“It is,” Mr. Mehta smiled grimly, “for chaos. Specifically, Tally.ERP 9.”
“Yes,” Mr. Mehta said. “Tally.ERP 9 doesn’t let you lie. And more importantly, it doesn’t let you forget.” “It is,” Mr
Vishal leaned back. He remembered the old days—the chits of paper, the mismatched stock, the tax panic. “Control,” he said. “It gives you control over the past, the present, and the future. All in one place. And it costs less than the salary of the clerk you’ll no longer need to chase numbers.” Mehta said
Vishal, now confident, opened Tally. , “GST Returns.” He exported the GSTR-1 JSON file. The figures tallied to the last rupee. The inspector raised an eyebrow. “You’re the first this week without a discrepancy.” He remembered the old days—the chits of paper,
The end.
Mr. Mehta pushed his glasses up. “We stop running the business on memory and Missives. We need an ERP.”