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Item Upon - How To Turn Bookkeeping Drudgery Into A $175/Hour Windfall
The Ultimate Choice or the Small Business
Owner or Self-Employed Person is InternetTaxHelper -- it is
by far the easiest to learn and simplest to use. If your
business grows, you can always invest in a more
sophisticated program later. For any small business owner,
especially if you're just starting out, this is the best
program I've ever seen.It is estimated we humans make an average 2000 decisions per day. Everything from what we will wear,what we eat,which weather report we watch. Incredibly all seem to be consistent with a pattern or habit we have developed. The average person will live about 72 years,depending on gender. This translates to 26,280 days of life if we reach 72 years. Based on the 2000 decisions a day concept we will make 52,560,000 decisions in a lifetime. If you are indecisive deduct some.Most of these decisions of course will be trivial,habitual,uncomplicated and uneventful.How many of those and the thought we put into them will be our life story?Sadly many of us allow other people and circu Using a software program is a tremendous time-saver. Once you've input all your individual income and expense transactions, and assuming you've assigned each transaction to the appropriate category and filed the paperwork, you've already completed all the work necessary to audit-proof your income tax return! For more information on InternetTaxHelper, go to: http://www.internettaxhelper.com/g.o/wmdctp One final comment: If you aren't "computer-savvy", that's OK. You can still use good ole pencil and paper to categorize your business expenses. I have clients who use no Demand for E-books on the Increase For most self-employed people, bookkeeping is about as much
fun as a root canal. But like it or not, it must be done,
otherwise you'll end up overpaying your taxes big time.Demand for electronic books, or e-books, has created one of the fastest growing Internet consumer market segments.Research conducted recently by the Gartner Group revealed that one in 300 books read in the USA, and one in 450 books in Europe, are read in the digital format. This is a 38% increase on last year, which in turn experienced 25% growth on 2003.eBook units sold for the first quarter 2004 were up 46% and eBook revenues were up 28% over the same quarter in 2003. These and other figures charting the eBook industry are reported in the quarterly Open eBook Forum (OeBF) eBook Statistics Report."At this rate, by 2010, more people will be reading e-books than the old-fashioned p Perhaps this article will help you see this tedious task in a new light. Follow along with me and I can turn your bookkeeping nightmare into the best paying part-time job you ever had. First, a question: How much money do you make right now -- per hour -- at your "regular" daytime job or in your business? Is it $15 per hour? $25 per hour? $50 per hour? Make a mental note of that amount, ok? Now, let's say by "keeping the books" this month, you record $1,000 worth of deductible expenses. Let's also assume you are in the 35% tax bracket (15% federal income tax plus 15% self-employment tax plus 5% state tax). So, for every $1,000 of deductions, you save yourself about $350 in taxes ($1,000 x 35% tax rate). One more assumption: it takes you about 2 hours to properly record and document that $1,000 of deductions. Hmmm. You spend 2 hours and save $350 bucks. How much money did you just make for yourself -- per hour? $175 per hour! Whoa -- now, compare that to how much you make per hour working in your business or at an employee job. Which "job" paid you more? Even if it takes you 4 hours -- it's like having a job that pays you $87.50 per hour. Still a pretty good hourly wage, don't you think? How does that make you feel about bookkeeping? Not such a bad deal after all, is it? So here's a simple six-step bookkeeping system that will put thousands of dollars of tax savings in your pocket and keep the IRS out of your life. 1. Maintain a separate bank account for your business or self-employment activity. Never use your personal bank account for business expenses. Having a separate bank account automatically creates the "shell" for the perfect documentation system. If you don't have a separate business bank account, now is the time to get one. 2. Maintain a separate credit card account for your business. Same deal as the bank account -- pick one credit card that you use exclusively for business expenses. 3. These 2 accounts (one bank account and one credit card account) should only be used for business! Never "co-mingle" business and personal financial information. The only income that goes into your business bank account is business income. The only expenses that are paid from the business bank account and business credit card account are business expenses. 4. For each major income and expense category, create a simple filing system each calendar year -- one file folder for each major category. Every time you write a check or use the credit card for a business expense, you assign that expense to the appropriate expense category and file the supporting documentation (receipt, invoice, cancelled check, or whatever) into the corresponding file folder. 5. Keep a separate file folder for all monthly bank account statements and credit card statements. 6. Use a simple bookkeeping software program to record all deposits, checks, and credit card charges. Once a week or once a month, input all transactions and assign each transaction to the appropriate income or expense category. The importance of this "categorization" process cannot be stressed enough -- it's the key to the whole system! There are any number of software programs out there for this purpose. I've used them all: Quicken, Quickbooks, Money, etc. Spreadsheet programs like Excel can also be used to automate business record-keeping. But my favorite bookkeeping program for the Small Business Owner or Self-Employed Person is InternetTaxHelper -- it is by far the easiest to learn and simplest to use. If your business grows, you can always invest in a more sophisticated program later. For any small business owner, especially if you're just starting out, this is the best program I've ever seen. Using a software program is a tremendous time-saver. Once you've input all your individual income and expense transactions, and assuming you've assigned each transaction to the appropriate category and filed the paperwork, you've already completed all