Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Why tax planning is so important / Do what you want, but do it in a tax-smart way

Bill Bischoff for MarketWatch.com writes:  While the term “tax planning” is frequently used, it is not necessarily well understood. Here’s what you need to know. 

What tax planning really means
Tax planning is the art of arranging your affairs in ways that postpone or avoid taxes. By employing effective tax planning strategies, you can have more money to save and invest or more money to spend. Or both. Your choice. 

Put another way, tax planning means deferring and flat out avoiding taxes by taking advantage of beneficial tax-law provisions, increasing and accelerating tax deductions and tax credits, and generally making maximum use of all applicable breaks available under our beloved Internal Revenue Code. 

While the federal income tax rules are now more complicated than ever, the benefits of good tax planning are arguably more valuable than ever before. 

Of course, you should not change your financial behavior solely to avoid taxes. Truly effective tax planning strategies are those that permit you to do what you want while reducing tax bills along the way. 

How are tax planning and financial planning connected?
Financial planning is the art of implementing strategies that help you reach your financial goals, be they short-term or long-term. That sounds pretty simple. However, if the actual execution was simple, there would be a lot more rich folks. 

Tax planning and financial planning are closely linked, because taxes are such a large expense item as you go through life. If you become really successful, taxes will probably be your single biggest expense over the long haul. So planning to reduce taxes is a critically important piece of the overall financial planning process. 

Horror stories when folks fail to make the connection
Over the years as a tax pro, I have been amazed at how many people fail to get the message about tax planning until they commit a grievous blunder that costs them a bundle in otherwise avoidable taxes. Then they finally get it. The trick is to make sure you don’t have to learn this lesson the hard way. To illustrate the point, consider the following example. 

Example: Josephine is a 45-year-old unmarried professional person. She considers herself to be financially astute. However, she is not well-versed on taxes. One day, Josephine meets Joe, and they quickly decide to get married. Caught up in the excitement of a whole new life, Josephine impulsively sells her home shortly before the marriage. The property is in a great area and has appreciated by $500,000 since she bought it 15 years ago. She intends to move into Joe’s home, which is a dump, but Josephine is a proven genius at remodeling, and she plans to work her usual magic on Joe’s property. 

Result without tax planning: For federal income tax purposes, Josephine has a whopping $250,000 gain on the sale of her home ($500,000 profit minus the $250,000 home sale gain exclusion allowed to unmarried sellers). 

Result with tax planning: If Josephine had instead kept her home and lived there with Joe for two years before selling, she could have taken advantage of the larger $500,000 home sale gain exclusion available to married joint-filers and thereby permanently avoided $250,000 of taxable gain. If necessary, Joe’s home could have been sold instead of Josephine’s. Alternatively, Joe’s property could have been retained, and the couple could have worked on remodeling it while still living in Josephine’s home for the requisite two years. 

Moral of the story? By selling her home without considering the tax-smart alternative, Josephine cost herself $62,500 in taxes (completely avoidable $250,000 gain taxed at an assumed combined federal and state rate of 25%). This is a permanent difference, not just a timing difference. The point is, you cannot ignore taxes. If you do, bad things can happen, even with a seemingly intelligent transaction. 

The last word
There are many other ways to commit expensive tax blunders. Like selling appreciated securities too soon when hanging on for just a little longer would have resulted in lower-taxed long-term capital gains instead of higher-taxed short-term gains; taking retirement account withdrawals before age 59½ and getting hit with the 10% premature withdrawal penalty tax; or failing to arrange for payments to an ex-spouse to qualify as deductible alimony; the list goes on and on. 

The cure is to plan transactions with taxes in mind and avoid making impulsive moves. Seeking professional tax advice before pulling the trigger on significant transactions is usually money well spent. As we get closer to the end of the year, some of my columns will focus on tax planning strategies that many folks can benefit from. Please stay tuned. Visit MarketWatch.com by clicking here.
Posted on 9:10 AM | Categories:

Three Reasons You Don’t Like QuickBooks and One Reason You Do

Shannon Tucker for QuickbooksUsers.com writes:  Three Reasons Why You Don’t Like QuickBooks

1. It’s not exactly right for your business.
No, it’s probably not. QuickBooks is used (by Intuit’s count) by 5 million businesses. None of them are exactly like yours. You have a particular way you like your income statement to look, or a particular thing you want to track in your sales, or a particular formatting you want for your invoice, and QuickBooks doesn’t and can’t do it exactly like that. That is a characteristic of almost all off-the-shelf software.  The alternative? Industry-specific software, or custom software. Both are many times more expensive than QuickBooks.

