Manual Lists

A manual list lets you select specific accounts, accounting units, activities, user analysis values, assets, or leases. Manual lists are not based on attributes. For example, you can select individual accounting units without identifying an attribute that is common to all of them. The only members of a manual list are those you define.

Creating a manual list, as the name implies, is a manual process. Any changes to the list, such as adding or removing accounting units, must also be done manually. For these reasons, manual lists are not often used to create large lists.

You can convert an automatic list to a manual list. A common practice is to create an automatic list first, convert it to a manual list, and then manually add or remove a few select accounting units. This process can provide a helpful tool for "what if" analysis.

For example, ABC Company is planning to reorganize their regions. They want to move some accounting units from the eastern and western regions to the central region. They might convert an automatic list of all stores (accounting units) in the central region to a manual list. They could then add or remove individual stores and use Account Analysis (GL95.1) or produce financial reports to see the impact on the regions.

Note: You cannot convert a manual list back to an automatic list.