Tags: home based business

Paul Bonnallie – 9 Steps to Become a Better Person

  • Step 1 — Be teachable! Nobody knows everything. Be willing to learn new ways to do things. Close your ego and open your mind to new ideas.
  • Step 2 — Evaluate your behavior. When something doesn’t work as expected, evaluate your actions. Nobody doubts your best intentions. It is not a crime to make mistakes. It is a crime to not learn from your mistakes and to repeat them.
  • Step 3 — Emulate the behavior of those who are successful. Are you bypassed promotions in work? Emulate the behavior of those that receive those promotions. Do you respect somebody in your community? Write down the qualities that you respect and incorporate them into your behavior.
  • Step 4 — Ask for help. Find a mentor. If you want to become a great sales person, talk to as many sales people as you can. Learn from them. Learn what to do and most importantly, what not to do. Ask people in work for help. If you are sincere, people will help you.
  • Step 5 — Ask how to be successful. I teach for private organizations and schools. Whenever I interview, I ask the interviewer what makes a successful teacher? They give me answers that help me learn.
  • Step 6 —Read. Successful people read! Read books that are not part of your discipline. For example, I read about successful coaches to become a better teacher. Want to be a great sales person? Read about people that inspire others.
  • Step 7 — Be humble. If you have to tell people how great you are, you’re not great. People know when you do great things; you don’t have to tell them.
  • Step 8 — Never forget the bad times. We all have our ups and downs. Don’t let success go to your head. It may take a lifetime to become successful but only a moment to become a failure.
  • Step 9 —Define your own meaning of success. Success does not necessarily equate to earning a million dollars. Success can be living the lifestyle you choose, raising a family, making a living doing what you love, et cetera.

Full article available at www.ehow.com

Ways to give back to your community are insurance that your community will be there for you. Most of us go about our days caught up in what it is that we need do routinely. Have you ever thought about in order for us to function in our community routinely, the community had to have a routine? Exactly. Have you ever thought of ways to give back to your community? You would be surprised at the little things you can do to ensure your local community continues to run like clockwork.

To begin to examine ways to give back to your community, just look around you at the local needs. Are there a lot of homeless people? Is there a lot of trash around in your community? The last time you were in your library was it tidy, were the people overworked? These are all places that you can volunteer that offer ways to give back to your community.

If you attend church, and the church has a day care center, volunteer at least once a month to help with day care. Volunteer to bring healthy snacks to the children that are in the day care. You can also volunteer your service by offering to clean the church, bring fresh flowers, or offer to volunteer in office work at the church administration office. The fact is all of these are ways to give back to your community because you are providing your time, which in turn provides a service.

The schools are suffering in every state. Our children are in need. Offer to volunteer in some capacity at your child’s school. There are always committees and functions that will need the assistance of parents, and volunteer service. Your face being a regular fixture around the school also serves to keep you abreast of how the school is running, the issues being dealt with, the assets, the deficits, and the needs of the school community in general. Your mere presence, your volunteer effort, and your being active as a parent at the school are all ways to give back to your community.

Other ways to give back to your community involve serving food to the homeless, and providing clothing to organizations that help others get prepared to get back into the workplace. A major volunteer service particularly for the homeless or for people who have been out of work is offering to prepare a resume for them. Many of these people don’t know where to begin to write a resume. Not only will you be helping an individual in need, you will be helping the workforce by helping to put someone back in it. All of these ideas, al of these efforts are ways you can give back to your community. If one person can do all of this, imagine what a whole community can do.

Published April 06, 2007 by: J. Rica at http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/195436/ways_to_give_back_to_your_community_pg2.html?cat=25

With the economy in its present state everyone is doing what they can to save money. Saving money, however, doesn’t mean that it has to cut into time spent with your family. Spending time with your family reinforces bonds with one another, and there are several activities that help you learn together. Sharing inside jokes, discovering things you each know (and don’t know), learning something new — all of these things are just basic rewards you and your family will receive from spending time together. But, when you spend that time together doing something that costs little or no money, you can do it more often, and sometimes begin a new family tradition.

I’ve put together ten of my favorite ways to spend time with my family. All of these activities cost very little, but the rewards are incredible.

Movie Night

My husband and I have two children (ages 9 and 11). Once a week we try to make sure to sit down and watch a movie together. We take turns picking out the movie, but we try to keep the options limited to movies that we would all have some kind of interest in. And, of course, we do everything possible to keep the movies family friendly, and appropriate for all the ages watching. Movies about animals are always a big hit at our house. Because we watch so many movies, we’ve invested into purchasing a plan with Netflix. For approximately $10.00 a month we always have an unlimited amount of movies to watch either by downloading them onto our computer or having them sent to our home. Most of the time we have dinner together as we watch our movie, but on occasion we’ll pop some microwave popcorn and chow down on that along with it. We try to make the night a little more special by having food for dinner that isn’t something we would normally eat like a new recipe or order in (pizza night!).

