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Showing posts with label Personal Finance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Personal Finance. Show all posts

Suze Orman's 2009 Action Plan (Paperback) by Suze Orman


If in late 2007 you were told that over the next twelve months housing would crater to 20% below it's all-time peak, unemployment would rise from below 5% to nearly 8%, stocks would fall nearly 50%, and a gallon of gas would spike to more than $4 (and then drop below $2) you would probably have shrugged it off as just a whole lot of doomsday-scenario crankiness. But that's exactly what we all had to live through and continue to grapple with in 2009.

The lesson is that the unexpected can happen. In fact, sometimes a whole lot of unexpected happens all at once (see: 2008). No one can control external events, but you do have absolute control over the most powerful tool: your will to make the smart and right choices that will insure your financial security, no matter what happens. As I have said for years: Hope for the best, plan for the worst. If you plan for life's “what if's” there's no need to panic when the news turns bad. An emergency cash fund is your security when a recession causes rising unemployment. A long-term investment strategy that employs a mix of stocks and bonds makes it easier to get through scary bear markets; living within your means, rather than running up credit card and HELOC debt leaves you better able to weather financial storms.

My 2009 Action Plan is designed to make sure you are ready for the unexpected—this year and every year forward. I most certainly hope things get better for us all, but in the meantime I want to make sure you have a plan in place that will protect you no matter what “what ifs” lay ahead. MORE

Price: $9.99

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Gimme My Money Back: Your Guide to Beating the Financial Crisis By Ali Velshi



One way or another, you lost money as a direct result of the financial crisis. Now you have to start making it back, and you can do that by reading this book.

This book shows how the markets work and how to be involved, how to calculate personal risk tolerance based on personality, goals, age and years from retirement, how to avoid losing money, and how to use mutual funds, index funds, stocks, ETF’s, bonds, and other investment vehicles to speed up readers’ own personal recovery. Includes model portfolios to get you started right away.

Written by CNN Chief Business Correspondent Ali Velshi using his trademark user-friendly voice, GIMME MY MONEY BACK is a straightforward guide to understanding how we got into the mess we’re in, with concrete, simple, proven steps to get you out of it. MORE

Price: $7.77

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Financing Your Small Business: From SBA Loans and Credit Cards to Common Stock and Partnership Interests by James E. Burk


Product Description
Secure your business's future using the right SBA loan, bank loan or equity financing for you. When it comes to your chances of receiving financing and doing it right, Financing Your Small Business provides you with all the answers you need. It helps you find ways to combine various types of financing and shows you how to get the money you need. Learn:

How to get a bank loan
How to make a better presentation How to get attention with your business plan
How to choose professionals
How to value your business
How to determine your investors' status
How to avoid securities law problems
How to find investors

From SBA loans to venture capital sources, Financing Your Small Business shows you all the ways to get the money you need.

Raising Money Just Got Easier.

About the Author
James E. Burk has been helping emerging companies in their initial stages of organization and growth for over thirty years. Mr. Burk is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin Law School, and is a member of the bars of the District of Columbia and Texas.

Richard P. Lehmann assists clients with a variety of business matters, including corporate issues and securities law. Mr. Lehmann is admitted to practice in the District of Columbia, Virginia and Minnesota.

Excerpted from Financing Your Small Business by James E. Burk and Richard P. Lehmann

A business plan is a blueprint of what your business is and what you want it to become. The business plan describes a serious problem suffered by individuals or organizations. It shows how your solution to that problem is much better-not just marginally better-than those that already exist. The plan shows how you will implement your solution, grow your company, and create ownership value.

Generally, business plans take two forms-one is the plan you write to raise capital and the other is the plan that represents ongoing evolution of your business. You will find that both forms must be updated frequently to incorporate your latest progress and achievements.

This section focuses on the plan you write to crystallize your business strategies and raise capital. Numerous resources exist in print and online to assist you in writing a business plan. These sources range from business plan software like BizPlanBuilder (www.jian.com) to the Small Business Administration's website at www.sba.gov, to classic works such as the Venture Capital Handbook by David Gladstone.

The private placement memorandum (PPM) is a somewhat stylized disclosure document, prescribed by federal and state securities laws. The PPM serves a different function than the business plan. The PPM is a legal retail document and the business plan is a strategic wholesale document. In other words, when you go to individual investors to raise capital, you use the PPM as your offering document. When you approach larger investors, sometime called angels and institutional investors, including banks or financing institutions, they are more likely to ask for your business plan.

