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    Business Valuation Planning
    Business valuation is very important for a business owner as it gives a clear picture of the company's strength, weaknesses and progress. Determining the value of a business is considered necessary for various purposes such as estate planning, business succession planning, loan application, buy-sell funding, charitable giving and financing.In order to optimize business value for future sale, business valuation planning is necessary. It is very useful for business owners who want to prepare their business for sale, market their business to buyers, and facilitate the transfer of ownership of their business. A bus
    ack. Letter from someone whose contact info you want to keep? Write down "Bob Smith, 123 H St., Anytown, 555-1234, bobs@smith.com and throw the paper out. You get the idea. For each and every piece record a related task in you new master list and either put the paper in the save stack or throw it out. You'll be amazed at the further reduction in paper as we tend to keep five page reports because there is a phone number on page three that we need. My experience was an hour and a half and my leftover paper was now about four inches high. Remember we started with 3 feet of paper.

    I would venture to guess that most of what is left after going through this three step process is paper that needs to be read or needs to be filed. Use your marker and folders to create the necessary files. Do not file paperclips and such. Staple multiple sheets together for easier filing. To stay on top of this in the future,

    Best Marketing Strategies, A Bread Baking Recipe For Business Owner Success
    Business owners everywhere know: it takes policies and strategies to make a business succeed. The idea of owning a business has become so competitive, that most business owners will spend a lot of time trying to find new ideas to implement along with different strategies to use. Finding businesses that know how to succeed are essential in learning what the formulas are. By doing this, you can master your own formula to success!If you want to look around at the businesses that succeed, you will find one thing in common with all of them. They understand that the most important thing to success is customer sat
    Do you have piles of paper on your desk. Many do and don't know how to deal with them. They have no working system to deal with the day to day influx of paper, email, magazines and other information. Worse yet, after a while that pile on your desk gets moved to the top of the file cabinet. And the pile on the file cabinet gets moved to the window sill. Pretty soon you have piles of paper all over your office. Are you or someone you know in this situation?

    That's how my office used to look back in 1985 when I decided to stop this insanity and get control over my work life. It only took about 2-3 hours to get totally organized and I have never again returned to those days of piles and piles of paper cluttering my workplace and causing the anxiety that comes with not knowing if something, anything in there is important, forgotten or needed to be done. Here's what I did.

    I brought in a big 30 gallon trash can into the office and closed the door. I also made sure I had one legal pad of paper, a pen, a marker, a stapler and a box of manila folders. Put these supplies aside until Step three of the process. Step one involves getting control of the paper. Stack everything from every pile into one big pile. Include every piece of paper you see in your office or work area notes, reports, phone messages, bills, letters, receipts, calendars….everything. Your stack will be quite high but fear not. You are starting to gain control. Now instead of a few or a few dozen piles scattered all around the room you have one place to put all of your focus. By the way, my stack when I did this was literally 3 feet high. Step two is another easy one. You will look at every piece of paper one by one and make this determination - is there anything on this paper I need. If the answer is yes then start a save stack. If the answer is no then throw it in the trash can. Do not stop to do anything about any thing on a piece of paper. Just rip through each piece and determine if it stays or goes. If there is an address on it that you want to keep put it in the keep stack. Maybe it's a flyer reminding you of an event you might like to attend. Save stack. Maybe a report you need to file, a receipt you need to record for reimbursement, a phone message that you need to return the call. If there is anything on the piece you are reviewing that needs some action, save it. Otherwise, throw it away. You should rip through your pile very quickly and be able to throw away quite a bit. It took me about a half hour and my 3 foot pile had now become about 1. Wow! Two-thirds of the stuff I was keeping wasn't even important. This feeling alone of reducing your paper piles to just the stuff you really need causes a great feeling of control over the situation. But it gets even better.

    Now you are ready for step three. Get out your legal pad and pen and have it right next to your newly created save stack. You are going to make a master task list and reduce your stack even further. Even if you have another master task list or to-do list go through this exercise. Go through each piece of paper again. This time you are going to write down on your legal pad the action you need to do to get rid of the piece of paper you are looking at. Use one line per task. If what you write down eliminates the need for the piece of paper, throw it out. If there is further need for the paper like to read, to file, to distribute to someone else then start a new save stack. Phone message? Write down to "return phone call from Bob" and throw it out. Major report you need to review? Write down "review accounting report on first quarter sales" and place in your save stack. Letter from someone whose contact info you want to keep? Write down "Bob Smith, 123 H St., Anytown, 555-1234, bobs@smith.com and throw the paper out. You get the idea. For each and every piece record a related task in you new master list and either put the paper in the save stack or throw it out. You'll be amazed at the further reduction in paper as we tend to keep five page reports because there is a phone number on page three that we need. My experience was an hour and a half and my leftover paper was now about four inches high. Remember we started with 3 feet of paper.

