Archives for Uncategorized category
Posted on Jan 25, 2010 under Uncategorized |
Happy whatever day, Australia
Australians love an excuse for a public holiday.
And if it falls on a Tuesday, then there’s little option but to take Monday off, and make it a long weekend!!
Enjoy yourselves, have a good time, relax, and get on with living in Australia
Thanks, girls, whoever you are. And thanks to the photographer, where ever you are – Happy Australia Day
Posted on Aug 20, 2009 under Uncategorized |
All you had to do was to show me a little courtesy
It’s been proven that customer service is critical to maintaining a happy client base. The following was seen in the local newspaper, attributed to a reader names “The Archeologist”:
Remember me? I’m the person who goes into a restaurant, sits down patiently and waits while the waitress does everything but takes my order.
I’m the one who goes into the store and stands quietly while the counter staff finish their little chit chat.
But who else am I?
I’m the one who never comes back, and it amuses me to see you spending thousands of dollars every year to get me when I was there in the first place ….
And all you had to do was to show me a little courtesy
Posted on Jul 10, 2009 under Uncategorized |
The Rudd Government is helping small businesses with the Small Business and General Business Tax Break.
The package is such that small businesses can claim a bonus 50 per cent tax deduction for eligible assets costing more than $1,000 acquired from 13 December 2008 until 31 December 2009, and installed ready for use by 31 December 2010.
They are telling everyone how the Rudd Government is helping small businesses with the Small Business and General Business Tax Break.
The package is such that small businesses can claim a bonus 50 per cent tax deduction for eligible assets costing more than $1,000 acquired from 13 December 2008 until 31 December 2009, and installed ready for use by 31 December 2010
To benefit from this Tax Break a small business must have a turnover of less than $2.0 million a year.
Forget the tax break, shop at your locally owned store
This may look good on paper, but unless you actually need to make any investment in capital purchases such as motor vehicles or equipment, how does it actually help small business?
It certainly helps large businesses – the suppliers of motor vehicles, national stationary / office equipment suppliers, hardly normal electical chain stores and the like, but how does it help you, the small business owner in and around Cockburn, Melville, Fremantle, or Canning Vale?
Speaking to an accountant of one of our bookkeeping clients recently, he said that whilst the incentive looks very rosy, you should actually look at the costs involved in the purchase of a new vehicle.
Taking all things into consideration for this particular client, the client was going to be worse off purchasing a new vehicle compared to finding a cheaper second-hand vehicle
Many small business owners are understandably looking to save money wherever they can, believing that’s the only way that they can increase their income. Yet at the sametime, they also want to increase their turnover by attracting more customers or upselling existing customers.
Why do small business owners have a problem with supporting other small-to-medium enterprises?
Many of our bookkeeping clients take their shopper dockets from the major supermarkets, to get discount fuel, rather than paying a few cents more (perhaps) for fuel from independent service station operators.
The same clients buy all their fruit and vegetables, meat and other groceries from the large supermarket chains instead of supporting small independent green-grocers or butchers
Why do small-to-medium enterprises complain that your potential customers are going to the large companies or multi-nationals instead of shopping from you? Maybe we should stop pointing the finger at other people, and start asking ourselves, why do small businesses have a problem trading with other small businesses?
Do large companies really care about the local Cockburn, Melville, Fremantle, Canning Vale business owner? Not when the head office is in Sydney, Melbourne or even overseas
The positive effect on the local economy would be far wider reaching than all of those small business owners that continue to support large companies who are only interested in making huge profits for their shareholders (many of whom are large multi-nationals themselves).
Go shopping at your local independantly owned business, take business away from large corporations and bring back competition to the market place – you’ll be helping the local econmy whch will in-turn help your small business
Posted on Mar 19, 2009 under Uncategorized |
Bookkeeping: Are you prepared for the end of the financial year? Before you realise, Easter will be upon us, then we’ll be in a new fiscal year.
A client asked us today whether he should make the final balloon payment on his earthmoving equipment, even though he still has 12 more months to pay it off
We’re not registered tax agents and can’t advise whether he’s better paying the lump sum before the end of this financial year, or whether he should carry the payments over into next year.
If your bookwork’s not upto date, how do you make an informed decision about your tax liabilities?
If you don’t have your bookwork upto date, or if bookkeeping is the last thing on your mind right now, then how can you make an informed decision about your tax liabilities for the financial year ending 30 June 2009?
How do you know if you should make a lump sum payment on your vehicle lease this year? If you ask your accountant, you’ll most likely be told that without seeing any upto date figures for this financial year, your accountant cannot give you an informed answer
To prepare for the end of the financial year is not as difficult or as daunting as the task may appear. In fact, the ATO offer you encouragement to get your financials upto date with the quarterly BAS requirements.