A business plan allows you to address the essential issues of your new business, such as the unique benefits and competitive advantages of your products or services, your market opportunity and marketing plan, and how you intend to capture a defensible share of the market. The financial statements (income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow analysis) accompanying the plan will give you, your management team, and potential investors a roadmap of the next three to five years of your business. Your financial projections should not exceed five years, as too much can change in that amount of time. Three years is generally sufficient. What matters is that you select a reasonable time frame during which you can achieve your stated goals.

STRUCTURING YOUR BUSINESS PLAN
Before discussing the contents of a business plan, it needs to be clear that a business plan is a management tool-it is not a legally required document. If you have an existing business and intend to continue that business without specific plans for expansion or other significant change, then you may not yet need a business plan. If you are going to register with eBay to sell your grandmother's china online, you may never need a business plan (although you do need your grandmother's permission or that of her estate).

A business plan should be a living document that evolves with the business and is constantly a work in progress. Business planning is a constant process, not a brief project. Internally, the business plan is a useful management tool when it is continually updated to reflect the marketplace. It should not be treated as a paperweight. Externally, the business plan often secures bank financing and attracts private or institutional investors. When your company is more mature, a business plan may serve as a basis for a strategic alliance, a merger, or an acquisition.

Assuming the business has been determined to be generally feasible, turn to the specifics of the plan. Investors want to know some very fundamental information.

? What is your business?
? What is the market for the product or service?
? How big is the market for the product or service?
? Have you segmented the market into digestible pieces?
? What is the revenue model (i.e., how does the business identify and sell to its customers)?
? What have you done to develop the business model?
? Have you identified all the resources you need to support the revenue model?
? How does the business make money?
? Why is this product or service unique?
? What qualities give it a competitive advantage over existing products or services?
? How is it better, faster, and cheaper than other choices available to your customers?
? What tangible assets does the company own?
? What intellectual property (trademarks, patents, trade secrets) does the company own?
? Who is in management and what are their backgrounds?
? What does the investor get for the investment?
? How much will the business be worth?
? How long will it take to be profitable?
? What is a reasonable risk assessment?

Do not be intimidated by these questions. Very few beginning businesses will have all of these questions fully answered from the start. However, sophisticated investors get hundreds of business plans to read. Your task is to write a business plan that is sticky-a plan that piques the interest of an investor to look further at your business. It has been said that one of the purposes of writing a business plan is to get a meeting with a capital source. A general outline for a business plan follows.

Cover Sheet and Table of Contents
The cover sheet should contain the name of your business, CEO, and contact information (including the address, phone, fax, and email for both). If you have a spiffy logo, the cover page is good place to introduce it. The next item should be a table of contents of the major topics contained in the business plan. Some reviewers like to have the various sections tabbed for easy reference.

Executive Summary
This is the most important part of the business plan because it is the part read first and determines whether the reader goes any further. The executive summary gives a brief synopsis of:

? the company's strategy for success;
? the company's unique business proposition;
? how your business proposition offers a competitive advantage;
? the market you are addressing;
? a description of the product and services offered;
? the management team's qualifications;
? key financial data and a statement of funds required; and,
? a statement of how you will either pay the funds back or how the investors will receive a return on their investment.

All of these brief topic descriptions will be expanded in the business plan. The executive summary should be brief, usually no more than two pages. Typically, the executive summary is the section written last, after the whole business plan is completed.

Statement of Purpose or Mission
This is where you articulate the vision of the company and its management. Some writers have called this the distinctive value proposition of the company-the formula you have devised that delivers goods and services to your customers better than the competition does.

Description of the Business
In this section, you are giving the history of the business entity. For start-ups, the following information is recommended:

? name of the business;
? legal form of the business (corporation, LLC, partnership, etc.);
? state of organization;
? when it was organized;
? location of the business;
? brief description of the owners/founders; and,
? stage of development of the business-conceptual, start-up, emerging, mature.

Description of the Products or Services Offered
Describe your products and services and show how they are related to your mission. What is your business? Be clear. Many business plans do not begin to discuss the actual business of the company until the middle of the plan. Most investors will not be that patient. Tell it up front and tell it in plain language. If the product is highly technical, save the details for inclusion in an appendix. Keep the discussion on a strategic level. The potential financers are probably not yet interested in tactical details.

