goods have been dispatched, and once those goods have been delivered that same note can then be referred to as a Goods Received Note.
To give you an idea, here's how invoice processing usually goes.
Decide what you need and identify your chosen supplier
Create purchase order and send to your supplier
Receive the invoice from the supplier
Receive the goods
Confirm receipt of delivery
3-way match using the purchase order, invoice, and GRN
So the Goods Received Note comes in right at the end of the process, and serves as evidence that the purchase has been completed and goods have been received correctly.
When you're part of a bustling finance team, keeping track of every purchase at every step is incredibly important. That way if there is an issue you can identify it straight away and know what the cause is. Using GRNs as part of 3-way matching also means that finance teams can make payments with confidence. If you have both approval workflows and 3-way matching in your process, you can almost eliminate wasteful spending and mistakes.
GRNs are also helpful in maintaining your supplier relationships, because when someone from both parties has signed it off there is no risk of misunderstanding and all your steps are on record.
A GRN is important because it allows organisations to confirm their order was sent by the supplier. They can then mark it as received.
A goods received note is issued and sent by the supplier. The GRN is then kept and filed by the recipient’s finance or AP team.
Once the GRN is issued, the recipient’s AP team will use it to three-way match and confirm that all their data on the purchase order, invoice, and GRN is correct before they make the final payment.
We have excellent guides on key parts of the order process, when the goods or services have been received and how to GRN an order. This article explains how to GRN your purchase:
LEARN MORE HOW TO GRN AN ORDER
We have a workflow step for invoice approvals that can check the GRN status. It will then pass onto the next step if the condition is true but will wait if the GRN status isn’t acceptable. The workflow step will then send recurring reminder emails, and place an alert for the designated user when they login to Zahara. Read on to find out how to set this up.
Latest news, events, and updates on all things app related, plus useful advice on app advisory - so you know you are ahead of the game.