There are so many board games on the market today that the possibilities are almost endless. Of course, one good thing about board games is that with most of them you only have to buy the game (or pieces) one time and then you have it there to play over and over again. A lot of creative thinking has gone into making games these days, and there are some great options available. For example, our family loves to play chess, but with a traditional game only two players can play. A new game called “Tile Chess” was developed that makes it possible for several players to play at once while keeping the main idea of the game intact. Other favorites are Monopoly, Risk, Uno, Clue, Battleship, Scrabble, and typical card games like Hearts and Rummy.

Another great thing about board games is that a good number of them have an educational value to them. For example, with Uno young children get an opportunity to use colors and numbers. Monopoly allows children to figure out how to use money (on a broad level). Risk, like Chess, is a game of strategy so it allows for a different type of thinking.

Hiking and Nature Walks

When our children were very young we began hiking. It has become one of our favorite things to do now. On several occasions we have seen animals on the trail such as deer, and that has always a treat. Planning even a small hiking trip can be a great opportunity for the entire family to pitch in and help decide where to hike, what specific trails to take, etc. We bought a book that references most of the major plants and animals that live in our area, so we use it as a time to point out wildlife that is native to us. We’ve discovered several plants and animals that we hadn’t seen before and the children can tell you the names of almost all the butterflies that live in our area now. From hiking we learned what poison oak and ivy look like, and some of the plants that you can eat. There’s something truly incredible when you are all working together toward a goal that really brings you all together. Every hiking trip we have ever been on has been memorable for one reason or another, and it has given our family an opportunity to make some lasting memories together that we wouldn’t have had otherwise.

Another special treat about hiking is that it is such great exercise. It also helps to loosen you up and get you more relaxed. And, its a wonderful time to have a picnic with your loved ones by a bubbling brook. It offers a great opportunity for conversation.

Bird Watching and/or Star Gazing
Bird watching offers you and your children the opportunity to see animals that you may have missed during the busy hustle of daily life. Taking the time to quietly watch these animals gives an opportunity to see they live, how they act in different situations, how they eat, and so much more. With so many different varieties of birds, the different colors of the feathers, the different ways each bird acts gives you an opportunity to be amazed at these little creatures. Your children will be amazed as well.

Just like bird watching, star gazing opens up your eyes to endless possibilities. There are so many clusters of stars, planets, and meteor showers out there, that you may find yourself looking toward the heavens for hours. It is an incredible canvas for imaginative thinking, and there is so much to learn! You can discover where the North Star is and what the scientists call it. Can you find the Big Dipper? What about Pleiades? It is so much fun to sit and point out these constellations to your child, and hear them repeat their names. On the nights of meteor showers the atmosphere becomes almost magical.

Finding information for either pastime is easy online, and, of course, free. You can do both from the comfort of your own back yard, so there’s not even the expense of gas. Have some yummy snacks on hand, and you’ve got yourself a wonderful new hobby that’s free!

Learning a New Craft

There are so many different crafts out there that any family could find a few to do together. There’s knitting, sewing, painting, wood working, wreath making… the list is endless. Learning how to build a birdhouse takes on a whole different meaning when there’s someone beside you to help in the process. Learning how to crochet an afghan becomes a wonderful opportunity to laugh at your mistakes. Tole painting becomes mesmerizing when you see the creative ideas that pop from your child’s imagination. Homemade clay is easy and inexpensive to make (the cost of a bag of flour and some salt). You can get acrylic paint for $1.00 a bottle or less. You can purchase a skein of yarn and two crochet hooks for under $5.00. Many projects can be done with very little money.

One of the best things from working together with your family on a craft project is the different levels of creativity that you discover you and your children have. I’ve heard several people tell me that they don’t have a creative bone in their whole body, but then I’ve seen this same person sit down with their child and make some of the most creative, incredible pieces of art. It blew their minds!

Cooking
We love to cook with our children. Recipes can be found online for easy dishes and very complicated ones, depending on what you and your children want to try your hand at. A lot of recipes don’t even call for cooking.

Here’s an easy no-bake peanut butter fudge recipe: www.recipezaar.com/15-Minute-No-Bake-Chocolate-Peanut-Butter-Fudge-153028

Cooking together gives your small child an opportunity to learn about measurements and how parts make a whole. For older children its a great way to promote self esteem with eating that wonderful dish when its ready to put on the plate.

