Is your budget process stuck on last year’s numbers?
Budgeting decisions are often anchored to the past. Here’s how to dislodge them.
Budgeting decisions are often anchored to the past. Here’s how to dislodge them.
So, you have a great idea for a start-up or you want to expand your current business. You have the perfect business plan and are confident that both revenue growth and profitability are sure-fire. Problem is, you don’t have the capital to fund the start-up or expansion.
Familiarizing yourself with the applicable tax rules and planning issues associated with your divorce settlement may be quite a significant challenge. Here are good thoughts.
Thinking of selling your business someday? Planning on leaving your empire to the kids with a chunk of cash attached? Dreaming of retiring to the sunny beaches of a Caribbean island? If so, it is time to read this article.
Divorce is about severing ties and starting over, at the same time. Having a financial plan can help secure your future and give you peace of mind, but this process isn’t without its challenges. You have to reassess everything. Everything you do is built on a set of future goals, and these change when you get divorced. Your future goals aren’t going to be the same; they’re no longer in connection with someone else.
If you’re thinking about selling your business, think twice. Selling a business should never be a spur-of-the-moment decision.
It can happen to the best of entrepreneurs. While a new business owner is putting in long hours to build a business, a marriage can fray. The next thing the owner knows, his or her spouse may be filing for divorce.
This scenario is all too common. Forty percent to 50 percent of all first marriages in the U.S. end in divorce, according to a 2010 report by the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia. The divorce rate for second marriages is even higher.
Three deceptively simple questions will change the way you think about your company’s future.
Understanding product and customer profitability can give you tremendous insights into your business and provide the intelligence needed to develop strategies for profitable growth.
In TV shows and movies, the typical divorce narrative is to portray women as celebrated victims. Meanwhile, men are depicted as silent sufferers who feel resentment, anger, depression and fear over lingering financial issues, relationship turmoil and worries over breaking up their families. Off camera, the truth is that men don’t always have the tools — or the support — to deal with these very real concerns.
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