Phase inverting preamps


Apologies in advance for this newbie question. I was reading some reviews of preamps and a couple said that the preamp "inverts phasing" and that this would have to be accounted for elsewhere in the system. I know what phasing means, but how and where does one allow for it elsewhere in the system?
4yanx
Herman: Rent a copy of the movie "The Green Berets" staring John Wayne. There is this one very nice sunset scene on the beach in Vietnam. It is interesting because the Vietnam coast faces east!! Talk about phase inversion!!
To KP. Thank you. I’ve a integrated amp that inverts signal and know one has been able to explain correctly what to do as a solution. Attaching right speaker cable to left and left cable speaker to right works.  Just as you stated  I now have correct phase and polarity. 
Just a for your information: every gain stage of any preamp or amp inverts the polarity. So if you have a preamp, or an amp with one or three gain stages the result will be, compared to the input, a reversed polarity at the output.
If the amplifier of preamp has an even number of gain stages, two or four, it will have the same polarity at output as the input.

The number of gain stages are a design philosophy matter. And a lot of great preamps use three gain stages.

IMO since about a third of all recording have totally screwed up polarity due to mixing etc, and a third have reversed polarity, and a third correct polarity..

What does it matter???
I have a reverse polarity switch on my preamp anyway.
Sometimes I can notice flipping it can clarify the sound. Sometimes not. I own dipoles, and those speakers make it easier to hear polarity.
I see a LOT of completely wrong information here. 

@elizabeth 
No. Gain stages have nothing to do with inverting the signal. Gain stages invert the signal only when the gain device is operated in common source or equivalent mode for the particular gain device. That's the mode that gets you only voltage gain which is all you need in a pre-amp since the load a pre-amp drives is of high impedance and requires very little current. Common drain and common gate modes get you only current gain or both current and voltage gain, respectively, and both of those modes are non-inverting. It has nothing to do with swapping left and right channels. You can't just rewire your RCA cables backwards either. Swapping the polarity of the speaker cables is the easy fix. If we're talking about an inverting phono pre-amp, you should reverse the wires to the cartridge. 
Just had a bit more time to read over this....

@herman 
For the intent of this discussion, you're really splitting hairs with the terms "phase" and "polarity". I signal that's experiencing 180 degrees of phase shift is the EXACT same thing as inverting it's polarity. Maybe there is some phase shifting going on inside a component somewhere, a few degrees + or - here or there, but that's the nature of the beast. But that's not what we're talking about here.