The present invention relates to systems and methods to maintain an updated more accurate financial report in connection with an online banking account.
Individuals, businesses and organizations have the benefit of using online banking to manage their financial accounts while in the same account may also use paper checks for some transactions. Most anytime the various financial account's transactions and balances can be obtained by logging on to the enrolled financial institutions online banking account. Transactions of credit cards, debit cards, across institution transfers, online payment accounts, other payment methods plus the ability to communicate with the financial institution is at most times updated on a real-time basis. There may be also near real-time reporting by the financial institution where there are pending debit or credit transactions. Because of the real-time basis of the online banking reporting many users may rely on the on line account balances as an adequate approximation for their financial account balance and funds available for other purchases. If paper checks are periodically written then solely relying on the on-line account reporting balance may present accurate financial account difficulties.
Unlike the real-time and digital payment method that is used very commonly today, payment by more traditional paper checks does not generate any electronic record at the time of drafting the check and transfer of the check from account holder to the payee. There is no immediate use of any computer network to communicate to the financial institution that holds the account of the drafted check that the check has been drawn. There may be a substantial amount of time passed before the payee of the drafted check actually cashes the drawn check. During the check drawn and the check cashed period of time the drawn check will not appear as a pending payment in the online banking account of the account holder. If the account holder does not account for the drawn check and relies upon the balance information in the online banking reporting, there will be an overstatement of the amount of funds available. The account could be overdrawn when the payee cashes the drawn check.
A difficulty may arise on occasion where the checking account or accounting book income, expenses, and/or deposits and withdrawals may not correctly match or may even be not accounted for on the online banking account. The reverse may sometimes occur where the online banking account may show entries that are not entered or incorrectly entered on the account holder's registers.
Another often difficulty associated with an online banking account is the usual inadequate information in the financial institution online report entries. Many times it is very hard to actually determine on the report: who the payee was, what was purchase and for how much for particular items. In most credit or debit card in person direct from the payee purchases, and especially online transactions, the purchaser does not keep the transaction receipt or inter the purchase information in the checking account register, or even sometimes in the accounting book's register. The online banking consumer many times cannot remember the details of the credit/debit or online purchase. There may be fraudulent purchases on the banking account and the online account holder, who may primarily rely on the online financial institution reports, to be unable to get further online information of a questionable purchase.
What is needed is an improved system and method for a more accurate entry accounting in connection with an online banking account. The account holder needs to be able to also expand the entry information in the financial institutions online report to adequately be able to recognize if the transaction is correct or legitimate.
The current invention is a system and method to help maintain an online banking accurate account balance. Paper checks may be drawn on the online checking account. Periodically the online banking account holder wants to find the true online checking account balance. The online checking account holder or payor can either take images, such as with a digital camera, scanner or an image producing and communicating device, such as a smart phone, of the check book or accounting register, or a digital copy can be made, of the checking or accounting books income, expense, deposit and withdrawal register. The image of the check book may be an individual's personal account and the digital copy of the accounting book's income/expense register may be that of a larger business.
In U.S. Pat. No. 8,676,706, Jones, et al., the account holder would take an image of the paper check each time it is written. Many people or businesses do not want to take the time or may not be able to take the image each time a check is written. The account holder may first look online at the account report to compare cashed checks with the checkbook stubs or register to see what written checks have not been cashed. The digital image may be processed by the account holder's recognition processing software, sometimes call Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software , or sent to the online banking financial institution, or the financial institution's third party processor, where number, symbol, print, type and written recognition software attempts to read the information of the checking account register. The account holder can send to the online banking account institution its recognition software processed attempted read checking and/or accounting book's income and expense register information. Alternatively the account holder can view the online account report where the financial institution's character recognition software attempted read checking and accounting book' register entries and has now been entered into the account's online report. A variance online banking report is generated that shows any entry variations from the account holder's registry data when compared to the online banking account entries. If the account holder knows some of the information is incorrect the account holder may be allowed to make corrections to the online checking account report. A more accurate account holder registry and balance can then be obtained along with the updated and corrected online variance report.
A further embodiment of the invention is to better identify the payee of a written check where the online reporting system will attempt to identify the registered name of the payee, the address of the payee and other merchant/banking data of the payee that would be useful to the account holder. The online banking report would give suggested payee names to the account holder for selections to identify the payee. The account holder may realize that that check was sent to the wrong payee or address.
Another embodiment of the invention may be that the online banking report system may be able to communicate to the payee to see if the payee has received the check. The online banking report system may even further be able to communicate to the payee if the payee intends to cash the check and possibly when the payee intends to cash the check.
The attempt to provide more transaction, deposit, withdrawal and other online banking account entry information to the account holder entails a further embodiment where more information about who the payee was and what was purchased plus possible information on income, expenses, deposit and withdrawals in further detail. Most of the online banking reports usually offer limited information about the entries. As the account holder is reviewing an online banking system report there may be a question as to whom and what was purchased, even trying to determine if there was a mistake in the billing, an alteration to the face of a check, a mistake in deposits and withdrawals or possibly an illegitimate purchase or billing where fraud was the case. Upon the request of the account holder the online banking system may be able to expand the purchases, income, expense, deposits and withdrawal entry information and may be able to communicate through the online banking account system with the payee, depositor and/or withdrawer; and/or view the transaction details, to obtain further information.
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