2. There are technical glitches.
Yep. In our opinion, there are bugs in QuickBooks. Always have been, always will be. There is no way to write hundreds of thousands of lines of code (purely a guess) with perfect logic, that will anticipate and respond correctly to every possible user action and IT event. My first tech job was as an accounting software quality tester. My second tech job was as an accounting software development code writer. So I’ve seen software quality from different angles, and it’s just hard to write really good accounting code, and perfect code is a mythical beast. We shouldn’t expect unicorn horns and phoenix feathers.

3. It’s not supported the way it should be.
I guess we all have an opinion about what we should expect of a software company in their support of their product. I hear people express dissatisfaction with Intuit’s sunset policy, the cost of their support plans, and the quality of help received through support staff. (Less complaints about that last issue in the last year or so, it seems to me.) What we’d all like is great support, delivered fast, that’s free. But unless the cost of providing that kind of support were built into the initial product cost, that’s not going to happen. Resources like the Intuit Community and the QuickBooks Forums do offer free support that is often of high quality.

One Reason Why You Like QuickBooks. Maybe a Lot.

1. It’s a complete, affordable, flexible system.
Between QuickBooks Pro, Premier industry editions, Enterprise Series, Mac, and Online editions, there is a completeness to what QuickBooks can do for small to medium-sized businesses.  The price of the software and support is reasonable for what you get (in my opinion). And it’s flexible. You can scale up from Pro to Premier to Enterprise, (and even scale down from Enterprise if necessary), or you can scale over to online editions.
It’s not perfect, but there’s a lot to like.
Posted on 8:50 AM | Categories:

GoDaddy Launches 'Get Paid,' a New Payment Processing Tool for Small Businesses

Laura Entis for Entrepreneur writes: GoDaddy has always been the go-to spot for businesses to register their domain names. Now, it wants to be the place where businesses manage their payments.

Today, GoDaddy launched 'Get Paid,' a payment processing tool designed to make it easier for small businesses to get paid promptly and track invoices, weekly expenses and sales as well as billable and non-billable time.

The move brings GoDaddy head to head with similar tools such as QuickBooks Payments, which added a slew of new features in March designed to accelerate the payments process.

Partnering with Stripe, Dwolla and PayPal, GoDaddy has streamlined the services offered by each company into one processing tool that supports all forms of payment, such as credit and debit cards, and electronic checks. Transactions can take place on mobile phones, laptops and tablets.

In addition, 'Get Paid' users can electronically track when an invoice sent via email has been opened, read and paid. Unlike with antiquated paper or attachment invoices, which can be easily lost (intentionally or not), "You'll always know who still owes you money," says Steven Aldrich, GoDaddy's senior vice president of business applications. He's heard some "disheartening stories" starring lost, forgotten about or discarded invoices that results in non-existent or delayed payments.

"We've made it really easy for a small business to create an estimate, turn that estimate into an invoice, present the invoice to a customer and get paid right there on the spot," says Aldrich.

Surprisingly, many small businesses don't have the tools to accept money at the point of sale, and thus must turn down immediate payment. According to a recent survey of 600 small businesses conducted by GoDaddy, over 45 percent of small-business owners still don't accept credit cards or debit cards, which means they're sending invoices. And invoices can get lost – nearly a quarter of respondents polled said they had lost track of whether or not a customer had paid them or not in the last 12 months, or could see it happening in the future.
"If a customer wants to pay you, you never want to have to say no," Aldrich says.
'Get Paid' is currently available with costs ranging from $3.99 to $19.99 per month.
Posted on 8:46 AM | Categories:

Kiwi Startup Xero Pries Accountants Away from Intuit’s QuickBooks

Wade Roush for  Xconomy.com writes: If you run a small- or medium-sized business and it’s big enough to have bookkeeper, chances are he or she is using QuickBooks, the desktop accounting program sold by Intuit since the mid-1990s. QuickBooks has a market share of around 90 percent in North America, making it one of the most powerful and long-lasting near-monopolies in the world of business software.

