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Add You - How to Sell A Business: Working With Your Attorney and CPA
How to Start my Own Nursing Agency Business Guide econd time an attorney must be involved is at closing. Do not, under any conditions, close the deal yourself only to save a few hundred dollars in attorney’s fees. It will come back to haunt you. Ideally, you should use an escrow attorney who is not representing either party to close the deal. If it is a larger deal where one party has an attorney on staff, you must use an independent attorney to handle the closing, or have both parties attorney’s manage the process together.Starting a successful nursing agency does not happen by accident.Most countries hospitals are in a serious crisis, from large numbers of uninsured patients to spiraling costs, from outlandishly expensive prescription drugs to a severe and dangerous shortage of nurses, a shortage that can best be summed up by the fact that there are now over 5,000,000 open positions for registered nurses nationwide. There is a major reason for the shortage. Ever since the mid-'80s, young people have been choosing more lucrative careers. At the same time, the nurses we do have are getting older; the average age is now 45. Just as the baby boomers are starting to need more care, the pipeline is runni TIP: Attorneys have specialties. You want one who has been involved in numerous business transactions. Also shop prices. For a typical small business transaction, you don’t need a $1,000 per hour attorney, just one with experience processing business sales including business purchase agreements. Use Your Exit Strategy Team Although some key points at which to involve both your CPA and attorney in your deal have been outlined here, never hesitate to involve them at other points in the process when you have doubts or concerns of a tax, accounting o How to Share Important Documents in a Spam-Free Environment When selling your own business, it is critical that you understand the points in the deal process when your attorney and CPA should get involved. The first point to make is that both of these parties must be involved in your selling process. You should think of them as a part of your “Exit Strategy Team.”An extranet is a web-based tool that provides a secure environment for the organization and exchange of documents and information among a defined group of users.Extranets are often used to support team collaboration in circumstances where the team members are geographically dispersed or are drawn from variety external organizations. Examples include a group of departments within a company that collaborate on a common project, or service companies that collaborate with a variety of outside clients, customers and partners.Access to the extranet requires a valid password with username. The permissions given to your unique username by the network administrator determines which Your CPA Your primary goal with your CPA is to minimize the tax impact of your sale. Small changes in deal structure can make large differences in your after-tax cash from the sale, or be the difference in whether or not a deal gets done at all. A seller can save literally hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes as a result of deal structure and asset allocation decisions. If you have a small business that won’t sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars, don’t think there isn’t a role for a quality CPA. There is. A typical CPA is going to charge you somewhere between $100 and $200 for a one hour consultation. For a smaller business, a good CPA should take no more than thirty minutes to give you an intelligent assessment of your tax exposure based on likely deal structures. Spending $100 to save $1,000 on a small business sale, or to make sure you simply didn’t miss an opportunity, is a good deal. When to Meet with Your CPA Meet with your CPA at two critical junctures: after you first decide to sell, and when you are evaluating an offer that includes any agreement on the structure of the deal. The first meeting will allow you to develop an understanding of deal structure issues, particularly in terms of tax implications. This will make you a more informed decision-maker and a better negotiator. There are numerous internet based resources that will help you gain a base of knowledge that will make your time with a CPA more valuable. Simply type "how to sell a business" in a search engine like Yahoo, MSN or Google, and you will be able to find several quality resources. A second meeting over a specific offer gives your CPA concrete variables to calculate your tax liability, and possibly reveal solutions to minimize it. You may meet with your CPA more often if you have multiple offers over time. After you get a little education from him or her, you will be able to make some decisions on your own, but call your CPA before entering into a final and binding purchase agreement. If they are familiar with your situation, a shorter, cheaper phone call may suffice. If you’re trying to economize, you can meet with your CPA only before committing to a deal that includes financial structure details that can affect your tax situation. We do advise working out allocation issues prior to a binding purchase agreement for the simple reason that you don’t want to get the parties committed to a deal and then blow it up over a meaningful change due to tax concerns. TIP: All CPA’s are not created equal. You need one with experience in business transactions. If your normal CPA does not frequently deal in business transactions, then you need to find one who does. Ask CPA’s pointed questions to see if they seem to have a grip on the implications for a business sale. Your Attorney A good business attorney will help you review your purchase agreement both for issues that protect your interests, and to ensure that it complies with legal requirements in your jurisdiction. You can find excellent purchase agreement templates online that are designed to be balanced and treat both parties fairly. While you can settle most of the issues in your deal with one of these templates, be sure to have an attorney review the agreement before committing to it. Your deal or business may have unique attributes that need to be accounted for. In addition, each state has its own laws and regulations, and your attorney will ensure the standard required language in your state is included, either by changing the body of the form, or through an addendum. When to Meet with Your Attorney There are multiple points in time when you may want to consult with an attorney. There are two critical points, however, when an attorney must be involved. The first is prior to signing a binding purchase agreement, as noted above. The second time an attorney must be involved is at closing. Do not, under any conditions, close the deal yourself only to save a few hundred dollars in attorney’s fees. It will come back to haunt you. Ideally, you should use an escrow attorney who is not representing either party to close the deal. If it