Window Shopping

Sometimes my family and I like to pile in the car and head down to the mall just to look and dream. We peruse through all the different stores and pick the items we would want in our dream home. We get ideas for future crafts there, and we get ideas for Christmas and birthdays too. We’ve used it as an opportunity to help the children learn how to stretch a dollar by comparing prices. We’ve also done this to prepare for a home remodeling or redecorating job. Many stores have put ideas together for you in their models so that you can look and see what you want to change at your home. We also use this as an way to help the children learn to save their money. If there’s something in the store that they really want, we give them ideas on ways they can earn money and save it to purchase it. It’s a great way to teach patience, perseverance, and how to teach them to avoid impulse buying. The key, however, is to go with a limited amount of money on you! Just enough to buy a treat afterwards. It’s always fun to wrap up the day with an ice cream.

Library

A lot of libraries have become savvy to the needs of their patrons. These days even the smallest of libraries have a video section, and many even have music cds to check out. Looking through the books together gives you an opportunity to help your child find new stories that will interest them. Of course, it helps promote reading, but it also helps expand your child’s imagination and interest in different things. Once your child can print his or her name, they can get a library card, and its free! Most libraries also have a lot of different group activities you can do together. One library near us has a movie day every week, a summer reading program contest, and an annual art/writing exhibit.
You can find myriads of books to help you plan that hiking trip or the new craft you’d like to do. You can get your movies for movie night here, and books on stars and birds. Most libraries are online too, so you can through the card catalog at home and find a book that you’d like to read and have it saved so that it isn’t checked out before you get it. If the book or movie you want is across town, you can also request that it be sent to your nearest library to save you time and gas.

Community Project

On occasion a community project will arise that we all take a part in. We have been part of a clean up effort in our town to pick up trash. We had an opportunity to help make a new hiking trail. My children learned how fortunate they were by helping at a food closet. It gives you and your family a great feeling to help give back to your community. Driving down the road my little girl told her grandmother, “We made this road pretty. We all picked up the garbage and now it looks beautiful! ” It gave all of us a sense of pride and belonging. Some community projects, however, aren’t appropriate for small children, so you may want to ask about that before you sign up for it. You can check your city town hall, any churches, library, or public boards at restaurants and stores to find out where there may be opportunities for you and your family to serve. It is time well spent.

Outdoor Sports

Badmitten anyone? What about a game of Frisbee? Tag football, relay races, volleyball, mini golf, croquet, basketball, baseball, woofle ball… there are so many outdoor sports to choose from! It’s a great way to get outside in the sunshine and see what you and your children are made of! It’s a great way to get that rusty pitching arm back in shape, or teach your child some hand-eye coordination. You could even take it a step further and design a treasure hunt. It may not be classified as a sport, but who cares about classification. It’s all about having fun with your kids!

Article Published December 23, 2008 by: Karen Greaves

Full article at http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1302682/ten_inexpensive_ways_to_spend_time_pg5.html?cat=25

7 ways financial reform will impact your life by Lynnette Khalfani-Cox is information you need to understand, Paul Bonnallie

Full article: http://www.walletpop.com/blog/2010/07/21/7-ways-financial-reform-will-change-your-financial-life/?ncid=webmail#ixzz0uQ5WRFel

Now that President Barack Obama has signed into law the biggest overhaul of the banking industry since the Great Depression, many Americans are wondering exactly how financial reform will impact them.

Officially called The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the far-reaching implications of the 2,300-page law will take many months, even years, to be fully felt. Moreover, since specific rules must still be written, observers fear that loopholes and carefully-worded fine print could muddy various elements of financial reform.

Despite these uncertainties, there are some clear ways that financial reform will impact you and your wallet. Here are seven of them:

Your Consumer Complaints

Upset with a debt-settlement agency or feeling ripped off by your mortgage lender? In as little as six months, maybe as long as a year and a half from now, you’ll have a pit bull in your corner.

One of the most important changes to be ushered in by financial reform is the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). This watchdog agency, likely to be headed by the highly-regarded consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren, will be charged with safeguarding the public from shady business practices, predatory lending and abusive financial products. The bureau will also collect consumer complaints and monitor them, providing regular reports to Congress.

Unlike some regulatory agencies, the CFPB won’t be all bark and no bite. Armed with sweeping authority and an estimated $500 million budget, this consumer advocacy powerhouse will pack a strong punch. Housed within the Federal Reserve, the CFPB will be an independent body that draws its funding from the Fed, not Congress. It will have the authority to write and enforce policies impacting virtually every area of consumer lending.