When Intuit’s QuickBooks division looks over its shoulder these days, the company it probably sees looming largest is Toronto-based Freshbooks, which started out as a simple invoicing tool for non-accountants but has added many bookkeeping functions. The startup claims to have 5 million users, although it doesn’t say how many of those are paying.

But while the Freshbooks threat is very real, there’s another company trying to sneak up on QuickBooks, from an unexpected direction: New Zealand. Wellington-based Xero offers a cloud-based business software accounting package that earns around $87 million in recurring subscription revenues from 300,000 paying customers around the world. At the moment, only about 18,000 of those subscribers are in North America. But the U.S. market is so central to Xero’s growth plans that it has put nearly a sixth of its 600-strong workforce into its North American headquarters, on Green Street in downtown San Francisco.

Xero is a public company in New Zealand, where it has a market capitalization of more than $3 billion, and over the last two years it has collected $200 million more in private funding from the likes of Peter Thiel and Matrix Partners. That leads Jamie Sutherland, president of Xero’s U.S. operations, to compare the company to a speedboat that’s zooming forward while bigger and smaller players—read: Intuit and Freshbooks—bob about in its wake. “We’re well-funded and well-capitalized, with the right talent,” Sutherland says. “The big players are fumbling around figuring things out, and then there’s a whole slew of smaller companies that aren’t well capitalized but try to play in our space.”
As someone who’s been following Intuit for a while—I wrote a long piece in 2012 about the financial-software giant’s efforts to keep innovating even as it enters its fourth decade—I’ve been intrigued by Xero’s bold move into one of the two U.S. markets that Intuit still convincingly dominates (the other being online tax accounting through TurboTax). The basic value proposition at the Kiwi startup, founded in 2006, is that it understands the Web-based software model and user-friendly design in a way that Intuit and other established competitors, such as UK-based Sage and Australia-based MYOB, never will. But just being new isn’t enough in a market as conservative as business accounting. If any company is going to steal QuickBooks’ market share, it will have to win the hearts of accountants and bookkeepers, since they—not their clients—are usually the ones who choose an accounting package. So I’ve been spending some time talking with Sutherland and his colleague Peter Karpas, Xero’s U.S. CEO, to find out more about the company’s strategy.


Rod Drury, a prominent serial entrepreneur in New Zealand, conceived Xero after difficulties communicating with accountants in his previous businesses. “He was frustrated that he couldn’t get a sense of what was going on with his business in the desktop world,” Sutherland says. “He’d send a question to his accountant and it would take three or four days to get the answer back, and by that time the information was out of sync. That problem doesn’t make sense in our day and age of cloud computing, when you can have all the data in one location.”

With no product, no customers, and barely an idea, Drury and his co-founder Hamish Edwards were able to raise money to start Xero in an IPO on the New Zealand Stock Exchange. (Just try doing that in the U.S.; Sutherland said it was only possible on the back of Drury’s track record as the founder of successful New Zealand software companies Glazier Software and AfterMail.)

Xero took off quickly in its home region, displacing a QuickBooks-like product called MYOB in New Zealand and Australia and then making inroads against Sage in the U.K. and Europe, Sutherland says. Good design and usability were among Xero’s selling points from the beginning. “We wanted to make accounting easy and fun,” he says. “It isn’t this old, legacy desktop application where you cringe when you look at it. It looks and feels like a consumer application.”

A case in point: Xero’s interface for reconciling a business’s internal books with its bank statement, which is one of the first things many small business owners do every morning. It’s usually a
mundane and annoying task, but Sutherland says Xero’s interface makes it feel like a game. “The transaction is on the right and what you expect at the bank is on the left and it’s just a game of matching,” he says. “It’s sort of like Tetris. We’ve heard people saying they’re upset when they’re done that they have nothing left to reconcile.”