Management Team
On equal footing with the products and services offered is the credibility of the management team of the company. Investors say that the three most important factors for success in business are management, management, and management. In this section you will be providing a synopsis of the management team and their qualifications. You can include full résumés in an appendix. Investors, especially sophisticated ones, would prefer an A management team and a B idea to a B management team and an A idea.

What differentiates the A team from the B team is a history of solid success and accomplishment. It proves the existence of skills and experience that can mean the difference between success and failure. Do not merely state that the marketing executive spent decades with a Fortune 500 company. Instead, specify the revenue growth and profitability results achieved in products and divisions for which the executive was responsible.

Many start-up ventures have difficulty attracting an experienced management team before their business has been tested in the marketplace. One way to offset any lack of depth on the management team is to establish a board of advisors and populate it with persons well-known in the business and professional community. Often, advisors become more interested in the business and can be recruited to join the management team. Alternatively, they may introduce you to qualified management candidates.

Marketplace and the Competition
The marketplace and competition section helps you understand and define your market, the demographics and psychographics of your target customers, your competitor's products or services, and your business risks.

Describe the target market for your product or service and the trends in your industry. For example, your market may be consumers between 25 and 40 years of age in the Rocky Mountain states or the upscale furniture industry in Chicago. ...

Get Your Own Copy of "Financing Your Small Business: From SBA Loans and Credit Cards to Common Stock and Partnership Interests by James E. Burk "

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Tax Deductions for Professionals By Stephen Fishman

Editorial Reviews
Accounting Today
"Aimed at anyone who runs a professional practice, including doctors, dentists, lawyers, engineers, architects and even chiropractors -- to say nothing of accountants. "

MarketWatch.com
"Attorney Stephen Fishman, author of Nolo's Tax Deductions for Professionals, offers... guidelines for converting a vacation into a business trip."

Architectural West
"Thorough, straightforward and specific, Tax Deductions for Professionals contains all the information you need to take advantage of every money-saving opportunity."

Book Description
The only "know how" guide for professionals who want to reduce their tax burden.

WINNER of the Publishers Marketing Associations' Benjamin Franklin Award

If you're ready to hold on to more of your hard-earned money, turn to Tax Deductions for Professionals. Comprehensive, easy to read and filled with interesting examples, the book is organized into practical categories featuring common deductions, including:

  • start-up and operating expenses
  • health deductions
  • vehicles and travel
  • entertainment and meals
  • home office
  • and many more

    Plus -- unlike any other book on the market --Tax Deductions for Professionals can help you choose the best legal structure for your practice, the most important business (and tax) decision you'll make.

    The book also covers putting money into retirement accounts, the tax implications of owning the building you work in, and deducting the cost of continuing education, professional fees and other expenses.

    The 3rd edition is completely updated with the latest tax numbers and laws for 2008.

    Download Description
    The only "know how" guide for professionals who want to reduce their tax burden. If you're ready to hold on to more of your hard-earned money, turn to Tax Deductions for Professionals. Comprehensive, easy to read and filled with interesting examples, the book is organized into practical categories featuring common deductions, including: start-up and operating expenses health deductions vehicles and travel entertainment and meals home office and many more Plus -- unlike any other book on the market -- Tax Deductions for Professionals can help you choose the best legal structure for your practice, the most important business (and tax) decision you'll make. The book also covers putting money into retirement accounts, the tax implications of owning the building you work in, and deducting the cost of continuing education, professional fees and other expenses.

    From the Publisher
    What do architects, lawyers, dentists, chiropractors, doctors and other licensed professionals have in common? Answer: Special tax considerations. If you're ready to hold on to more of your hard-earned money, turn to Tax Deductions for Professionals

    About the Author
    Stephen Fishman is the author of many Nolo books, most recently Tax Deductions for Professionals. Other titles include Deduct It! Lower Your Small Business Taxes, Every Landlord's Tax Deduction Guide and Home Business Tax Deductions: Keep What You Earn plus many other legal and business books. He received his law degree from the University of Southern California in 1979. After time in government and private practice, he became a full-time legal writer in 1983.

  • Get A Copy Of "Tax Deductions for Professionals By Stephen Fishman."

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