LOS ANGELES, CA, June 27, 2013 (Press-News.org) As business technology advances, the way business was done in the past becomes more and more obsolete. Business owners have long been done with pagers, filing cabinets and messenger services; having replaced them with Smartphones, network servers, and Doc-u-sign. The most recent expense business owners are finding they can not only do without, but can also save money by doing without, is the use of an in-house bookkeeper.
"Society as a whole has become much more computer savvy. Bookkeeping software has made it very easy for people to run their own books" says Todd Lewis, Vice President of Blue Tax. "The service that our clients expect from us is not inputting the numbers, but to evaluate and analyze the numbers. We have become more business analysts then number crunchers." Blue Tax's approach to outsourced bookkeeping has become a highly valued resource to its clients. By comparing its database of thousands of various successful client businesses, Blue Tax has been able to compare operating expenses and methods, being able to suggest changes to clients to make their business more profitable. Through the implementation of these suggested changes, Blue Tax has been able to make their clients' businesses 7% to 15% more profitable on average.
One of the secrets behind Blue Tax's success with bookkeeping is their innovative approach to presenting the monthly report. While most bookkeepers are data entry professionals, presenting an excel spreadsheet, Blue Tax's approach specifically addresses each business's areas of improvement. "I know as a business owner, the last thing I want to do is look at some spread sheet. That is why we created the Four Points of Profitability." Every month, Blue Tax provides a detailed but very simple report that focuses in on four areas that affects a specific business's bottom line. This innovative approach to business bookkeeping has made Blue Tax the number one choice for those who need to have accurate reports but can't afford the cost of an in-house bookkeeper.
For more information about Blue Tax and its ability to help taxpayers resolve their tax problems, please visit www.BlueTax.com or call (800) 780-8485 for a free confidential consultation.
Like the Rolodex and the Typewriter Before Them, In-House Bookkeepers are Becoming the Next Unnecessary Small Business Need on the Chopping Block
Small businesses are saving thousands of dollars a year by outsourcing their bookkeeping needs.
2013-06-27
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
"Pine Aroma" Against Beetle Invasion
2013-06-27
Pine trees and red ants have something in common: Both use alkaloids to banish enemies. These organic ingredients are more and more in demand because of their environmental friendliness and safety. The problem is that they are only present in minimal amounts in natural form. Chemical synthesis in turn is complicated and expensive. Researchers at the Austrian Centre of Industrial Biotechnology (acib) and at the University of Graz led by Prof. Wolfgang Kroutil have now developed a new key technology to produce a promising alkaloid variety much easier than ever using biocatalysis.
So ...
MobileSmith and CICL Sign Distribution Partnership for MobileSmith App Development Platform
2013-06-27
MobileSmith, a leading provider of mobile software solutions for enterprise customers, announced that it entered into a distribution partnership with The Center For Innovation Commercialization LLC (CICL), a firm that identifies, represents, and helps to increase sales and global distribution of cutting edge innovative technology solutions.
"We are thrilled to partner with CICL, known for helping large multinational companies to re-innovate, by helping them to access the most innovative solutions," said Robert Hancock, MobileSmith VP of Sales. "This partnership ...
More women pick computer science if media nix outdated 'nerd' stereotype
2013-06-26
Parents and teachers like to tell children they can be whatever they want to be when they grow up. But are there inaccurate stereotypes in the media that nudge them away from certain careers?
University of Washington psychologist Sapna Cheryan wanted to know if gendered stereotypes had any effect on young women's interest in becoming computer scientists. Specifically, she and colleagues studied whether the stereotypical view of the geeky male nerd so often portrayed in the media, most recently in CBS's "The Big Bang Theory," discouraged women from pursuing computer science ...
How men and women cooperate
2013-06-26
Cooperation is essential in any successful romantic relationship, but how men and women experience cooperation emotionally may be quite different, according to new research conducted at the University of Arizona.
Ashley Randall, a post-doctoral research associate in the UA's John & Doris Norton School of Family and Consumer Sciences and the UA's department of psychiatry, has been interested for some time in how romantic partners' emotions become coordinated with one another. For example, if someone comes home from work in a bad mood we know their partner's mood might plummet ...
Astronomers spy on galaxies in the raw
2013-06-26
A CSIRO radio telescope has detected the raw material for making the first stars in galaxies that formed when the Universe was just three billion years old — less than a quarter of its current age.
This opens the way to studying how these early galaxies make their first stars.
The telescope is CSIRO's Australia Telescope Compact Array telescope near Narrabri, NSW. "It one of very few telescopes in the world that can do such difficult work, because it is both extremely sensitive and can receive radio waves of the right wavelengths," says CSIRO astronomer Professor Ron ...
Climate tug of war disrupting Australian atmospheric circulation patterns
2013-06-26
Further evidence of climate change shifting atmospheric circulation in the southern Australian-New Zealand region has been identified in a new study.
The study, in the Nature journal Scientific Reports, demonstrates that mid-latitude high pressure zones (30oS-45oS) are being pushed further into the Southern Ocean by rising global temperatures associated with greenhouse warming. This is despite more frequent occurrences of strong El Niños in recent decades, which should have drawn the high pressure zones in the opposite direction toward the equator.
"What we are seeing," ...
Quantum engines must break down
2013-06-26
Our present understanding of thermodynamics is fundamentally incorrect if applied to small systems and needs to be modified, according to new research from University College London (UCL) and the University of Gdańsk. The work establishes new laws in the rapidly emerging field of quantum thermodynamics.
The findings, published today in Nature Communications, have wide applications in small systems, from nanoscale engines and quantum technologies, to biological motors and systems found in the body.
The laws of thermodynamics govern much of the world around us – ...
Research shows Vitamin D levels drop after pediatric heart surgery, increasing sickness
2013-06-26
OTTAWA, Canada—June 26, 2013—Until now, there has been no research dedicated to the importance of Vitamin D supplementation in children with congenital heart disease (CHD). However, over the past few years, researchers at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) Research Institute and Cardiovascular Surgery Program teamed with the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group to understand the impact of cardiac surgery on the Vitamin D status of infants and children, to be printed next month in Anesthesiology.
"The importance of Vitamin D levels and supplementation in ...
Sea level along Maryland's shorelines could rise 2 feet by 2050, according to new report
2013-06-26
ANNAPOLIS, MD (June 26, 2013)—A new report on sea level rise recommends that the State of Maryland should plan for a rise in sea level of as much as 2 feet by 2050. Led by the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, the report was prepared by a panel of scientific experts in response to Governor Martin O'Malley's Executive Order on Climate Change and "Coast Smart" Construction. The projections are based on an assessment of the latest climate change science and federal guidelines.
"The State of Maryland is committed to taking the necessary actions to ...
Efficacy of acupressure to relieve migraine nausea presented at International Headache Congress
2013-06-26
Boston, MA, June 26, 2013 – Nausea is one of the most debilitating symptoms of migraine and affects 80 percent of migraine suffers in the United States. Leading headache physician, Dr. Zoltan Medgyessy of the Berolina Clinic in Lohne, Germany demonstrated in a trial that pressure to the P6 antiemetic point on the inner wrist with an acupressure wristband is an effective and quick therapy for relieving nausea of migraine sufferers. He will be presenting his findings to the U.S. for the first time at the International Headache Congress in Boston, MA on June 27 – 30, 2013.
Migraine ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
What’s behind the enormous increase in early-onset gastrointestinal cancers?
Pharmacogenomics expert advances precision medicine for bipolar disorder
Brazilian researcher explores centenarian stem cells for aging insights
Dr. Xuyu Qian's breakthrough analysis of 18 million brain cells advances understanding of human brain development
Gene networks decode human brain architecture from health to glioma
How artificial light at night damages brain health and metabolism
For ultrasound, ultra-strength not always a good thing
Matching your workouts to your personality could make exercising more enjoyable and give you better results
Study shows people perceive biodiversity
Personality type can predict which forms of exercise people enjoy
People can accurately judge biodiversity through sight and sound
People diagnosed with dementia are living longer, global study shows
When domesticated rabbits go feral, new morphologies emerge
Rain events could cause major failure of Waikīkī storm drainage by 2050
Breakthrough in upconversion luminescence research: Uncovering the energy back transfer mechanism
Hidden role of 'cell protector' opens cancer treatment possibilities
How plants build the microbiome they need to survive in a tough environment
Depression due to politics and its quiet danger to democracy addressed in new book 'The Sad Citizen'
International experts and patients unite to help ensure all patients are fully informed before consenting to new surgical procedures
Melting glaciers could trigger more explosive eruptions globally, finds research
Nearly half of U.S. grandchildren live within 10 miles of a grandparent
Study demonstrates low-cost method to remove CO₂ from air using cold temperatures, common materials
Masonic Medical Research Institute (MMRI) welcomes 13 students to prestigious Summer Fellowship program
Mass timber could elevate hospital construction
A nuanced model of soil moisture illuminates plant behavior and climate patterns
$2.6 million NIH grant backs search for genetic cure in deadly heart disease
Pennsylvania’s medical cannabis program changed drastically when anxiety was added as a qualifying condition
1 in 5 overweight adults could be reclassified with obesity according to new framework
Findings of study on how illegally manufactured fentanyl enters U.S. contradict common assumptions, undermining efforts to control supply
Satellite observations provide insight into post-wildfire forest recovery
[Press-News.org] Like the Rolodex and the Typewriter Before Them, In-House Bookkeepers are Becoming the Next Unnecessary Small Business Need on the Chopping BlockSmall businesses are saving thousands of dollars a year by outsourcing their bookkeeping needs.