The consumer-like features extend into Xero’s mobile app, which lets users enter expenses into the system by snapping a photo of a receipt. Because the system is cloud-based and accessed from a Web browser, there’s no on-premise software to download or maintain—another feature that cements Xero’s resemblance to Mint, Check, and other popular consumer money management apps.
Intuit offers a cloud-based version of QuickBooks, but its architecture dates back to the desktop days, and it’s been known to suffer downtime, including a four-day outage in 2011 that paralyzed many small businesses. “I think there are systemic issues in the core of that product, largely because it was built in the early days, before mobile took off,” Sutherland says. “They basically ported their desktop product and put it online and didn’t rethink how it actually works.” Xero was born in the cloud, which means the startup has a more natural understanding of how information flows between accountants and small business owners, especially those who are on the go, Sutherland says. [Update 6/30/14: Steve Sharp, Intuit's communications manager for small business, contacted Xconomy to dispute Sutherland's characterization of QuickBooks Online. Sharp says the company "launched an entirely new, rebuilt from the ground up and made-in-the-cloud version of QuickBooks Online last September."]

But as fun as Xero is for business owners, it’s accountants who choose what software to use to keep a company’s books—which is why they’re the main focus of Xero’s sales strategy.
Under Xero’s business model, the basic cloud software is free to accountants, as is some extra client-management software for running an accounting practice. It’s only when an accountant brings a new client onto the system that’s Xero starts charging a subscription fee. (Prices range from $9 per month to $180 per month, depending on the number of employees a company has and the amount of file storage it needs.) The more customers an accountant brings to Xero, the larger the discount the startup offers to her clients. It’s a clever model, since winning just one accountant can meaning winning all of his or her clients.

Karpas acknowledges that there are hundreds of thousands of accountants who have been using QuickBooks for years and aren’t about to defect to Xero or Freshbooks. But he thinks there’s plenty of room for Xero to compete in two other segments: new businesses that aren’t using any accounting software yet, or are only using Excel spreadsheets, and businesses served by accountants who are dissatisfied with QuickBooks, or who see it as the choice of an older generation of accounting professionals.

“The accounting practice that is run by the person who is in their 60s and is thinking about retirement and has used QuickBooks for 20 years—they are not going to switch,” Karpas says. “But the younger, more aggressive accountants, meaning people in their 20s, 30s, and 40s, who are looking to grow their practices, are very open to talking to us and are looking for an alternative to QuickBooks, which has acted like a monopoly.”

The classic “disruptive” startup, as defined by Harvard Business School scholar Clay Christensen, starts out by offering a product that’s inferior to the incumbent, but is so much cheaper it draws users away. That’s not the scenario with Xero, which is actually more expensive and more feature-rich than QuickBooks Online. Rather, Xero’s strategy has been to frame itself as the modern, mobile-friendly, consumerized alternative to a stodgy 1990s brand.

All it needs now is more name recognition. “Our biggest issue now in the U.S. is that we are not famous enough,” Karpas says. “We are the first legitimate competitor to QuickBooks in at least a decade, and you could argue even longer. We have invested over $200 million over eight years in building this product, and we have traction around the world. What all that means is, if people hear about us, they can know that we are going to be around. And then we will win more than our fair share of bakeoffs.”

Becoming famous is a different problem in the U.S. than in other markets, mainly because there are so many small businesses here: 23 million, according to the Small Business Administration. So Xero’s big challenge in North America is to decide which sectors to go after, and tailor its software and sales pitch accordingly. Xero has a plan, according to Karpas, but he demurs about the details—he says that’s the startup’s “secret sauce.” If he and Sutherland can get more American accountants to take a look at a little-known service from a Southern Hemisphere country with a population smaller than Houston’s, they may yet become a bigger worry for Intuit.

Wade Roush is Editor at Large at Xconomy. You can subscribe to his Google Group or e-mail him at wroush@xconomy.com. Follow @wroush
Posted on 8:39 AM | Categories:

StratPad business plan now integrates with Intuit’s QuickBooks Online

StratPad writes: Are you using Intuit’s QuickBooks Online (QBO) to create invoices and do your bookkeeping? Are you an accountant or bookkeeper who uses QBO with your clients?
Any StratPad business plan file can now link to a QBO file in real-time. You’ll see up-to-the-second financial results graphed against your business plan’s projections including revenue, cost of goods sold, expenses, net income, cash, accounts receivable and accounts payable.