The agency will also likely reduce the mounds of paperwork and fine print contained in most financial agreements. In a recent article in theBoston Globe, Warren said the CFPB should make financial disclosures to consumers shorter and clearer. “I would like to see a world with two-page mortgage disclosures, two-page credit card agreements and two-page overdraft contracts,” she told the Globe.

Your Loans

Because the Consumer Protection bureau will have broad powers to oversee an array of financial products and services, everything from credit counseling and payday loans to mortgages and credit cards will come under its jurisdiction. Even an ombudsman for private education loans will be appointed to help borrowers resolve complaints with college lenders. (An ombudsman for federal student loans already exists within the U.S. Department of Education.)

Your Home

Even before financial reform has been implemented, it is “already becoming tougher and tougher for an average person to get a home loan,” says Ray Kuplaste, sales manager at United Capital Lenders in Southampton, Pennsylvania.

Though mortgages will become harder to get, they’ll be cheaper in many ways too. For example, the new legislation requires lenders to fully document a home buyer’s income – preferably with tax records from the IRS. That means no more “stated-income” loans or fudging about how much money you make, a common practice during the housing boom.

Your Credit Scores
One year after President Obama signs the Dodd-Frank bill, you’ll be eligible to get a free copy of your credit score if you suffer any “adverse” decision by an institution, such as getting rejected for a credit card or loan, denied insurance, or turned down for a job because of your credit rating.
Kenneth Lin, founder and CEO of CreditKarma.com, which already gives out free credit scores to consumers, applauded this area of financial reform, but he expressed reservations about another credit-related aspect of the new regulations.
Under the law, the Consumer Protection bureau will study credit scores and issue a report on whether scores sold to consumers differ dramatically from those purchased by lenders, insurers and other businesses. The bureau will weigh in on whether such discrepancies hurt consumers – something Lin says will be tricky at best.

“In concept, it’s a great idea,” he says. “But to actually create legislation that discloses this complex (scoring) system, or discloses winners and losers, is going to prove challenging.”

Lin questions, for instance, whether regulators will adopt a “preferred” credit score. “If so, will it be the FICO score, the VantageScore created by the credit bureaus, Experian’s Plus score, or some other score?”

Your Investments

Under financial reform, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) will ramp up its efforts. The SEC has already announced plans to hire 800 new staffers and create three new offices to meet the agency’s new responsibilities.

One office will oversee large financial institutions, regulating swaps, derivatives and other complex Wall Street products. Another SEC office will better monitor asset-backed securities, like the toxic mortgages sold by Wall Street firms during the subprime meltdown. A final office will review newly-created Wall Street securities and make sure adequate investor protections and disclosures are in place.

While much of the SEC’s focus will be on corporations, three key initiatives target individual investors, earning the bill praise from the Consumer Federation of America. First is the appointment of an “Investor Advocate” within the SEC – a high-profile position intended to reinforce that the agency’s mission is to put the public’s interest above that of Wall Street.
Additionally, the Consumer Protection bureau will review the current practice of mandatory arbitration on Wall Street. In 2009, complaints lodged with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) — the brokerage industry’s self-regulatory organization which handles investment disputes — rose 43% over 2008 levels. Yet investors won just 45% of all complaints against brokers last year, FINRA statistics show. If the CFPB deems mandatory arbitration unfair, the bureau can limit or ban it, which could allow spurned investors to sue in court when they feel wronged by their stockbrokers.
Lastly, the SEC will have the power to mandate that your stockbroker serve as a fiduciary, acting solely in your best interest, just as financial advisers do. So despite criticisms of financial reform by former SEC Chairman Harvey Pitt, a more investor-friendly SEC is certain to emerge.

Your Financial Education

Much attention has been paid to the fact that the financial reform bill will create a national Office of Financial Literacy. In reality, though, there will be multiple new offices – all under the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau – whose goals are to boost your money-management knowledge.
The purpose of the Financial Literacy office will be to teach all Americans about saving money, credit and loans, liens and fees. Meanwhile, two other offices will focus specifically on educating and helping two segments of the public who often get scammed financially: older Americans aged 62 and older, and members of the military and their families.
Beyond these new offices, woven throughout financial reform are other educational safeguards. For instance, if you finance your home with an Adjustable Rate Mortgage, or ARM, your lender must also give you at least six months’ notice before the first interest-rate reset, telling you how much your new payment is likely to be. Additionally, if you’re a first-time home buyer and you want to use an option ARM – a home loan that can lead to negative amortization – you must first receive housing counseling from a HUD-certified agency.

