Accounting — part of the ICommand platform

Books that keep themselves.
Because the work is already in the system.

Invoicing, general ledger, AP/AR, and financial reports — all built from the tickets, shifts, and transactions you already entered.

Month-end close without the month-end scramble — because the books have been closing themselves all along.

Core accounting

Everything the CPA expects.
None of the rekeying.

The accounting module is a first-class citizen of the platform — not a bolted-on export. Every ticket, every invoice, every bank transaction flows into the books in real time.

01

Invoicing

Invoices roll up from real ticket data — grouped by work order, priced from your rate cards, reconciled line-by-line.

02

General ledger

Every entry posts to the right account automatically. Full chart of accounts, journal entries, and period controls.

03

AP / AR

Bills paid, invoices collected, aging reports live. Vendors and customers live alongside the work they're tied to.

04

Financial reports

P&L, balance sheet, cash flow, trial balance — every figure ties back to a source transaction you can click into.

05

Audit-ready trails

Every change is logged. Reports can be reproduced from any date. No "who changed this?" mysteries.

06

Tax prep summaries

1099 tracking, sales tax rollups, and year-end exports built from the same data that runs the books.

How it fits the platform

From the field to the financial statements.

Accounting doesn't live in a separate tab that gets reconciled at month-end. It's the downstream of the same data that runs operations — updated every time a ticket saves.

01

Work entered

A load ticket, a daily sheet, a service visit.

02

Invoice built

Priced, grouped, reconciled from ticket data.

03

Posted to GL

Revenue hits the right account automatically.

04

Reports update

P&L, cash flow, and balances stay live.

Accounting that runs itself.
Because the work runs it.

Start with operations. The books follow — cleanly, accurately, every day of the month.

Accounting — Books That Keep Themselves | ICommand | ICommand