Regularly monitoring your progress against your plan is one of the best habits of success. It allows you to see issues in time to take appropriate action. And it allows you to see opportunities sooner and capitalize on them.

The StratPad/QBO integration has been carefully designed to support multiple connections. Every one of your StratPad plans can connect to a different QBO file. This lets an accountant, for example, support multiple clients.

You can also have multiple StratPad plans that connect to the same QBO file. This allows you to have multiple iterations of your business plan with each one connecting to your live QBO file.

The StratPad/QBO link is free to anyone with both a valid StratPad account AND a valid QBO account.

Connecting a StratPad plan to your QBO file is very easy:
1. Sign up for a QBO account.
2. Sign in to StratPad. NOTE: you can also click the “Sign in with Intuit” button, if you prefer.
Screen Shot 2014-06-30 at 2.34.53 PM3. From the “Select Your StratFiles” menu (at the top right corner) select the plan you’d like to link to your QBO file.
4. Click on “Write Your Plan” in the left-side menu.
5. Click “About Your Company” in the left-side menu.
6. Click the “Connect to QuickBooks” button. You may have to sign in to QuickBooks if you haven’t already.
7. Select the QBO file you’d like to link to and then click the Authorize button.
Your business plan and your QBO file are now connected.
Now select which financial metrics you’d like to chart:
1. Click “Track Your Progress” on the left-hand menu.
2. Click on “Summary”.
3. Click the “Add Chart” button (at the bottom of the Summary screen).
4. In the Source field, scroll down to the “Projections” items and select one of the financial metrics (Revenue, Expenses, Cash, Net Income, etc.).
5. Change the title and colour if you wish.
6. Click the “Save Chart” button.
7. Select this chart from the left-hand menu.
8. The chart will appear and show projected values (if there are any). To connect this chart to QBO (rather than entering actual values manually):
a. Open the Chart Controls menu
b. Click the “Values” button
c. Click the “Link to QuickBooks” button

You’ll now see the actual values from your QBO file beside the projected values from your business plan. Every time you refresh this chart the values from QBO are also refreshed so you can be assured of having up-to-the-second values.
____________

So we wondered, "Who is Stratpad"?  and 1000StartUps writes: Founder Alex Glassey
I didn’t set out to become an entrepreneur; it came out of necessity. In my 20s, my life circumstances changed suddenly and I became a single parent to my two young children. At the time I had a corporate job, working long hours and traveling a lot. I had to find a way to work from home and set my own hours. I started writing a software program for physiotherapists, working on it after I put the kids to bed. It enabled me to start my first company and quit my day job. Over the next 20 years, I founded and sold two more tech companies. I also started consulting and found it very inspiring to work with other entrepreneurs. I went back to school in my 40s to get my MBA so I could teach (which I now do at Royal Roads University in Victoria). Business education at that time was really focused on big business; it didn’t offer much for entrepreneurs. I saw an opportunity to take what I had learned and develop a way of doing strategy and business planning that meets the unique needs of small business. That became the basis for StratPad, which is a tool that helps entrepreneurs harness the power of strategy to take their business forward. Technology is democratizing education and making many more tools available to entrepreneurs. I’m happy to be in the business of empowering entrepreneurs. If we can improve their success, we’ll strengthen societies everywhere. 

Elevator Pitch
Our company helps startups and small businesses grow. We provide software, online training and live workshops that make strategy and business planning simple and practical for entrepreneurs. Our StratPad software teaches business basics and helps entrepreneurs prepare a short business plan that focuses on strategy. StratPad uses interactive text and video to guide users through the strategic planning process. Users respond to simple questions that help them define a strategic goal for their business, along with activities, timelines and financials. Based on their answers, StratPad creates all the investor-ready reports they need, including a summary business plan. StratPad then links strategy and execution with built-in business intelligence that lets entrepreneurs track their progress on financial and other metrics. StratPad offers free, on-demand video training, a user forum and e-mail support. We offer a free course on financial statements via our web site and on Udemy.com. StratPad is an iPad app, available in free and paid editions ranging from US$9.99 to $54.99. The web version will launch in Fall 2013. 