the work necessary to audit-proof your income tax return! For more information on InternetTaxHelper, go to: http://www.internettaxhelper.com/g.o/wmdctp One final comment: If you aren't "computer-savvy", that's OK. You can still use good ole pencil and paper to categorize your business expenses. I have clients who use not Web Production And Design Tips e).You have identified that to have an internet prescence would be of benefit to your small business, however are not sure how to proceed. This article gives free tips on web design services and practices and on how to keep your web designer happy and on side.The first thing you need to do if find a suitable web designer or web design company. Due to the large amount of competition out there you should be able to find a quality professional web design company happy to build you a website from between ?50 and ?100.You can find these companies on search engines, internet auction websites such as ebay, yellow pages, by asking family and friends, shop window advertisements or newspaper a One more assumption: it takes you about 2 hours to properly record and document that $1,000 of deductions. Hmmm. You spend 2 hours and save $350 bucks. How much money did you just make for yourself -- per hour? $175 per hour! Whoa -- now, compare that to how much you make per hour working in your business or at an employee job. Which "job" paid you more? Even if it takes you 4 hours -- it's like having a job that pays you $87.50 per hour. Still a pretty good hourly wage, don't you think? How does that make you feel about bookkeeping? Not such a bad deal after all, is it? So here's a simple six-step bookkeeping system that will put thousands of dollars of tax savings in your pocket and keep the IRS out of your life. 1. Maintain a separate bank account for your business or self-employment activity. Never use your personal bank account for business expenses. Having a separate bank account automatically creates the "shell" for the perfect documentation system. If you don't have a separate business bank account, now is the time to get one. 2. Maintain a separate credit card account for your business. Same deal as the bank account -- pick one credit card that you use exclusively for business expenses. 3. These 2 accounts (one bank account and one credit card account) should only be used for business! Never "co-mingle" business and personal financial information. The only income that goes into your business bank account is business income. The only expenses that are paid from the business bank account and business credit card account are business expenses. 4. For each major income and expense category, create a simple filing system each calendar year -- one file folder for each major category. Every time you write a check or use the credit card for a business expense, you assign that expense to the appropriate expense category and file the supporting documentation (receipt, invoice, cancelled check, or whatever) into the corresponding file folder. 5. Keep a separate file folder for all monthly bank account statements and credit card statements. 6. Use a simple bookkeeping software program to record all deposits, checks, and credit card charges. Once a week or once a month, input all transactions and assign each transaction to the appropriate income or expense category. The importance of this "categorization" process cannot be stressed enough -- it's the key to the whole system! There are any number of software programs out there for this purpose. I've used them all: Quicken, Quickbooks, Money, etc. Spreadsheet programs like Excel can also be used to automate business record-keeping. But my favorite bookkeeping program for the Small Business Owner or Self-Employed Person is InternetTaxHelper -- it is by far the easiest to learn and simplest to use. If your business grows, you can always invest in a more sophisticated program later. For any small business owner, especially if you're just starting out, this is the best program I've ever seen. Using a software program is a tremendous time-saver. Once you've input all your individual income and expense transactions, and assuming you've assigned each transaction to the appropriate category and filed the paperwork, you've already completed all the work necessary to audit-proof your income tax return! For more information on InternetTaxHelper, go to: http://www.internettaxhelper.com/g.o/wmdctp One final comment: If you aren't "computer-savvy", that's OK. You can still use good ole pencil and paper to categorize your business expenses. I have clients who use no Why Aren't Things Done Properly – Unless I Do Them Myself…? aving a separate bank account automatically creates the
"shell" for the perfect documentation system.Come on, don’t deny it; we’ve all said that at one time or another (yes, under your breath still counts). We know that our job is to get things done – not to do them ourselves. So why do we often end up frustrated when we think something hasn’t been done properly?The easy answer is that we have employees who don’t have the initiative, skills or experience to do anything except follow instructions. (OK when we’re starting out, not when we’re growing quickly.) But - what about the ones who are giving the instructions (that would be us)? How well do we hold up our end of the deal?Things don’t get off to a good start if we only delegate when we’re overwhelmed and miss If you don't have a separate business bank account, now is the time to get one. 2. Maintain a separate credit card account for your business. Same deal as the bank account -- pick one credit card that you use exclusively for business expenses. 3. These 2 accounts (one bank account and one credit card account) should only be used for business! Never "co-mingle" business and personal financial information. The only income that goes into your business bank account is business income. The only expenses that are paid from the business bank account and business credit card account are business expenses. 4. For each major income and expense category, create a simple filing system each calendar year -- one file folder for each major category. Every time you write a check or use the credit card for a business expense, you assign that expense to the appropriate expense category and file the supporting documentation (receipt, invoice, cancelled check, or whatever) into the corresponding file folder. 5. Keep a separate file folder for all monthly bank account statements and credit card statements. 6. Use a simple bookkeeping software program to record all deposits, checks, and credit card charges. Once a week or once a month, input all transactions and assign each transaction to the appropriate income or expense category. The importance of this "categorization" process cannot be stressed enough -- it's the key to the whole system! There are any number of software programs out there for this purpose. I've used them all: Quicken, Quickbooks, Money, etc. Spreadsheet programs like Excel can also be used to automate business record-keeping. But my favorite bookkeeping program for the Small Business Owner or Self-Employed Person is InternetTaxHelper -- it is by far the easiest to learn and simplest to use. If your business grows, you can always invest in a more sophisticated program later. For any small business owner, especially if you're just starting out, this is the best program I've ever seen. Using a software program is a tremendous time-saver. Once you've input all your individual income and expense transactions, and assuming you've assigned each transaction to the appropriate category and filed the paperwork, you've already completed all the work necessary to audit-proof your income tax return! For more information on InternetTaxHelper, go to: http://www.internettaxhelper.com/g.o/wmdctp One final comment: If you aren't "computer-savvy", that's OK. You can still use good ole pencil and paper to categorize your business expenses. I have clients who use no Improving Energy Efficiency Improves Bottom Line ard for a business expense,
you assign that expense to the appropriate expense category
and file the supporting documentation (receipt, invoice,
cancelled check, or whatever) into the corresponding file
folder.Energy prices continue to rise, but projects to save energy can pay for themselves and put money in your pocket.Did you know? · Energy efficiency improvements provide savings for their entire product life, perhaps up to 20 years, well past the point where the savings have paid for the initial improvement. · Improvements in energy performance and employee comfort can increase income due to improved productivity, perhaps as much as 10 times as high as the energy cost savings produced by performing the upgrade. · Many energy efficiency improvement programs pay for themselves in less than 3 years. · Improved comfort results in improved retention; in retail stores, shopper 5. Keep a separate file folder for all monthly bank account statements and credit card statements. 6. Use a simple bookkeeping software program to record all deposits, checks, and credit card charges. Once a week or once a month, input all transactions and assign each transaction to the appropriate income or expense category. The importance of this "categorization" process cannot be stressed enough -- it's the key to the whole system! There are any number of software programs out there for this purpose. I've used them all: Quicken, Quickbooks, Money, etc. Spreadsheet programs like Excel can also be used to automate business record-keeping. But my favorite bookkeeping program for the Small Business Owner or Self-Employed Person is InternetTaxHelper -- it is by far the easiest to learn and simplest to use. If your business grows, you can always invest in a more sophisticated program later. For any small business owner, especially if you're just starting out, this is the best program I've ever seen. Using a software program is a tremendous time-saver. Once you've input all your individual income and expense transactions, and assuming you've assigned each transaction to the appropriate category and filed the paperwork, you've already completed all the work necessary to audit-proof your income tax return! For more information on InternetTaxHelper, go to: http://www.internettaxhelper.com/g.o/wmdctp One final comment: If you aren't "computer-savvy", that's OK. You can still use good ole pencil and paper to categorize your business expenses. I have clients who use no Selling a Mobile Car Wash Account With a Regional Mall or the Small Business
Owner or Self-Employed Person is InternetTaxHelper -- it is
by far the easiest to learn and simplest to use. If your
business grows, you can always invest in a more
sophisticated program later. For any small business owner,
especially if you're just starting out, this is the best
program I've ever seen.Do you own a mobile car washing or detailing business and would you love to wash cars at the regional mall? The mall could benefit with more activity and thus less cars stolen and it is an amenity to shoppers to bring them in. Also consider that the mall could charge you a commission per car or lease space to you and therefore make more money too.These are all options for the mall and when selling the account you must push the amenity aspect and value to the shopper and how you will draw in more clientele to help promote more shoppers to the mall you see? To set up an account with a Mall, indeed you would need to contact the Property Management Company, Private Parking Company running th Using a software program is a tremendous time-saver. Once you've input all your individual income and expense transactions, and assuming you've assigned each transaction to the appropriate category and filed the paperwork, you've already completed all the work necessary to audit-proof your income tax return! For more information on InternetTaxHelper, go to: http://www.internettaxhelper.com/g.o/wmdctp One final comment: If you aren't "computer-savvy", that's OK. You can still use good ole pencil and paper to categorize your business expenses. I have clients who use nothing more sophisticated than a spiral notebook. Each year they buy a new notebook and label each page with a particular income or expense category. Every transaction gets written down in the notebook on the appropriate page. At the end of the year, they add up the totals for each page, and presto, they give me an annual recap of all major income and expense categories. Get the picture? It doesn't have to be fancy. It just has to be in writing, accurate, and supported by actual paper documents. Whether you use your computer or not, the end result is the same: Every single transaction has been assigned to the appropriate category, and every transaction has the corresponding "paper trail" -- every receipt, invoice, cancelled check and credit card charge has been filed into the appropriate file folder. Should the IRS question any income or expense amount on your return, you'll be ready!
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