
Graph Accounting
Multi-Chart, Event-Driven, Explainable Systems for Accounting, Workflow, and Decision-Grade ReportingBy Julian Alexander OrigliassoLength15h 43m
About this audiobook
Graph Accounting introduces a new way to understand accounting in the digital age. Instead of treating accounting as a money-only record of past transactions, it presents a broader system for recording accountable change across finance, time, work, quality, capability, risk, emissions, assets, relationships, and other organisational domains. The book explains how events can be captured first, then translated into journals, ledgers, statements, and decisions through governed rules. It shows why modern organisations need multi-chart and multi-unit systems that preserve the native meaning of different data types while producing clear, auditable, decision-grade outputs. At its core, Graph Accounting connects data, workflows, approvals, and reporting into one explainable architecture. It is written for accountants, founders, managers, technologists, and leaders who want better systems for measuring value, responsibility, performance, and long-term impact.
Audiobook details
GenreBusiness and Economics
Length15 hrs 43 mins
Narrated byListen with 1,000+ voices
FormateBook with Audio
Publish dateMay 3, 2026
LanguageEnglish
Table of contents
1Graph Accounting
17Chapter 15 - Interoperability and External Systems
2Introduction
18Part IV — Product, Platform, and Enterprise Design: Chapter 16 - Product and Platform Architecture
3Part I — The Problem and the Category: Chapter 1 - The Fragmented Enterprise
19Chapter 17 - Interface Architecture and User Roles
4Chapter 2 - Why Existing Systems Are Not Enough
20Chapter 18 - Enterprise Deployment and Institutional Design
5Chapter 3 - Defining Graph Accounting
21Chapter 19 - Vertical Adaptation and Domain Architecture
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6Part II — Foundations of the Architecture: Chapter 4 - The Architectural Philosophy of Graph Accounting: (Untitled)
22Part V — Worked Architectures in Practice: Chapter 20 - AP, AR, and Payroll as the Foundation
7Chapter 5 - Chart Architecture and Chart Families
23Chapter 21 - Project-Based Labour Allocation
8Chapter 6 - Object Model Architecture
24Chapter 22 - Grants, Acquittals, and Non-Profit Outcome Reporting
9Chapter 7 - Relationship Architecture
25Chapter 23 - Engineering, Construction, and Operational Work Measurement
10Chapter 8 - Event and Journal Architecture
26Chapter 24 - Public Sector Accountability and Stewardship
11Chapter 9 - Ledger Architecture and Accumulated State
27Chapter 25 - Energy, Emissions, and Multi-Unit Operational Recording
12Chapter 10 - Statement Architecture
28Chapter 26 - Intangible Assets, Rights, and Venture Reporting
13Chapter 11 - Evidence, Provenance, and Explainability
29Part VI — Agentic, Analytical, and Future Directions: Chapter 27 - Agentic and AI-Assisted Graph Accounting
14Part III — Core System Layers: Chapter 12 - Workflow Architecture
30Chapter 28 - Analytics, Simulation, and Institutional Intelligence
15Chapter 13 - Rules and Controls Architecture
31Chapter 29 - The Future of Accounting-Grade Organisational Systems
16Chapter 14 - Integration and Data Architecture
32A. Definitions