Aha! Moment
What I saw in my consulting practice (and this is supported by the research), is that most entrepreneurs don’t fail because they’re not smart enough or don’t work hard enough. They fail because they don’t have the right tools to succeed: the business plan that helps them get the capital they need or the basic financial skills to manage their cash flow or a strategy to defend their uniqueness. That inspired me to create a simple, practical tool to help entrepreneurs do these things and increase their chances of success. 

Biggest Challenge
Our biggest challenge is competition. The market is saturated with business planning software, templates, courses and consultants. Many of our competitors, particularly in software, are bigger, better funded and/or better connected than we are. We’re not going to overcome our competitors. In fact, I tell entrepreneurs, “Don’t compete. Be unique.” StratPad stands out from the pack in several ways, but mainly it teaches a way of thinking. It puts strategy at the core of business planning and everything the company does. Our competitors focus on the writing of the business plan; they’re not focused on strategy or strengthening the thinking that goes into the plan. StratPad is unique because it provides insights into strategy, execution, alignment and financial consequences that are so critical to business success. And it does so in a simple, practical way that even someone with little or no background in business can use. But being unique isn’t enough; it’s too easy to copy what we do. We continually have to defend our uniqueness. That means adding value and we do that by listening to our customers and responding to their needs. For example, StratPad customers said they needed help understanding finance. We created a free online course to explain financial statements and we’re planning more free videos on finance. Customers told us they wanted help using their business plan to access capital and other resources to grow their business. We’re working on creating a Community within StratPad that matches users with funders and other services. 

Biggest Accomplishment
Entrepreneurs who use StratPad love it. Their reviews and ratings have made StratPad the #1 strategy and business planning app in the iPad App Store. We get e-mails everyday from customers telling us how StratPad has helped them in their business. Customer love is our biggest accomplishment, but we’ve also appreciated the recognition and support from the community. StratPad was named one of Forbes’ top 10 mobile apps for business in 2013. We’re also proud of our contribution to improving financial literacy for startups and small business. We were honoured to win Intuit’s Financial Literacy Startup Award and the People’s Choice Award at Startup Canada’s Bridging the Financial Literacy Gap event this year. 

Advice
Think through your business idea, test it on as many customers as you can, and figure out how you will be unique! Just because you can build something, doesn’t mean you should. And yes, you do need a business plan; it’s not so much about the document as it is about the thinking that goes into it. A good business planning process asks you the key questions to help clarify your thinking and support your assumptions. It doesn’t have to be a 100-page business plan -- one or two well thought-out pages can be perfect. 

Team
We’re a small team that consists of: Alex Glassey is the creator of StratPad and leads the team. Alex is a former “big five” consultant turned serial entrepreneur with four successful startups to his credit.Glassey is passionate about helping entrepreneurs succeed. In addition to his own ventures, he advises startups and SMBs on growth strategies and has clients in North America and Europe. He speaks to business groups worldwide and teaches in the entrepreneurial program at Royal Roads University in Victoria. He has an MBA from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. Julian Wood is StratPad’s Chief Technology Officer. He is the former co-founder of Mobilesce, a Calgary-based firm specializing in mobile app development. Manuela Bizzotto is StratPad’s Communications Director. She brings years of experience as a communicator and publicist to StratPad’s PR and social media initiatives. Sam Estok is the graphic designer contracted to create the look and feel of StratPad. He is the principal at Faction23, based in Victoria BC. 

The Future
We aspire to become the premiere international portal for entrepreneurs seeking to grow their business. StratPad already provides entrepreneurs with a place where they can do their business planning, manage the execution of their plan, and tracks results. Our next step is to help entrepreneurs use their business plan to get the financing and resources they need to succeed. We plan to build an integrated "match-making" service within StratPad to connect users with funders and other services. Based on the unique needs identified in their business plan, StratPad will show users a list of appropriate funders and make a virtual introduction to these resources. Users will be able to send their business plan and other investor-ready documents to funders directly and securely within StratPad. We will also introduce users to other services: for example, local accountants, bookkeepers, lawyers, consultants and graphic designers, and web hosting services. 

