Adding employees to your staff is reason to celebrate. It means you’re growing enough that you need to bring new people on board to get all of your work done.
Adding employees that need access to your QuickBooks Online data, though, requires a high level of trust. Those individuals will be able to see a lot of very sensitive company, customer, and vendor information. You need to make sure that they can only view what they need to and that their ability to enter and modify data is limited.
QuickBooks Online makes this possible with its user management tools. You can provide users with their own login information that restricts where they can go and what they can do. Here’s how it works.
Types of Users
Warning: Your QuickBooks Online subscription allows you to invite a specific number of employees, though you can add more. Ask us about this.
To set up a new user, click the gear icon in the upper right. Select Manage users under Your Company. Or click Get things done in the toolbar and select the Manage users icon in the Company box.
You’ll see a table with your own account information listed there. Click Add user in the upper right. In the window that opens, you’ll have to choose a user type. This can be a:
Company admin. This user could see and do everything, like adding users and sending money.
Standard user. This user would have full or limited access, without admin privileges.
Both of these user types would count toward your employee limit. You can also invite someone to have access to Reports only, excluding payroll and contact information (wouldn’t count toward your user limit).
Choose Standard user and select Next in the lower right. The page that opens asks you how much access the individual should have. Your options are:
All, including or excluding Payroll.
None. User could, though, manage some things and submit timesheets.
Limited. You can allow access to Customers and/or Vendors, with access rights spelled out.
After you’ve made your selection on this page, click Next in the lower right. You’ll answer a few Yes, No, or View only questions, things like Do you want this user to add, edit, and remove users? Click Next and provide the user’s name and email address. He or she will receive an invitation (good for 30 days) to set up a password and log in. Click Save to be returned to your user access list. Your user can log in after accepting your invitation.
Other ways to keep your data safe
Limiting access for other employees who must log into QuickBooks Online is one way of safeguarding your company file data. Here are some additional suggestions:
Try to avoid printing data other than necessary transactions from your QuickBooks Online file. When you do, either store it in a secure place or shred it when you’re done with it.
Keep your networks safe. Create policies and put them in writing for employees. Don’t allow workers to download apps onto their work computers, and discourage unnecessary web browsing. Encourage them to practice good email hygiene (no clicking on links or attachments unless they’ve requested the information). Consider network monitoring software, or, if your company is big enough, managed IT.
Protect data remotely. If you or your employees have company-issued phones with QuickBooks Online data on them, stress to them that they should never use those phone on public Wi-Fi networks.
Don’t leave QuickBooks Online open when you’re not at your desk.
Update your applications and operating system when necessary. QuickBooks Online updates itself, but many other applications don’t. These updates sometimes contain system security patches in addition to new features.
One serious security breach could shut you down. Follow these best practices to avoid hackers and other intrusions that could seriously compromise your data or put it in the wrong hands. Your customers, vendors, and employees entrust sensitive information that you’ve added to your QuickBooks company file. Continue to earn their trust by protecting their data as well as your own.
Questions about system security or about QuickBooks Online features? We’re here, and we stand ready to share our accounting expertise with you. We want to see you succeed, and good financial records are essential in making that happen.