Your Retail Shopping

This holiday season or the next, when you’re gift-shopping at your favorite retailer, don’t be surprised if you’re offered a discount for turning over a $20 bill, instead of your well-worn Visa card. That’s because the financial reform bill allows merchants to give you a discount on your purchase, if you pay with cash, a check or a debit card – as opposed to a credit card.
What’s more, the new law will allow retailers to impose a $10 minimum on credit card purchases, forcing consumers to stop using plastic for small purchases like that morning latte from Starbucks.
Paying cash for relatively low-cost items may be an inconvenience if you’re used to whipping out a credit card for everything. In the long run, however, this switch may save you big bucks by not allowing you to rack up unnecessary debt.

Consumer advocates expect that many tweaks to financial reform will occur during the rule-making process. But they’re hoping that the spirit of the overhaul envisioned by Congress will remain intact. They’re also hoping that changes will come sooner, rather than later.

“Even with the best of intentions, maybe everything will be put in place in two years,” says Sherry, of Consumer Action. Then she quickly adds: “But I think that’s being optimistic.”

Read more: http://www.walletpop.com/blog/2010/07/21/7-ways-financial-reform-will-change-your-financial-life/?ncid=webmail#ixzz0uQ61sUbD

Here is another great article I came across … Shift Your Sales Focus for Increased Sales By , About.com Guide  Full article at http://www.sbinfocanada.about.com/od/salesselling/a/increasesales.htm

Want to increase sales dramatically? Then shift your sales focus from attracting new customers to enticing your proven customers to buy again. The best sales prospect is a prospect that’s already converted – in other words, one of your current customers.

Think of it this way; if your business is located in a small town with a population of 1000 people and you sell a sprocket to everyone in that town, man, woman, and child, you’ve sold 1000 sprockets – and saturated your market. Your sprocket selling days are over. Is it time to pack up and move on?

No! If you start focusing your sales efforts on your proven customers, you’ll be able to increase your sprocket sales dramatically. And these sure ways to increase sales will help build customer loyalty, too. Try some or all of these ideas to increase your sales:

1. Set up a sales incentive program.

Give your sales staff a reason to get out there and sell, sell, sell. Why do so many businesses that rely on their sales staff to drive sales have incentive programs in place? Because offering their sales staff the trips and/or TVs for x amount of sales works. See Paul Shearstone’s Creating Sales Incentive Programs That Work for how to make your sales incentive program “sweet and simple and attainable”.

2. Encourage your sales staff to upsell.

Essentially, upselling involves adding related products and/or services to your line and making it convenient and necessary for customer to buy them. Just placing more products near your usual products isn’t going to increase your sales much. To upsell successfully, the customer has to be persuaded of the benefit. For instance, when I last had my carpets cleaned, the cleaner noticed a pet stain. Instead of just cleaning it up, he drew my attention to it, and showed me how easily and effectively the spot cleaning solution removed all trace of the stain. Did I buy the spot cleaning solution? You bet. He persuaded me that buying it was beneficial to me and made it convenient to purchase it. Result: increased sales for the carpet cleaning company.

3. Give your customers the inside scoop.

Recently I was shopping at a retail housewares store. I had picked out an item and was mulling over whether to buy it or not when a salesperson came up to me and said, “I see you’re interested in that blender. We’re having a sale next week and all our blenders will be 20 percent off. You might want to come back then.” Guess what? I did – and bought two other items as well. Lesson: if you have a promotion or sale coming up, tell your customers about it. They’ll come back – and probably bring some friends with them too. (And don’t forget – you can give your customers the inside scoop by emailing or calling them, too.)

4. Tier your customers.

There should be a clear and obvious difference between regular customers and other customers – a difference that your regular customers perceive as showing that you value them. How can you expect customer loyalty if all customers are treated as “someone off the street”? There are all kinds of ways that you can show your regular customers that you value them, from small things such as greeting them by name through larger benefits such as giving regulars extended credit or discounts.

5. Set up a customer rewards program.

We’re all familiar with the customer rewards programs that so many large businesses have in place. But there’s no reason that a small business can’t have a customer rewards program, too. It can be as simple as a discount on a customer’s birthday or as complex as a points system that earns various rewards such as discounts on merchandise. Done right, rewards programs can really help build customer loyalty and increase sales.

6. Distribute free samples to customers.

Why do so many businesses include free samples of other products when you buy something from them? Because it can increase sales in so many ways. As the customer who bought the original product, I might try and like the sample of the new product and buy some of it, too. Or I might pass on the sample to someone else, who might try the product, like it, and buy that and other products from the company. At the very least, the original customer will be thinking warm thoughts about your company, and hopefully telling other people about your products.

Attracting new customers is a good thing. But attracting new customers is not the only way to increase your sales, and is, in fact, the hard way of going about it. Shifting your sales focus to enticing your current customers can make increasing your sales easier – and best of all, build the customer loyalty that results in repeat sales.