Looking For
We are looking for relationships with partners who can help us with customer acquisition. Our StratPad products are built to scale rapidly and our web release will make StratPad accessible to many more users. We welcome customer acquisition partners such as affiliates and business-to-business channels. We’d also love to hear from entrepreneurs, accelerators and consultants/coaches who want to host or facilitate our strategic business planning workshops in their communities.  Visit StratPad Here.
Posted on 8:39 AM | Categories:

Too Soon for Taxes? 6 Prep Steps to Take Now

Chad Brooks for BusinessNewsDaily writes:  The year isn't even halfway over, but that doesn't mean it's too early for businesses to be thinking about their taxes.

Jamal Ayyad, vice president of service delivery at SurePayroll, said this is the time of year when small businesses should ensure their tax situation is in order.

"When a small business owner plans for tax season strategically and consistently throughout the year, they can create a much better financial outcome for their company," Ayyad said in a statement. 

SurePayroll offered six midyear tax checkup tips to help small business owners exercise greater control over their tax filings and avoid common — and costly — mistakes:
  • Take advantage of the health care credit. Small business employers with fewer than 25 full-time-equivalent employees with average wages of less than $50,800 who provide health insurance through the Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) may be eligible for a tax credit. Starting this year, these businesses may be eligible for a maximum of 50 percent of premiums paid, with the credit limited to two consecutive years.
  • You may have options if you owe payroll taxes. Small businesses that are having trouble paying their payroll taxes may be able to take advantage of an IRS installment plan. If you owe less than $25,000 in combined tax, penalties and interest, and filed all required returns, you may be eligible.
  • Avoid retirement-plan penalties; get relief if needed. Failure to file Form 5500 by employers sponsoring retirement plans can mean fines as high as $15,000. Small business owners should make sure they are on top of this filing requirement. If, however, they were unaware and are facing a penalty, the U.S. Department of Labor has a program to reduce or eliminate penalties. Additionally, for one-participant plans, the IRS began a one-year pilot program this month to help small employers avoid the penalty. 
  • Take the simple deduction option if you work in a home office. Taking the home office tax deduction is typically filled with complicated requirements and qualifications. Recently, the IRS created a simple option that allows you to take a standard $5 per square foot of your home used for business.   
  • Keep in mind that you could pay more unemployment taxes. Some states take loans from the federal government to meet unemployment benefits liabilities. If they have not repaid those loans, there will be a reduction in the credit against the Federal Unemployment Tax Act tax rate. This means employers in those states will have to pay more. A number of states may be affected, including Arizona, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Indiana, Kentucky, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Rhode Island and South Carolina, as well as the U.S. Virgin Islands.
  • Start organizing now. Organizing tax records now can make filing taxes much easier and faster later on. When small business owners get their information together well ahead of time, they greatly improve the odds of filing a complete and accurate return. Being compliant is the law, but instead of merely checking taxes off of a list of things to do at the end of the year, a savvy small business owner knows that preparation and planning ahead are key components of success.
Posted on 8:33 AM | Categories:

Depreciation Alternative Can Lead to Big Savings

Julian Block for AccountingWeb writes: Tax-savvy freelancers and other self-employed individuals know that they have two choices on how to write off their outlays for purchases of equipment and other kinds of personal property. One is depreciation; the other is so-called first-year expensing.

But countless tax-challenged entrepreneurs mistakenly believe that depreciation is the only way to deduct equipment purchases. As a result, they pay far more in taxes each year than legally required.

Business owners who go the "standard route" at Form 1040 time recover what they spend on equipment through depreciation deductions over varying periods. Section 167 of the Internal Revenue Code sets out the general rules for depreciation of various kinds of personal and real property. It specifies periods that range from as low as three years to as much as 39 years—with the majority closer to three than to 39.

Section 167 allows businesses to depreciate most of their equipment over five years or seven years. For example, it's five years for computers, copiers, cameras, tape recorders, and the like and seven years for furniture, such as desks, chairs, file cabinets, and safes. Usually, the cap on the amount allowable as a deduction for the first year is only 20 percent of the cost of five-year property and about 14 percent of the cost of seven-year property. [snip].  The article continues @ AccountingWeb.com, click here to continue reading.
Posted on 8:30 AM | Categories: