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#1
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To make a long story mercifully short, RST is looking for a person to do the
accounting function. While there are hundreds of thousands of beancounters in the area, there are darned few that understand that all small airplanes aren't yellow with a small bear painted on the side {;-) We don't need a CPA necessarily, nor any investment advice. What we need to do is to be able to send our bank statement every month along with the Quickbooks data and at the end of the fiscal year get the tax forms (Fed and California) filled out ready for signature. The whole thing can be done snailmail or electronically by scanning the statement into a file. It isn't that big of a deal, but we'd like to form a permanent relationship with somebody that speaks airplane and that understands the manufacturing environment. The best of all worlds would be a homebuilder; that just enhances the odds of us finding a like kin that we can relate to. You can email or simply post here, your choice. Looking forward to hearing from you. Jim Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
#2
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We don't need a CPA necessarily, nor any investment advice. What we need
to do is to be able to send our bank statement every month along with the Quickbooks data and at the end of the fiscal year get the tax forms (Fed and California) Jim, if you're already using Quickbooks, the ONLY thing you need an accountant for is the year-end stuff. Monthly taxes (all flavors) are a breeze using QB. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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Jay...
Both Gail and I are working 12 to 14 hour days between the design bench, the production bench, the day to day paperwork, purchasing... Something had to be offloaded and the easiest thing to offload was the accounting part. No, I don't need any monthly taxes, but it would be nice to catch any errors in procedure prior to the year end stuff. It's just like your hotel. At SOME point you are going to be successful enough that both of you can't do the front office stuff, the promo stuff, the supplies ordering, making beds, fixing plumbing, painting, and all the other day in and day out tasks without severe lack of sleep or sanity. You have to offload SOMETHING, and it will probably be the maid service, or the plumbing, or something that is in fairly high supply and isn't vital to your core mission of RUNNING the hotel, not fixing dripping faucets. Capiche? Jim "Jay Honeck" shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: - We don't need a CPA necessarily, nor any investment advice. What we need -to do - is to be able to send our bank statement every month along with the -Quickbooks - data and at the end of the fiscal year get the tax forms (Fed and -California) - -Jim, if you're already using Quickbooks, the ONLY thing you need an -accountant for is the year-end stuff. - -Monthly taxes (all flavors) are a breeze using QB. Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
#4
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Jim Weir wrote:
To make a long story mercifully short, RST is looking for a person to do the accounting function....and at the end of the fiscal year get the tax forms (Fed and California) filled out ready for signature. From a fully credentialed bean counter with a tax practice: You didn't say whether out-of-state help is OK, but doing that for tax prep can be a bit problematic in general even for federal. From my understanding of Kaliforneeah and their increasingly whimsical ways of regulating return preparers, I wouldn't do it due no experience beyond a few nauseating CA returns and inability to spread my costs of compliance around to other CA clients, unless you want to pay for it. there are darned few that understand that all small airplanes aren't yellow with a small bear painted on the side...somebody that speaks airplane and that understands the manufacturing environment. There are some biz' requiring specialized knowledge for the accountant, but not yours. I do work for a genuine Part 145 instrument shop, but my knowledge in related matters has been worth no more than social chit-chat, for which you'll never know whether you're being billed. And manufacturing is 2nd semester of Accounting 101 with later immersion in brain-frying perpetual cost and LIFO, for Pete's sake! Important also for small business is someone with experience in IRS practice, because if nuthin' much has happened yet, strange gov't behaviour is only a matter of time ("Hear me now; believe me later!"). Just a few tips to help you find the right guy or gal. Fred F. |
#5
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"Jay Honeck" wrote:
Jim, if you're already using Quickbooks, the ONLY thing you need an accountant for is the year-end stuff. With 39 years exp in accounting/tax, and believe me or not, I've seen nothing in QB or any such thing which can assure me the results are accurate beyond the math. If a client has a good, basic understanding of accounting principles and variances in tax treatment, it may be safe to provide me with only financial statements for tax prep. This may be your case, but it's rare in small businesses, and too often they get just they pay for. I normally counsel at least my one-time, thorough review of the work, with probable corrective advice to the person doing it so future years can meet my comfort level. So much the better if you did that already. Fred F. |
#6
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It's just like your hotel. At SOME point you are going to be successful
enough that both of you can't do the front office stuff, the promo stuff, the supplies ordering, making beds, fixing plumbing, painting, and all the other day in and day out tasks without severe lack of sleep or sanity. You have to offload SOMETHING, and it will probably be the maid service, or the plumbing, or something that is in fairly high supply and isn't vital to your core mission of RUNNING the hotel, not fixing dripping faucets. Well, we've got three housekeepers, so we dumped THAT right away. :-) And I've got a handyman who knows how to fix ANYTHING, so I guess I'm set there, too. I can do the simple stuff, but when it comes to drywall and plumbing, he's Da Man. Accounting, however, is not something I want to farm out -- and Quickbooks makes it almost easy. I want my finger on the pulse of the place every, single day. I want to know how we're doing minute-to-minute, compared to last month, and last year. It's the only way I can make business decisions (I.E.: "Can we afford to re-landscape the front entrance?" Answer: "Yes") with any sense of direction. It's ironic, cuz my worst grade in college was "Accounting." In fact, that one course convinced me to change my major from Business to Anything Else... :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#7
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I normally counsel at least my one-time,
thorough review of the work, with probable corrective advice to the person doing it so future years can meet my comfort level. So much the better if you did that already. Yeah, each year my accountant (an aviation nut, by the way) either comes out and fixes all my previous year's screw-ups, or gives me a list of things to change -- or both. The list grows shorter every year, but mistakes are made. It's always arcane, stupid stuff, like how to figure depreciation on office equipment...nothing that can't be fixed after the fact. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#8
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Sorry. The answer to your question is that out of state help is just fine with
me. I have absolutely no idea of how Californicate regulates return preparers; I didn't even know they were regulated. You are right; manufacturing accounting is the second semester of Accounting 101. Similarly, transistor circuit design is the second semester of Engineering 101. If that isn't your bent, more better you come to somebody like me who speaks Hfe (and hfe as well) and Miller capacitance as a second language. It is far better to do what you do well and let somebody else do what they do well. I have found that to be the optimal combination for preserving income -- and that's what I'm trying to do. Jim "TaxSrv" shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: - -From a fully credentialed bean counter with a tax practice: You didn't -say whether out-of-state help is OK, but doing that for tax prep can -be a bit problematic in general even for federal. From my -understanding of Kaliforneeah and their increasingly whimsical ways of -regulating return preparers, I wouldn't do it due no experience beyond -a few nauseating CA returns and inability to spread my costs of -compliance around to other CA clients, unless you want to pay for it. Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
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