Your team members are just as important to your business as your customers, so you need to communicate effectively with them on a regular basis too. Bloomtool’s Database Marketing tool the Ezy Communicator is a great option to use for this. It makes keeping your employees up to date easy, keeps company morale high and reduces the need for paper memos.

Employee company updates

Keep your employees in the loop and make them feel valued by giving them regular updates on company news. They will be much more loyal and productive if they feel like part of the companys success. Create a template for weekly updates, then simply type in the current news and hit send its that easy.

Employee company focus/targets for week or month

Send a quick email to your team with details of your sales targets or your promotional focus for a certain time period so they all informed and up-to-date. Include some tips to help them reach the goals and mention high achievers to keep the team motivated.

Event announcements

Quickly and easily let your staff know about upcoming events, such as workshops and training sessions. If your Internet marketing software has event management capabilities, the employees can even RSVP on the spot.

Social club announcements

Contact staff with social club news and a calendar of upcoming team events. You can even have the functionality for them to book online to minimise administration time for the event. Sending an email campaign

is much quicker and more effective than relying on word of mouth and it ensures that no one gets left out of the loop.

Blogs / Newsletters

By using Bloomtool’s blog tool you can engage with your team members and be the expert by sharing useful advice and information in a company blog on your website. You can also send personalised newsletters to your database with a Bloomtools simple editing system with the help of professionally designed email templates

. This also includes autoresponders and trigger emails.

Knowledgebase / Intranet

A knowledge base is basically a collection of pages within your site that cover things like frequently asked questions and product guides, so your employees can log in and search for the information they need. Bloomtool’s knowledge base tool is a great option to use internally as you are able put your policies, style guides, templates and important documents all in the one place where staff can easily view and download them. This helps to minimise your workload by having this information available in a knowledge base on your website.

Article Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com

About the Author:
This article was provided to you by Bloomtools, Australasia’s leading website developer. With Offices in Melbourne, Newcastle, Gold Coast, Brisbane, Sunshine Coast and Wellington New Zealand. Online business solutions provider SEO, Websites (with simple to use Content Management System), Email Marketing and CRM.

Many people want to start a home business, but never do because of the hassles and start-up costs. As with any new business, a home based business can have unforeseen expenses and problems. There’s also usually a waiting period of at least a year before profits can be realized. But with a turn key, automated home based business, many of these hassles can be eliminated. You can make money from home without the initial hassles of running a business. Let’s see how a turn key business works to your advantage.

Eliminate Many Business Start-Up Costs

Most new home based businesses will require certain start-up costs. These may include a new computer and computer desk, a printer, supplies, a fax machine, employee costs, consulting or accounting fees, a business phone, and printing costs for letterhead, envelopes, and business cards. With an online home business, you’ll incur fees for new website design along with your domain name and hosting fees, promotion, and order processing expenses. These can add up in a hurry and are the main reason many new home based business owners don’t make it.

Why a Turn Key, Automated Home Based Business?

A turn key home business helps you eliminate many of these start-up costs and some of the hassles while realizing your home business dream. You’ll still have some responsibilities, of course, but nowhere near as many. Why? A turn key home business is a ready-made business that has already been tested and proven time and time again for your benefit. By the time you join the opportunity, the company has likely already tested to see what works… and what brings sales!

You can enter a turn key, automated home based business with the backing of highly trained professionals who know how to guide you every step of the way. This eliminates part of the waiting and testing period for new business start-ups. You can make money from home in less amount of time while leaving the legwork to the experts.

Benefits of the Turn Key Home Business

There are many benefits of joining a turn key, automated business opportunity. First, you’ll be able to avoid the hassles and many start-up costs of a new business. Turn key businesses usually provide a website for you, which will eliminate high web design costs. You may be required to pay a fee to receive the website and services, but much time will be saved because your website will be ready to sell. The website presentation has already been tested to bring results. Also, customer service can be a huge benefit. The company will take care of sales for you. Trained professionals will take the phone calls and answer questions. They will close the sale for you so you won’t have to worry about working one-on-one with customers.

Having a turn key website also eliminates many office expenses. You may still want to get business cards and promotional items, but you can eliminate phone expenses and other supplies because you won’t need them for online promotions. Your main function will be network marketing through online promotion, so you can earn a healthy residual income based on your promotional efforts. The company does the selling for you once you introduce new people to your website.

As with many MLM opportunities, the turn key, automated home based business uses an automated system that works around the clock selling the ideas or products available, even while you sleep. Your focus can be on promotion, not everyday tasks such as answering phones, mailing correspondence, and updating your website.

