Cash Sales vs Rush Order
Cash Sales and Rush Order are the sales document type that are used in case of sales form plant or process.
Cash Sales: In Cash Sales, the customer pays for the goods immediately after picking them from the warehouse . The delivery is processed as soon as the order has been made. A cash invoice can be printed immediately from the order and billing is related to the order.
In the standard system, sales document type BV (CS) is saved for cash sales with immediate delivery type BV.
When the sales employee creates a cash sale, the system automatically proposes the current date as the date for delivery and billing. Once the order has been posted, a delivery with type BV is created immediately in the background and the system prints a document that is used as an invoice for the customer. The invoice papers are controlled with output type RD03, contained in the output determination procedure for order type CS.
Rush Order: In a rush order, the customer picks up the goods immediately, or the goods are delivered them on the same day as when the order was created. But the customer does not pay immediately after picking the goods. When you save the rush order, a delivery is automatically created in the standard system. Billing the rush order takes place as normal, after the delivery.
In the standard system, sales document type RO is saved for rush orders with immediate delivery type LF. Once the goods have been removed from storage, the goods are picked, and goods issue is posted. Once the billing documents are created (for example, in collective processing), invoice papers are printed and sent to the customer.
In cash sales, you can process an order for when the customer orders the goods, picks them up, and pays for them immediately. The delivery is processed at the same time as when the order is created and a cash invoice is printed immediately: billing is therefore related to the order, unlike rush and standard orders. Receivables are not created for the customer, as they are for rush and standard orders because the amount in the invoice is immediately posted to a cash account.