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This page explains the core SAP terms you’ll meet during Phase 1: Verification of the Fast Implementation Track. In short, it’s the SAP-to-human dictionary, translating technical jargon into plain English so anyone (even without SAP experience) can follow what’s happening inside In-House Secure’s prototype system. It matters because once you understand what these switches and settings actually mean, you can spot system issues before they become project problems.

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Term Plain English Explanation
Accounting Entry A digital record showing money movement. Like writing “I spent £5 on lunch” in your notebook. SAP creates these automatically whenever something is bought, sold, or transferred.
Balance Sheet A financial report that shows what the company owns, what it owes, and what’s left (its value).
Budget Control A rule that stops spending once a set limit is reached. Think of it as a safety lock on your wallet.
Chart of Accounts (CoA) A big list of all the money “buckets” a company uses. Like folders labelled Sales, Expenses, or Taxes. Every transaction goes into one of these.
Clearing Account A temporary holding area for money while SAP figures out where it really belongs. Like a waiting room for payments.
Company Code A digital version of a legal entity that keeps its own books inside SAP. Each one has separate financial records.
Controlling Area The part of SAP that tracks internal costs and budgets. The system’s version of a business coach.
Document Splitting SAP’s method of breaking one financial transaction into smaller pieces so each department or profit centre gets its share.
Document Splitting Characteristics The labels used when SAP divides documents, such as profit centre or segment. These ensure every posting knows who owns it.
Document Splitting Method The rulebook SAP follows when deciding how to split transactions.
Enterprise Structure The digital family tree of a company. Showing how all locations, warehouses, and departments link together.
Financial Statement Version (FSV) The layout SAP uses to print financial reports like balance sheets or profit and loss statements.
Fiscal Year Variant The company’s chosen financial calendar, usually January–December, but can be any 12-month cycle.
Funds Management (FM) A system used mostly by governments or non-profits to control budgets and spending, not profits.
General Ledger (G/L) The master financial log that records every sale, purchase, or payment. The system’s ultimate book of truth.
Inheritance (Document Splitting) When SAP automatically copies key data (like profit centre or segment) from one document to another. No retyping required.
Item Category A label telling SAP what kind of thing is being processed. For example, a normal sale, a free sample, or a return.
Ledger A specific set of financial records that follows certain accounting rules. For example, one for local tax law and another for international reporting.
New General Ledger (New G/L) The modern version of SAP’s accounting engine. It can handle multiple ledgers, real-time updates, and split transactions automatically.
Parallel Accounting Keeping more than one set of books at the same time. For instance, one for UK standards and another for EU rules.
Plant A physical place like a factory or warehouse where goods are made, stored, or shipped.
Posting Period The time window when SAP allows financial entries. Like deciding you can only write in your diary for this month, not last year.
Posting Period Variant (PPV) The setting that controls which months are open or closed for financial postings in each company.
Profit and Loss Statement (P&L) A report showing how much money the company earned, spent, and kept. Income minus expenses.
Profit Centre A business unit or department responsible for its own income and costs. Like a mini-company inside the big one.
Public Sector Management (PSM) SAP’s version for governments and non-profits. It focuses on managing budgets and approvals, not profit.
Segment A higher-level group of related profit centres. For example, “Smart Locks” or “Security Cameras.”
Valuation Area The level at which SAP tracks stock value. Usually by plant, so every warehouse knows how much its inventory is worth.
Valuation Class The tag that connects materials (like raw goods or finished products) to the correct financial accounts.
Valuation Control A switch deciding whether plants can share the same valuation rules. Helpful when you’ve got multiple warehouses.
Valuation Grouping Code A shortcut that groups plants together under shared accounting rules. One rulebook for several sites.
Valuation Level The setting that defines where SAP values stock. Across the company (same everywhere) or by plant (different per location).
Warehouse A building where goods are stored before sale or delivery. Each can have its own stock, value, and rules.
Zero-Balance Check A rule that forces debits and credits to always match. Every transaction must balance perfectly before SAP accepts it.

Author: Isard Haasakker

Organisation: No Tie Generation

Framework: Fast Implementation Track (F.I.T.)

Category: SAP Configuration Reasoning

Canonical: https://fit4sap.notion.site/phase-01-jargon

Last Updated: 05-Dec-2025

License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Tags: glossary, sap-basics, finance-integration, valuation, document-splitting, fit-foundation, learning