So if you’re worried about the hassles of starting a business, then a turn key, automated home based business may be just the right choice for you to realize wealth from home.

www.HowToMakeMoneyWhileYourSick.com has an excellent Free Report on how to make money online with some excellent tips and guides on webhosting and more.

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www.HowToMakeMoneyWhileYourSick.com has an excellent Free Report on how to make money online with some excellent tips and guides on webhosting and more. - http://www.howtomakemoneywhileyoursick.com/

Expert business IT support will ensure both your systems and your people continue to offer the service your customers expect. Business in today’s environment demands a high degree of efficiency. It is no good just being good. Your people need to be able to work with the confidence of knowing your systems will all work efficiently and fast with the minimal fuss and they have superior quality business IT support at their disposal to help resolve problems.

As a comparison, just consider a business that relies heavily on transport such as cars and vans. You rarely see that business with their own team of mechanics to maintain these vehicles and keep them on the road. That task is generally set up with a specialist service provider who will manage that element for them.

The same line of thinking should be applied to your IT systems. Specialist business IT support doesn’t have to be on hand in house with today’s technology throughout the operational day.

The evolution of the internet, technology, and the control and monitoring systems available today means that many business systems and their process control mechanisms and programmes can be monitored remotely so when a potential problem manifests, there can be remedial action taken from afar over the internet. The repairs to your programmes or systems do not necessarily have to be undertaken on-site.

More often than not today, communication networks and the internet run side by side with many interdependent interfaces between the two systems. It is extremely important therefore that when selecting a service provider, you ensure they have the pedigree to provide a reliable, consistent service for you and your people across all of your systems. .

Below is a video I found floating out on the internet: It is definitely worth the time to watch… Paul

Tony Robbins interviews Frank Kern and John Reese to finally understand what makes successful people successful. Why the majority of aspiring entrepreneurs and people in general fail to take action on daily basis. Why people fail to follow through? Watch the video to find out!

I think the original article came from http://tonyrobbinstraining.com

Here is a great article I found on aol.com that provides the 10 ten ways to avoid a tax audit,  Best method is to be accurate and honest..  Paul
Kelly Phillips ErbKelly Phillips Erb RSS Feed
Jan 28th 2010 at 8:00AM
“Worried about an IRS audit? Avoid what’s called a red flag. That’s something the IRS always looks for. For example, say you have some money left in your bank account after paying taxes. That’s a red flag.

Jay Leno

While Leno might not have it exactly right, he is on to something: The IRS does look for red flags when selecting a return for audit. Their methodology, however, is a little more sophisticated than what the comedian suggests. While there’s no foolproof way to escape an audit, here are some tips for keeping your return from being flagged:

1. Be good at math. The IRS continually cites bad math as one of the top errors on tax returns. Making math mistakes on your tax return will get you noticed — and not in a good way. While the IRS will generally just correct your mistake and send you a bill, too many math errors might indicate a level of carelessness that causes your return to be flagged. So, use caution when preparing your return. Copy numbers onto forms or input into software carefully — and double check those numbers when you’re done. Check for transposition errors, as well as addition and subtraction. Don’t have a false sense of security when using a software package. Your tax prep software can’t tell when you’ve made a mistake before entering your data.

2. Don’t be too rich. Statistically, you’re about six times more likely to be audited if you report over $1 million in income than if you report income of less than $200,000. You’re about three times more likely to be audited if you report between $200,000 and $1,000,000 than if you report income of less than $200,000.

Does the IRS have it out for the rich? Not necessarily. Those who make more money tend to take advantage of more itemized deductions, such as charitable contributions, which attract the attention of the IRS. Filing a Schedule A with significant charitable contributions or miscellaneous expenses may trigger an examination.

It’s also highly likely that many higher income taxpayers are small business owners. Statistically, taxpayers who file a Schedule C are two to four times more likely to be audited. Many tax professionals recommend that taxpayers who are collecting substantial income from a small business consider incorporating in order to avoid filing a Schedule C that attracts attention.

3. Don’t be too poor. While the upper class is generally the target of most audits, the other end of the spectrum isn’t spared. When examining returns, the IRS is particularly interested in errors related to the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), a refundable credit that may only be claimed by lower income taxpayers. In 1999, the IRS reported $8.5 billion and $9.9 billion in over-payments related to the EITC. The error rate is about 30%, nearly three times higher than with other social programs.

Despite initiatives put in place to stamp out EITC errors and fraud, as recently as 2002, the IRS reported that it had issued math error notices on more than 1 million returns claiming $729 million in EITC. Common mistakes included amounts that were figured or entered incorrectly; missing or incorrect taxpayer ID numbers for qualified children; failure to report income; and dependent children who were ineligible for purposes of the credit.

