|
Are You Making This Money Mistake In Your
Business?
By Kalinda Rose Stevenson
"What's worth doing is worth doing for money."
Joseph Donohue
It's that time of year again. This is the time when business owners get
letters from CPAs and tax attorneys announcing that it's time to get
ready to file taxes. Getting ready to file taxes brings up one of the
biggest challenges any business owner faces. What do you do about
handling the money?
I once took a daylong course called "Accounting For Non-Accountants."
The CPA who taught the class said that the biggest mistake business
owners make is to hand over their accounting to someone else. His point
was not that business owners have to do all of the accounting tasks, but
that business owners need to understand what is happening with the
money.
"Do what you love and the money will follow."
Marsha Sinetar
For many business owners, dealing with the money is the worst part of
business. They got into business to do something they love. Paying
attention to the money feels like a distraction from what they really
want to do. This belief is nurtured by the hopeful notion that money
will miraculously appear when you do what you love.
I once attended a seminar featuring a charismatic speaker. He could
command the audience with the power of his personality. During the
course of the seminar, he talked about his wonderful office manager. He
talked about what a gem she was and what a gift it was to him that he
had someone so competent handling his finances so that he was free to do
what he loved to do.
Less than a year later, I took another seminar with the same charismatic
speaker who talked about how heartbroken he was. He had recently
discovered that his wonderful office manager had embezzled more than $1
million from him. This brilliant speaker had made the mistake so many
business owners make. He had handed over complete control of his
finances to someone else, thinking that money was a distraction from his
real work.
In the process, he missed the fundamental difference between a hobby and
business. The function of business is to make money. The IRS has
criteria to determine whether you have a hobby or are running a
business. The difference concerns whether or not you make money with
what you do.
When you have a hobby, you can do what you love and forget about the
money. When you start a business, forgetting about the money can be the
quickest path to business failure.
"The surest way to ruin a man who doesn't know how to handle money is to
give him some."
George Bernard Shaw
Isn't it ironic that the one thing that stands between doing a hobby and
running a business is money and yet the one thing many business owners
find most distasteful about being in business is handling the money?
When you stop to consider that the reason to have a business is to make
money, it seems very shortsighted to surrender the most important part
of your business to someone else.
The other extreme is to spend so much time keeping track of the
finances, paying bills, and doing data entry that there is little time
or energy left to do what you love.
So what do you do about the money? Money is the lifeblood of your
business. And knowledge of money is power. When you give up control of
your money to someone else, you're giving way your power as a business
owner.
"Where large sums of money are concerned, it is advisable to trust
nobody."
Agatha Christie
There is no royal road to business success that will allow you to simply
hand off all knowledge and responsibly about money to someone else. At
worst, you will become victim to embezzlement or incompetence. At best,
you will never feel in control of your business, because you don't
understand what is happening with the money.
The solution is to understand that your business exists to make money.
As a business owner, it is up to you to control the money coming in and
going out of your business. You don't have to do the data entry, but you
do need to understand the data.
Kalinda Rose Stevenson, Ph.D.
FREE "No Money Limits Consumer Guide to Real Estate Investor Training."
http://www.nomoneylimits.com
kalinda@nomoneylimits.com |