Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Support for QuickBooks 2009 will be discontinued 1/31/12. Upgrade to v2012 at moxiebookkeeping.com

Thursday, September 29, 2011

"QB for Mac not for everyone who has a Mac" Mac.http://ping.fm/UIlx3
Oldie but goodie IRS employee vs contractor guidelines.
http://ping.fm/FF6y7

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Do you know your true 'cost of sales'? Take your direct costs and divide by number of sales made in a day (or hour). Helps with cashflow.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

When planning your week, focus on what you want to achieve (outcome) not just for activities. If you are missing desired outcome, rethink!

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

While I don't love QB Online, it does work on an iPad
www.sleeter.com/blog/2011/05/manage-payroll-from-your-iphone-or-ipad-with-intuit-online-payroll-mobile/

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Just offset 20.5 tonnes of CO2 for another carbon-neutral year. Make your site or biz carbonfree : www.carbonfund.org/carbonfreewebsite
Intuit Complete Payroll to be discontinued as of 12/31/11. Don't just go with another Intuit service, unless it truly suits your needs.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Intuit GoPayment credit card swiper compatible with iPad. Very cool.
http://gopayment.com/

Thursday, April 28, 2011

WIBO hosts free legal and accounting clinics for NYC entrepreneurs
http://wibo.org/events

Monday, April 25, 2011

QB Mac users may want to consider rightnetworks.com instead of Parallels: remote hosted QB. awesome.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

"I think that maybe inside any business, there is someone slowly going crazy" - Joseph Heller.
Happy Tax Season!

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

David Allen - Getting Things Done newsletter - What is Wrong with Lists?

What's wrong with lists? Most people haven't had a lot of success with lists, especially the ones they've tried to use to "get organized."

You are either attracted or repelled by your lists and everything on them. There is no neutral territory. When you look at any one item you will either be thinking to yourself, "Hey, when can I mark THAT off?" or "Yuck! Back away!" My educated guess is that 98 percent of people's responses are some version of the latter.

Why? Because 1) they're hard work and/or 2) they're scary and/or 3) they're disappointing.

1) Hard work

If you know your list of calls to make doesn't include every single call you have to make about any and everything in your life, you will feel that you still should be remembering things that aren't on the list. That's low-level and hard work for your psyche, so it's not really getting the relief from the list it is seeking. If you don't have everything out of your head, it hardly feels worth trying to keep ANYthing out of your head. Also, most big to-do lists have things grouped together on them that cannot be done in the context you are in at the time, and a lot of repetitive re-thinking (wasteful mental effort) is required to figure out what you actually have the opportunity to do in the moment versus what can't be done until another place and time.

2) Scary

If a to-do on your list is not the very next physical visible action to be done, there is a gap between current reality and what you are looking at, and it can trigger a subtle but very real sense of being out of control with what to do about it, every time you glance at it. Some part of you knows that there is more thinking and decision-making required, and you don't feel you have the energy or capability to do that well, in this moment. Simply having "Mom" on a to-do list reminds you that her birthday is coming and that you should think and decide about what you're going to do about it... but, oh my... I don't have the juice to deal with that right now!

3) Disappointing

Ever had to rewrite a list of things you didn't get done when you thought you should? People who try to work daily to-do lists usually have undone things at the end of the day that create guilt and the trouble of having to transfer them to the next day.

So, to change your relationship with "lists" to a more positive one:

1) Make them complete, so your brain gets to graduate from the job of remembering; and organize your action reminders by context (phone, computer, errands, at home, etc.) so you only need to review what you actually can do at the time.

2) Make sure every actionable item has the very next visible physical action identified along with it, so you don't freak out about unknown territory between here and there.

3) Only put items that cannot be done any other day on your calendar, and everything else hold in "as soon as I can get to them" lists.

I suppose "love your lists" could be a little too radical an admonition for some of you. But how about at least "be good friends" with them?


QUOTABLES

"If you aren't yet at the point of clarity, then make that your first goal. It's a big waste of time to go through life being unclear about what you want. Most people wallow way too long in the state of "I don't know what to do." They wait for some external force to provide them with clarity, never realizing that clarity is self-created. The universe is waiting on you, not the other way around, and it's going to keep waiting until you finally make up your mind. Waiting for clarity is like being a sculptor staring at a piece of marble, waiting for the statue within to cast off the unneeded pieces. Do not wait for clarity to spontaneously materialize—grab a chisel and get busy!"

-Steve Pavlina

Thursday, March 17, 2011

I am loving the new Collections Center in QB 2011 PC!

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

QB 2011 Premier for PC now has Balance Sheet by Class. Great news for non-profits! @TechSoup may have discount copies

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

http://ping.fm/3geZp
psyched for QB workshop @GPCW on 3/3/11

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

5 $ Mistakes Freelancers Make - right on the money!
www.freshbooks.com/blog/2011/01/12/five-money-mistakes-freelancers-make/