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I cannot believe the year is almost over! Time sure
does fly when you’re having fun. This is the beginning
of my busiest season and it always creeps up on me.
Everyone wants to get organized with the new year
approaching. You’d think after 10 years in business I
would remember, and the truth is, I do – but I also
like the surprise.
Stress comes with the push to get organized. To do
it now. To do it right. Like the Nike adage, I
say, “Just do it!” This issue is devoted to checklists,
techniques, tips and my favorite products to help
you get prepared for the new year. Hopefully it will
spark an idea and help you feel more prepared as you
enter 2006.
Wishing you greater productivity and success,
Debbie :)
| Productivity for Your Business: Year End Checklist |
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Things to do before December 31st
- Look at your Profit & Loss report. Where do you
stand? If you have a larger than expected profit, are
there any major purchases you should make now that
can be depreciated? Make sure you have the cash.
Talk to your accountant if you are not clear of the
depreciation rules or see this article by CCH.
- Verify loan accounts and clean up if
necessary.
- Verify your 1099 information is setup properly in
your accounting system. If you don’t have proper
information from each vendor, ask them for it now,
then create a form to use every year. Need help
making this happen in QuickBooks? Just ask us.
(More on our website)
After January 1st
- Reconcile all accounts – bank and credit cards –
in your accounting system.
- Verify you’ve made all entries in Petty Cash. If
you made the purchases last year, make sure to use
that date.
- Verify you’ve made all entries for items you’ve
paid for with personal funds.
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| Productivity for Your Self: Get Your Self Ready for the New Year |
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We often focus on the year end tasks surrounding
our small business. Getting yourself ready is just as
important and probably even more beneficial in the
long run. In a small business, our personal lives are
so tied to the business that the overlapping areas
are often gray. Here are 10 tasks you can do to get
prepared.
- Write a family holiday letter, summarizing the
major events for the year. People really do like to
know what you’re up to. Keep it light and fun and
only about a page or two long. This also provides a
history for your family files of what happened this
year. Put a copy in your family scrap book.
- Start or update a blessings log (or whatever
means something to you, like accomplishments or
thanks). Just seeing a positive list of what you’ve
managed to do should reduce any focus on the
negatives.
- Get your family budget in order. Decide what
major home improvement or decorating projects you
want to do. Decide what vacations you will go on.
Having a money plan is so important!
- Choose your intentions or goals for the upcoming
year. What do you personally want to accomplish?
Type them up and assign dates you’d like to aim for.
I go one step further and choose a theme for the
year. It is my “Year of ”. This helps to
keeps me focused and is easy to remember. Some
previous years have been titled “Year of MY choices”
and “Year I Become a Writer”.
- Create or reassess your personal mission or
purpose statement.
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| Technology Tip: My favorite tool of 2005 |
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My favorite technology tool of 2005 is my Dymo
LabelWriter printer. I just LOVE it! It’s perfect for
printing one label at a time. The best part is, I can
type as large as I want and it will automatically size
the font to fit the label. No more typing out a long
name and printing it on a full sheet of Avery labels
only to find the name ran off the label. Plus, you
really shouldn’t be running partial sheets of labels
through your printer multiple times. This is a true
time saver and helps me stay organized (my writing is
not the neatest). Anyone on our network can also
print to it plus Outlook, Word, ACT! and QuickBooks
all have interfaces that save keystrokes. I think
every office and even most homes should have one.
Click here for more information on
Dymo's website. Prices range from $110 - $210,
depending on your need for speed or dual tapes.
Think about your needs. If you frequently print both
shipping and file folder labels, you’ll appreciate a Twin
Turbo model. It’s new this year. I have the 330
model which works fine for my small office. You can
get a good deal on a refurbished model on the Dymo
website. See a printer at most office supply and
computer stores.
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| Interesting News |
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- The U.S. Postal Service will raise key rates on
January 8, 2006, lifting the price of a first class letter
to 39¢ for the first ounce and to 24¢ for each
additional ounce and all postcards. Priority Mail will
go to $4.05 for up to one pound. Best to get your
stock of 1¢ and 2¢ stamps now to meet the new
price and to avoid the crowds at post offices. Tip:
We buy our stamps online at www.usps.com for
just a $1.00 fee. Saves a lot of time and they arrive
in the mail about 5-7 days later, sometimes
sooner.
- Going on a vacation over the holidays? Use my
free
Vacation Preparation Checklist to help you save
time and forego the stress of getting ready. Modify it
to fit your needs. Why do I have something like
this on my site? Because it is simple tools like
this checklist, that help us be more productive.
- A new report from UK firm British Design
Innovation confirmed that the common practice by
design agencies to give free sales pitches is costing
an average of 12% in lost man-hours a year or
$65,000. This is based on the premise that 56% of
the firms employ five or less people. Do you give free
sales pitches? If so, what is your closing ratio? If you
are the company being pitched, consider saving
everyone’s time, including your own, by preparing a
simple Request for Proposal (RFP). We did this last
month for a client looking to outsource HR services
and find help preparing for a move.
- If you didn’t catch my October newsletter article
about a wonderful new online service called
SendOutCards, consider reading it here (http
://www.c4gp.com/sendoutcards.html). In under
30 minutes, I mailed out over 70 Thanksgiving cards
to clients. Really, this new service did! I exported the
contact information from ACT!, imported the list into
SendOutCards, picked my card, typed a personal
note that will be printed on each one and
pressed “send”. SendOutCards.com printed and
mailed my cards the same day! All for less than the
cost of a store bought card. If you’d like to try out
this service, just send me an email so I can set you
up with a free gift account. Make someone’s day –
send them a card!
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"Ask Debbie" |
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Q: How can I save time paying bills?
- For vendor invoices with no stubs, stop copying
the invoice to send back to the vendor. Instead,
write their invoice # on your check stub. Better yet,
if you enter a bill and use voucher checks,
QuickBooks will print the invoice # on the attached
stub. If you are paying an invoice in full, trust me,
they will be able to figure it out.
- Keep all unpaid bills in one location, like a folder
or tray. You don’t even need to open them when you
get the mail, if you pay on a regular basis.
- Have “regular” bills automatically paid by a debit
to your bank account or paid via credit card.
Memorize these in your accounting software.
- Get a return address self-inking stamp and keep a
roll of stamps in your bill paying area.
- Organize your files so you can easily, yet
effectively, store and retrieve financial records.
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