If you qualify for the EITC, pay attention to the fine print. Report all your income; check and double check your math (see number one above).

4. Live within your means. Even if you’re not too rich or too poor, make sure your tax return accurately reflects your economic reality. It doesn’t make sense for you to report $30,000 in charitable donations on a $45,000 salary — or home mortgage interest deductions of $10,000 for your $15,000 job. Think about the picture you’re painting on your return: Does it make sense?

The IRS has a database, of sorts, of what it thinks it takes to survive based on where you live and the number of dependents you report. If your numbers are wildly different from those norms, it will question whether you are under reporting income or over reporting deductions. Just ask Rachel Porcaro, the Seattle mother of two boys, who was flagged for audit because the IRS did not understand how she could support her family on her salary.

The bottom line when it comes to reporting income and expenses: Your tax return shouldn’t raise more questions than it answers.

5. Don’t lose money. I’ve already alluded to the fact that filing a Schedule C may increase your risk of audit. This is because, according to a recent Government Accountability Office report, the IRS estimates that as many of 70% of taxpayers who report net losses on a Schedule C have artificially inflated expenses to create losses.

The IRS understands you will have years that are good and years that are not so good. But it likes to think you’re in business to make a profit, even if you don’t every single year. If, however, you’re reporting losses on your Schedule C every year (especially for three or more years in a row), the IRS might question how you’re managing to get by. Expect the agency to ask.

6. Remember that you’re married (or not). Your marital status is determined as of December 31, 2009. It doesn’t matter if you just got married (or divorced) on December 31 or if you’ve been married (or divorced) for the entire year. You may not file as single if you are still married — even if you are living apart from your spouse. And you may not file as married filing jointly without the consent of your spouse. Don’t file using the wrong marital status, and don’t file without the proper number of signatures — although it feels obvious, a joint return should have two signatures. Your spouse may forgive you if you forget that you’re married, but the IRS won’t.

7. Don’t claim the wrong number of dependents and exemptions. You may claim a person as a dependent only if that person meets the legal definition of a dependent. Don’t claim your cousin down the street just because you may send him or her a few dollars from time to time. If you’re not sure who might qualify as a dependent, check out this prior post.

Adding or removing dependents from year to year without explanation could cause you to land on the IRS’ radar screen. Similarly, claiming the same dependent as another taxpayer (which happens from time to time in the case of a divorce) may raise questions or cause your claims related to a dependent to be rejected, as will reporting the wrong Social Security number. If your dependent doesn’t have a Social Security number but otherwise qualifies as your dependent, you’ll need to get an ITIN for tax purposes.

8. Report all income. If you’ve ever used a software package to prepare your tax return, you should have noticed that the program constantly reminds you to enter the information on forms 1099, W-2, and the like exactly as it appears on the form. It’s not just an annoying computer generated message — there’s a method to their madness. The IRS makes every effort to match nearly 100% of the forms submitted to them by employers and other organizations. Financial information reported by banks, brokerage houses, and other financial institutions are matched about 96% of the time. This makes your individual margin for error incredibly small. Take the time to collect all the forms sent to you by employers, banks and other organizations. If you fail to receive a form, follow up — ask your employer where your form W-2 is, just in case it got lost in the mail. You don’t want to overlook income that should have been reported on your return, especially when the IRS is so diligent about checking this one.

9. Learn to type. It may sound silly, but handwriting your return may slow down processing and result in a mistake that attracts the attention of the IRS. If the IRS cannot read your return, the return may be rejected. The IRS encourages you to e-file for just this reason; it claims the error rate on e-filed returns is reduced to 1% as compared to nearly 20% on a paper return. This, in the IRS’ own words, “means a decreased likelihood of hearing from the IRS.”

10. Be normal. You may have noticed a trend with respect to these tips: The IRS doesn’t like returns that are different. In fact, it likes norms so much that it has a computer program to make sure you fit them. The program is called the Discriminant Inventory Function System (DIF), and it assigns a numeric score to each individual tax return after it’s been processed. If your score varies wildly from the norm, chances are, you’ll be flagged.

The bottom line: Be smart. But don’t cheat yourself, either. Don’t let a fear of being audited discourage you from reporting unusual losses or significant itemized deductions that you may be entitled to. Just be sure to keep good records to substantiate those items.

It is true that your chances of being audited are increasing. As the numbers of audits go up, take steps to protect yourself. Don’t be greedy, keep good records, and check (and double-check) your return. The fewer reasons you give the IRS to take a second look at your return, the better.

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