is a larger deal where one party has an attorney on staff, you must use an independent attorney to handle the closing, or have both parties attorney’s manage the process together. TIP: Attorneys have specialties. You want one who has been involved in numerous business transactions. Also shop prices. For a typical small business transaction, you don’t need a $1,000 per hour attorney, just one with experience processing business sales including business purchase agreements. Use Your Exit Strategy Team Although some key points at which to involve both your CPA and attorney in your deal have been outlined here, never hesitate to involve them at other points in the process when you have doubts or concerns of a tax, accounting or Why Your MLM Support System Gives You A 90% Chance Of Being A Failure! of your tax exposure based on likely deal structures. Spending $100 to save $1,000 on a small business sale, or to make sure you simply didn’t miss an opportunity, is a good deal.One of the biggest reasons why I see network marketers drop like flies is because of the support system. Yes you heard that right, your support system TRULY stinks! But I am not telling you to get you mad, but help you realize that by "plugging into the system" with blind faith is a huge mistake.Sure you may feel a temporary high after listening to your big time upline repeat these lines. But have you actually taken into consideration if it has actually helped you become richer and more successful? Probably not. See if you can relate:Upline: You can do it winner! You: Yeah, yeah I heard that a billion timesUpline: Staying excited and enthusiastic is the sec When to Meet with Your CPA Meet with your CPA at two critical junctures: after you first decide to sell, and when you are evaluating an offer that includes any agreement on the structure of the deal. The first meeting will allow you to develop an understanding of deal structure issues, particularly in terms of tax implications. This will make you a more informed decision-maker and a better negotiator. There are numerous internet based resources that will help you gain a base of knowledge that will make your time with a CPA more valuable. Simply type "how to sell a business" in a search engine like Yahoo, MSN or Google, and you will be able to find several quality resources. A second meeting over a specific offer gives your CPA concrete variables to calculate your tax liability, and possibly reveal solutions to minimize it. You may meet with your CPA more often if you have multiple offers over time. After you get a little education from him or her, you will be able to make some decisions on your own, but call your CPA before entering into a final and binding purchase agreement. If they are familiar with your situation, a shorter, cheaper phone call may suffice. If you’re trying to economize, you can meet with your CPA only before committing to a deal that includes financial structure details that can affect your tax situation. We do advise working out allocation issues prior to a binding purchase agreement for the simple reason that you don’t want to get the parties committed to a deal and then blow it up over a meaningful change due to tax concerns. TIP: All CPA’s are not created equal. You need one with experience in business transactions. If your normal CPA does not frequently deal in business transactions, then you need to find one who does. Ask CPA’s pointed questions to see if they seem to have a grip on the implications for a business sale. Your Attorney A good business attorney will help you review your purchase agreement both for issues that protect your interests, and to ensure that it complies with legal requirements in your jurisdiction. You can find excellent purchase agreement templates online that are designed to be balanced and treat both parties fairly. While you can settle most of the issues in your deal with one of these templates, be sure to have an attorney review the agreement before committing to it. Your deal or business may have unique attributes that need to be accounted for. In addition, each state has its own laws and regulations, and your attorney will ensure the standard required language in your state is included, either by changing the body of the form, or through an addendum. When to Meet with Your Attorney There are multiple points in time when you may want to consult with an attorney. There are two critical points, however, when an attorney must be involved. The first is prior to signing a binding purchase agreement, as noted above. The second time an attorney must be involved is at closing. Do not, under any conditions, close the deal yourself only to save a few hundred dollars in attorney’s fees. It will come back to haunt you. Ideally, you should use an escrow attorney who is not representing either party to close the deal. If it is a larger deal where one party has an attorney on staff, you must use an independent attorney to handle the closing, or have both parties attorney’s manage the process together. TIP: Attorneys have specialties. You want one who has been involved in numerous business transactions. Also shop prices. For a typical small business transaction, you don’t need a $1,000 per hour attorney, just one with experience processing business sales including business purchase agreements. Use Your Exit Strategy Team Although some key points at which to involve both your CPA and attorney in your deal have been outlined here, never hesitate to involve them at other points in the process when you have doubts or concerns of a tax, accounting o Vital Component to Marketing Success: Establishing Credibility CPA more often if you have multiple offers over time. After you get a little education from him or her, you will be able to make some decisions on your own, but call your CPA before entering into a final and binding purchase agreement. If they are familiar with your situation, a shorter, cheaper phone call may suffice.As a salesperson or the owner of a small business, do you consider yourself to be qualified, experienced, and dependable? More importantly, have 95% of your customers had a satisfying experience doing business with you or your company? If your answer is ‘yes’ to all those questions, then your services or products have the potential to be in high demand. The trick is effectively communicating that information to your target market.Let’s assume that you have what your prospective customers are looking for: excellent service, high ethical and quality standards, a near-perfect track record in living up to promises and producing desired results, and the skills or knowledge to help your If you’re trying to economize, you can meet with your CPA only before committing to a deal that includes financial structure details that can affect your tax situation. We do advise working out allocation issues prior to a binding purchase agreement for the simple reason that you don’t want to get the parties committed to a deal and then blow it up over a meaningful change due to tax concerns. TIP: All CPA’s are not created