As a Woman, Make 2012 the Year You Break Free in the Business World

Posted by Samantha Martinez on December 17th, 2011

With the New Year just a couple of weeks away, have you thought about where your career is going?

For many women, 2012 could be the year they break out and go into business for themselves.

Tired of the daily rigors of the 9 to 5 scene under someone else, they could be just a move away from taking over as their own bosses, setting their sights on accomplishing a long-held dream.

According to a recently released American Express study, the number of women-owned businesses increased 50 percent when comparing it to a similar report more than a decade ago. Numbers show that there are more than 8.1 million women-owned companies nationwide, with annual sales of $1.3 trillion.

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LinkedIn Introduces Polling for Groups

Posted by Paul Thompson on December 13th, 2011

« Office 365 Becomes First and Only Major Cloud Productivity Service to Comply With Leading EU and U.S. Standards for Data Protection and Security By marijana |

Professional social networking site LinkedIn introduced a new feature on Wednesday created to boost participation in professional conversation within its one million Groups through polling. Polls within groups will be rolling out to all members over the next few days, the company said.

According to LinkedIn’s principal product manager Ian McCarthy, group moderators on LinkedIn have been looking for “easy, time sensitive ways to generate conversations within the group,” and features that have been available to them so far, such as article sharing or blogging, weren’t suitable for obtaining quick insights from group members.  To prov

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10 Often Overlooked but Frequently Helpful Small Business Tax Deductions

Posted by Samantha Martinez on December 6th, 2011

Are you fully taking advantage of all the tax deductions that are available to small businesses? Whether you file your taxes yourself or hire just a bookkeeper, there are many deductions that go overlooked. Here are 10 helpful small business tax deductions that are often overlooked.

  1. Tax Preparation Fees

    Did you know that the costs associated with preparing your small business taxes are actually tax deductible? This knowledge can have a big impact not only on your taxes, but whom you choose as your tax preparer.

    Bookkeepers or tax preparers are often extremely busy during tax season and don’t often sit down to offer advice. While tax preparer fees may be cheaper, you could splurge for a CPA or even a Tax Lawyer/CPA who can better qualify your deductions and counsel you about smarter small business tax deductions.

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5 Most Criminally Shady Credit Cards

Posted by Paul Thompson on December 4th, 2011

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Credit is the lifeblood of any well-functioning economy.  It allows us to buy cars, houses, education and terabytes of filthy, filthy porn (you know, the stuff so filthy you can’t find it for free).  For most people, their most accessible line of credit is a credit card — basically an instant ability to cover sudden outrageous expenses without having to pawn belongings.  If you don’t have a credit card, you better have a rainy-day fund as big as Scrooge McDuck or else you’re one car repair or medical expense away from bankruptcy.  Credit card companies know that customers depend on this line of credit, sometimes desperately, so they do their best to provide it an easy and simple a fashion as possible.  Just kidding, they try to gouge customers for every last red cent in anyway that will keep them technically legal.  Or they’ll just take your money without telling you.  You know, like the exact definition of a thief.   

 

 

  
  For those with low incomes or abysmal credit scores, getting a credit card with a decent interest rate and credit limit can be a frustrating challenge.  Once you finally do find a creditor willing to give you the time of day, you’re likely to end up with an usurious interest rate and a credit limit roughly high enough to buy some crusts of stale bread and weeks-old milk.  While unfortunate, from a business perspective this makes sense.  A bank can’t simply go lending out money to high-risk individuals without trying to protect their investment somewhat, so it’s hard to blame them for being careful and circumspect about who they extend credit to. 

Or it would be, if this is what actually happened.  In reality, these cards for the credit-poor are often what experts refer to as “Fee-Harvesting” cards.  What this means is that someone might get a card with a limit of $200-$300 dollars, and an interest rate in the high 20s.  Buried in the fine print of the agreement is a whole bevy of fees, often adding up to a huge chunk of the customer’s credit limit.  In one case, a customer with a credit limit of $250 was only able to put $50 on the card after all the fees were applied.  The worst part about all of this is that the fees apply whether or not the card is used or paid off each month.  Meaning that someone who doesn’t pay attention to the fine print, and barely uses the card at all, can suddenly find themselves hundreds of dollars in debt after a few months.  And that debt will only continue to pile on at that incredibly high interest rate. 

