 to the project, it'll still populate on the income statement like normal, but it'll also populate in here so I can see it, each of these projects tracking by the project. Now also, it would be nice if I can break out my income statement by project, which would, so if I run my income statement report, if I was to run it, if you select the dropdown, we've got the product and services, we've got, well I'm sorry, here we've got the vendors or customers, so we can break out the basically the income statement in essence by customer, which could include say the sub-customers, so that's where the sub-customers can come into play. Let's add another tab, I'm gonna right click and duplicate a tab so we can look at possibly a project report, and then we're gonna go to the reports on the left hand side, close up the hamburger, and I'm gonna type in project, so we have a project profitability summary report, nothing's currently in it at this point in time, but there you have it. Now notice that when you think about the projects, notice that when you're looking at one individual project, it's great to be going in here and being able to see what is happening within a particular project and run reports for that particular project. However, it's often the case that you will wanna run a report for a job cost system that has all of the projects that are currently in play, and so that's why it's nice to be able to run a report that's gonna have basically all the projects that should tie in to basically your income statement when you're trying to do your financial reporting. So the thing that if I go back on over here, the thing that this report does great is it gives you more of an isolated view on each individual project in its own little space here, but when you do external reporting and financial statement creation, then you still might want to be running reports which is gonna be breaking out basically all of your projects. Again, we'll get into that in more detail in future courses or sections that are focused more on projects and job cost systems in particular. Okay, so we have the overview. So on the overview, we've got the income and the expenses. We've got the invoices, the expenses, bills, and hours that we can have. These are the transactions by the project, the time activity, and the project reports for the particular project. And then you've got the attachments that we can add. We have the dropdown up top. So it says not started, completed, or canceled so we can change the status of the project. We can go back to the all projects up top and that takes us to our homepage which will typically go in if I open the hamburger whenever we directly go into the projects. And so now the homepage has the status dropdown. So if I go to all status or if I went to canceled there's nothing in it. The only thing in it right now is the in progress. And then we have customers. We only have the one customers. So we could sort by customers if we so choose. And then the employee rates. So the hourly cost and the payroll expenses. And then we can go into the particular project as we were before going into the project. And now we're inside that particular project. Let's just do one more. I'm gonna go back to the projects so we can just see two projects in here and mirror them to the sub customers. So I'm gonna say new project up top and I'm gonna say this is going to be I'm just gonna call it project to project to. And then I'm gonna link it to it. This is an asterisk field. I have to have it to Sam the guitar man not to the sub customer but I just wanna compare and contrast the differences between a project and a sub customer. So we're gonna say there it is. And I'm gonna say the start date is in the beginning of January again and it is once again in progress. So we're gonna go ahead and save it. And so there it is so it opens up and now we're inside the project. I'm gonna go back to the all projects. So now when we go into this field we see our two projects and we can go in there individually. So if I open up my hamburger note that although these projects are tied to customers as you can see they have their own area outside of the customer center which if I go to the customer center is in the sales area. So if I go to the sales area and then customers you can see we basically tied a project to Jones and Sam the guitar man and that can be found separately in the projects area over there. And then these two are the sub customers. So that's gonna be, but when we get into the billing of the projects it's gonna be bill two, the Jones project one to Jones guitars and project two to Sam the guitar man. So that's the general idea. We'll do some, a little bit of billing to the particular projects we'll play with some time and look a little bit at the differences between the sub customers and the projects. But again, we get into it a lot more detail in future courses and sections that specialize in a job cost type of system. The main thing I just wanna point out with these is make sure if you're working in this area the first thing you gotta get down is kind of the terminology. A job cost system is gonna use the term jobs but they could use jobs to refer to the QuickBooks tool that we're using which could have been the old jobs and the desktop version which are now called sub customers and the new version and the sub customers the coolest newest thing is to convert the sub customers generally to the projects. So the projects are basically kind of like the jobs now that now have their own kind of place within QuickBooks, their own portal within QuickBooks. That's kind of like the general overview. Now there's nothing happened to the reports. We haven't entered anything new. So the trial balance is still standing. We're still standing on those same two legs we haven't even moved. We're just standing still here just hanging out, listen to your babble just standing there watching your babble. So there it is.