Erp 9 May 2026
Day three: The first invoice. Vishal watched, mesmerized, as Mr. Mehta pressed (Go To), then V (Voucher), then F8 (Sales). A clean grid appeared. He typed quantity: 100. Rate: 350. Tally automatically calculated GST—CGST 9%, SGST 9%. Total? ₹41,300. Press Enter . The stock from “LED Bulbs – 9W” reduced from 120 to 20. Instantly. Simultaneously, Tiwari Traders owed ₹41,300. The ledger updated. The tax liability registered.
Day one: They entered masters. Ledgers felt like naming children—Sundry Debtors, Sundry Creditors, Sales Accounts, Purchase Accounts. Vishal laughed when he typed “Tiwari Traders” under Debtors. “Now they can’t deny payment.” Day three: The first invoice
Mr. Mehta pushed his glasses up. “We stop running the business on memory and Missives. We need an ERP.” A clean grid appeared
Vishal rubbed his temples. “Then what do we do?” Tally automatically calculated GST—CGST 9%, SGST 9%
Then , “Outstanding.” A list appeared: Ramesh Electricals – 90 days overdue (₹2.3 lakh). Vishal’s face hardened. “Call them tomorrow. No more credit.”
“No,” Mr. Mehta corrected. “That’s double-entry, real-time, with integrity.”
He paused, then added with a smile: “But never fire Mr. Mehta. Tally can’t make chai.”