From the credit card company’s point of view, they just got someone hundreds of dollars indebted to them, without having to extend more than a few bucks of credit up front.  This is why they apply the fees, instead of just making the credit limit that much lower.  This apparently all happens as they cackle cravenly while swimming through piles of money and murdered puppies while ignoring evidence that severe debt can often lead to depression and suicide. 
 

 

 

    Believe it or not, those promotional in-store cards that usually come along with some sort of discount or interest-free purchase are actual credit cards.  You could use your Sears card at Home Depot and your Best Buy card to buy cigarettes at the corner store.  A large section of these cards are issued by Monogram Credit Card Bank of Georgia, which delights in teaming up with retailers to bend customers over a pinball machine.   

In what you’ll begin to notice is a recurring pattern, customers are misled about the terms of whatever deal they’re signing, whether through terms, interest rates, or hidden fees.  One good example of the sociopathic deft of Monogram was a promotion with Home Depot and Lowes.  Customers were allowed to purchase items using the store’s credit cards, and pay them off interest-free.  Except they never mentioned to the customers that they were required to pay down the interest-free balance before anything else, meaning customers who purchased anything else were forced to watch that item gather interest while they paid down the cheaper balance first.  (Fortunately, this practice is now illegal).    Unsurprisingly, several class-action lawsuits have been brought against Monogram.  Monogram responded by saying “that’s so quaint” and pointing out the required arbitration clause in the customers contracts—basically guaranteeing that any complaints won’t be able to legally see the inside of a courtroom. 

 

 

   Oh Bank of America.  When you aren’t trying to charge $5 for using your debit card each month, you’re borrowing billions of dollars from the Federal Reserve and making billions off of taxpayer money.  It seems like there’s no money you won’t take, and no one you’ll avoid paying it out to (except your executive bonuses, of course).  So because they hadn’t found enough avenues for evil-doing, BofA decided their credit card arm should get involved in the financial wizardry of tricking people into owing the bank more than they could possibly afford.   

former support people came forward in 2008 and admitted to a host of unethical and illegal practices that were rampant throughout the company.  These two former employees worked in a call center, which was ostensibly there to help customers with questions or account issues.  Their actual purpose was to push huge cash advances on customer’s credit cards onto people who couldn’t afford them.  As one of the employees put it, instead of helping the customers,   “Every customer that calls in is a mark, it’s a great big con”.  Some of these advances totaled upward of fifty to one hundred thousand real actual dollars.  The interest rates on these loans? As high as 28%.   

One of the hilarious unintended consequences of offering people tens of thousands of dollars right

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Small Businesses Weigh In: Are You Using Google+?

Posted by Paul Thompson on December 3rd, 2011

The social media world is quickly becoming crowded, and search engine giant Google recently entered the market with Google+.

Experts said Google+ can be a good tool to find new customers and increase their presence online. Creating a profile and rounding up followers can help even the smallest company out with their SEO rankings, according to Jason Hennessey of EverSpark Interactive.

While some businesses simply just haven’t heard of Google+, others are focusing their time and effort on more highly-trafficked sites like Twitter and Facebook. Here’s what some of our businesses of the day had to say about Google’s content-sharing site.

DiggersList, Los Angeles 

Co-founder Matt Knox said DiggersList, said the online home improvement materials retailer is not using Google+ out of sheer frustration. Read more…

Finding a tenant: what pitfalls to avoid?

Posted by admin on December 2nd, 2011

finding a tenantNo landlord wants to deal with criminals or unscrupulous tenants. That’s why, getting a good tenant is a very important process. With tenanthunter.com finding a tenant is an easy task for any person who needs to move out as soon as possible and no to break the lease at the same time. Professionals can save a lot of time and money not only for landlords but for tenants as well.

Talk to your tenants and put them in the lease only if you are confident. W Read more…

For Bloggers Who Hate Comment Spam

Posted by Samantha Martinez on November 27th, 2011

Do you hate spammers? Many bloggers at least believe they do.  Hate only hurts the person who feels that emotion and does nothing to the object of your hatred.

What I realize that many don’t is that there are different kinds of spammers. While there are some who know they are stealing our time and energy, probably the greater number of people bloggers refer to as spammers do NOT know they are doing this all wrong.

ANYONE that comments regularly IS going to end up being flagged by Akismet as a spammer.

If we just delete them they won’t ever know WHY or how to get better. It makes more sense to EDUCATE new commenters than to slam the door in their face. If I deleted YOUR comments are YOU going to come back?

When shopping we expect the door to be open to the store, right? If a Read more…