equal. You need one with experience in business transactions. If your normal CPA does not frequently deal in business transactions, then you need to find one who does. Ask CPA’s pointed questions to see if they seem to have a grip on the implications for a business sale. Your Attorney A good business attorney will help you review your purchase agreement both for issues that protect your interests, and to ensure that it complies with legal requirements in your jurisdiction. You can find excellent purchase agreement templates online that are designed to be balanced and treat both parties fairly. While you can settle most of the issues in your deal with one of these templates, be sure to have an attorney review the agreement before committing to it. Your deal or business may have unique attributes that need to be accounted for. In addition, each state has its own laws and regulations, and your attorney will ensure the standard required language in your state is included, either by changing the body of the form, or through an addendum. When to Meet with Your Attorney There are multiple points in time when you may want to consult with an attorney. There are two critical points, however, when an attorney must be involved. The first is prior to signing a binding purchase agreement, as noted above. The second time an attorney must be involved is at closing. Do not, under any conditions, close the deal yourself only to save a few hundred dollars in attorney’s fees. It will come back to haunt you. Ideally, you should use an escrow attorney who is not representing either party to close the deal. If it is a larger deal where one party has an attorney on staff, you must use an independent attorney to handle the closing, or have both parties attorney’s manage the process together. TIP: Attorneys have specialties. You want one who has been involved in numerous business transactions. Also shop prices. For a typical small business transaction, you don’t need a $1,000 per hour attorney, just one with experience processing business sales including business purchase agreements. Use Your Exit Strategy Team Although some key points at which to involve both your CPA and attorney in your deal have been outlined here, never hesitate to involve them at other points in the process when you have doubts or concerns of a tax, accounting o How To Gear Up Your Network The art of Networking is a key ability for any type of entrepreneur. Networking can bring you important information as well as give others important information about you. As an aspiring or current business owner, networking should be an area of interest of prime importance to you and the future of you business. For those of us working via the internet only, the concept of networking becomes at the same time daunting and almost hilariously easy. Just point and click. You can even get software to help you contact people you want to network with. Personally I like to do most things manually, to get a feel for the project at hand.If you don’t understand why networking is so imp A good business attorney will help you review your purchase agreement both for issues that protect your interests, and to ensure that it complies with legal requirements in your jurisdiction. You can find excellent purchase agreement templates online that are designed to be balanced and treat both parties fairly. While you can settle most of the issues in your deal with one of these templates, be sure to have an attorney review the agreement before committing to it. Your deal or business may have unique attributes that need to be accounted for. In addition, each state has its own laws and regulations, and your attorney will ensure the standard required language in your state is included, either by changing the body of the form, or through an addendum. When to Meet with Your Attorney There are multiple points in time when you may want to consult with an attorney. There are two critical points, however, when an attorney must be involved. The first is prior to signing a binding purchase agreement, as noted above. The second time an attorney must be involved is at closing. Do not, under any conditions, close the deal yourself only to save a few hundred dollars in attorney’s fees. It will come back to haunt you. Ideally, you should use an escrow attorney who is not representing either party to close the deal. If it is a larger deal where one party has an attorney on staff, you must use an independent attorney to handle the closing, or have both parties attorney’s manage the process together. TIP: Attorneys have specialties. You want one who has been involved in numerous business transactions. Also shop prices. For a typical small business transaction, you don’t need a $1,000 per hour attorney, just one with experience processing business sales including business purchase agreements. Use Your Exit Strategy Team Although some key points at which to involve both your CPA and attorney in your deal have been outlined here, never hesitate to involve them at other points in the process when you have doubts or concerns of a tax, accounting o Quick Turning vs Speculation in Commercial Real Estate econd time an attorney must be involved is at closing. Do not, under any conditions, close the deal yourself only to save a few hundred dollars in attorney’s fees. It will come back to haunt you. Ideally, you should use an escrow attorney who is not representing either party to close the deal. If it is a larger deal where one party has an attorney on staff, you must use an independent attorney to handle the closing, or have both parties attorney’s manage the process together.Understanding how specific investment strategies can affect your entire commercial real estate process. A popular topic of commercial real estate is what is known as quick turning. The media has caught on to this phenomenon and generalized it. Many of the things you may have heard about quick turning are not as simple as they make them look. The general public has confused the arena of quick turning to include simple speculation. While the differences may not be apparent at first, if we delve deeper, there are several key variations.The first way to look at speculating is that it is performed by the absolute amateurs in real estate. This is not what an experienced commercial prope TIP: Attorneys have specialties. You want one who has been involved in numerous business transactions. Also shop prices. For a typical small business transaction, you don’t need a $1,000 per hour attorney, just one with experience processing business sales including business purchase agreements. Use Your Exit Strategy Team Although some key points at which to involve both your CPA and attorney in your deal have been outlined here, never hesitate to involve them at other points in the process when you have doubts or concerns of a tax, accounting or legal nature. It’s a lot cheaper to pay for an extra ten or fifteen minutes of time than it is to deal with the aftermath of a failed or flawed agreement!
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