Look no further, stress no more, simply contact us, as we provide an outsourced bookkeeping service. Our mobile bookkeepers can come to your premises, work on your computer, or pick up the paperwork and take it away to return with neatly filed and documented set of accounts ready for you to take to your accountant
Posted on Feb 17, 2009 under Uncategorized |
How bad do you feel when you’ve realised that you’ve paid a supplier’s invoice twice?
Often it’s a simple mistake made because you are in a hurry, or panic about a particular order that you have to fulfil. Contact us for more information
We can all make mistakes in the course of our business day, whether you’re based in Cockburn, Melville, Fremantle, Canning Vale, and South Perth, good bookkeeping is an important part of your business.
9 tips to avoid paying the same invoice twice
Here’s nine tips to ensure that you and / or your bookkeeper never pay the same invoice twice:
1 Always make a payment from an invoice, and not a statement
The statement may not take into account a recent payment that you have made
When you look at the supplier statement and see the total outstanding amount you may get feelings of guilt and pay the whole amount showing on that statement
2. Have your book – keeper keep your accounting up to date.
By entering all payments and invoices regularly into the system before you pay your invoices, you can match the statements and outstanding invoices with your bookkeeping system quickly
3.Set aside a specific day for paying your bills.
You can ask your bookkeeper for a report of outstanding bills, or simply have a folder marked “Bills to pay”
So if you receive a statement, place it in the folder, and on the assigned bill payment day, you can match any outstanding bills with the statement
4. Use Purchase Orders and keep delivery dockets
Often small business owners may get their purchase orders and delivery dockets mixed up. In some cases your supplier may use the invoice as a delivery docket, and then send you another copy of the same invoice when requesting payment.
So, if you are not diligent, you can easily find yourself paying the same invoice twice thinking that they were two separate invoices.
5. Do not make a payment based on a phone call.
In a slower economy, when everybody is chasing payments from everybody else, it’s easy to make a payment based on a phone call from a supplier. Just because they are chasing a payment, it does not mean that a particular invoice is still outstanding
6. No invoice – no payment
Just as we suggest to our business owners that they shouldn’t pay any staff claims for cash reimbursements without a proof of purchase, neither should you make a supplier payment without an invoice in your hand
7. A Delivery Docket is not the same as an invoice
Your supplier may issue a numbered delivery docket with prices included, but it’s not a tax invoice. Ensure that your bookkeeper does not enter the delivery docket as an invoice, as well as entering the invoice relating to the same order. If they can’t find the invoice, then ask the supplier to issue a copy of the invoice
8. Reconcile your bank accounts each month
At the same time you should get a report of suppliers invoices and reconcile them against your suppliers statements
If the two do not balance, then your bookkeeper may have entered an invoice twice. Once you’ve paid your supplier twice, it’s not always so simple to get a refund
9. Enter suppliers invoices into your accounting system
By ensuring your have suppliers invoices entered, you can quickly check for duplicate in voice numbers, which may warn you that you’ve entered an invoice twice
Contact us for more information
Posted on Jan 25, 2009 under Uncategorized |
Congratulations to all those Australians honoured for Australia Day
We salute all those that make enormous contributions to the country in their own small way, but because they are not well known sports people, musicians or film stars nobody seems to want to honour them.
[would the Australia Day honours be political?]
Without Australia’s anonymous heroes this nation would not be what it is today!
This year Australia Day falls on a Monday, so the nation gets a long weekend!
Happy “Australia Day” Australia! Let’s just party!
Posted on Jan 23, 2009 under Uncategorized |
Can A Financial Planner Do Bookkeeping? Well, the one that contacted us enquiring about a local freelance bookkeeping services was looking for help. When a financial planner contacts a bookkeeping service because they are eighteen months behind in the paperwork, there’s a touch of irony.
It’s like the sparkie who still hasn’t wired up some extra powerpoints in his house though his wife’s been nagging him for three months
Or the accountant who has not lodged their own tax return for a couple of years
Business owners can get so caught up in the busy-ness of every day activities that they can never seem to find time to work on their business.
Even financial planners need the help of freelance bookkeepers to help them with the genera bookkeeping duties such as entering customer and supplier invoices, entering receipts, and calculating fuel expenses etc
Unless you’re passionate about bookeeping, you’ll always find excuses for putting it off.
As a bookkeeping service covering Fremantle, Melville, and South Perth, Canning Vale, we are often called up to tidy up the mess that has accumulated over the past few months. Contact us for detailsRead more… »