    I would venture to guess that most of what is left after going through this three step process is paper that needs to be read or needs to be filed. Use your marker and folders to create the necessary files. Do not file paperclips and such. Staple multiple sheets together for easier filing. To stay on top of this in the future,

    Medical Billing - Hiring A QA Tester
    In our last installment of medical billing, we looked at what was involved as far as the software company hiring a programmer to create their software that will eventually be sold to the public. But programmers aren't enough because the software needs to be tested. The truth is, programmers make lousy testers because they are biased. That's why the software company needs to hire QA testers to make sure the software works as it should. So what should a medical billing company look for when hiring a QA tester? What follows is a list of a few things that you're going to want.Unlike other industries, QA testin
    on trash can into the office and closed the door. I also made sure I had one legal pad of paper, a pen, a marker, a stapler and a box of manila folders. Put these supplies aside until Step three of the process. Step one involves getting control of the paper. Stack everything from every pile into one big pile. Include every piece of paper you see in your office or work area notes, reports, phone messages, bills, letters, receipts, calendars….everything. Your stack will be quite high but fear not. You are starting to gain control. Now instead of a few or a few dozen piles scattered all around the room you have one place to put all of your focus. By the way, my stack when I did this was literally 3 feet high. Step two is another easy one. You will look at every piece of paper one by one and make this determination - is there anything on this paper I need. If the answer is yes then start a save stack. If the answer is no then throw it in the trash can. Do not stop to do anything about any thing on a piece of paper. Just rip through each piece and determine if it stays or goes. If there is an address on it that you want to keep put it in the keep stack. Maybe it's a flyer reminding you of an event you might like to attend. Save stack. Maybe a report you need to file, a receipt you need to record for reimbursement, a phone message that you need to return the call. If there is anything on the piece you are reviewing that needs some action, save it. Otherwise, throw it away. You should rip through your pile very quickly and be able to throw away quite a bit. It took me about a half hour and my 3 foot pile had now become about 1. Wow! Two-thirds of the stuff I was keeping wasn't even important. This feeling alone of reducing your paper piles to just the stuff you really need causes a great feeling of control over the situation. But it gets even better.

    Now you are ready for step three. Get out your legal pad and pen and have it right next to your newly created save stack. You are going to make a master task list and reduce your stack even further. Even if you have another master task list or to-do list go through this exercise. Go through each piece of paper again. This time you are going to write down on your legal pad the action you need to do to get rid of the piece of paper you are looking at. Use one line per task. If what you write down eliminates the need for the piece of paper, throw it out. If there is further need for the paper like to read, to file, to distribute to someone else then start a new save stack. Phone message? Write down to "return phone call from Bob" and throw it out. Major report you need to review? Write down "review accounting report on first quarter sales" and place in your save stack. Letter from someone whose contact info you want to keep? Write down "Bob Smith, 123 H St., Anytown, 555-1234, bobs@smith.com and throw the paper out. You get the idea. For each and every piece record a related task in you new master list and either put the paper in the save stack or throw it out. You'll be amazed at the further reduction in paper as we tend to keep five page reports because there is a phone number on page three that we need. My experience was an hour and a half and my leftover paper was now about four inches high. Remember we started with 3 feet of paper.

    I would venture to guess that most of what is left after going through this three step process is paper that needs to be read or needs to be filed. Use your marker and folders to create the necessary files. Do not file paperclips and such. Staple multiple sheets together for easier filing. To stay on top of this in the future,

    Form is a Four Letter Word
    Those who push paper and demand forms when they are not completely necessary are doing so to their own peril. Unfortunately when the government demands forms they do it to our peril. You see incase you had not noticed FORM is a four letter word and for good reason too. Forms are so often used by bureaucracies, lawyers and stodgy old corporations who are on their way out.The surest way to kill any progress is to stop the process and start making people fill out forms. Bill Gates was able to reduce the number of forms used in his company to only a few, guess what? Microsoft became the biggest corporation in the w
    nswer is no then throw it in the trash can. Do not stop to do anything about any thing on a piece of paper. Just rip through each piece and determine if it stays or goes. If there is an address on it that you want to keep put it in the keep stack. Maybe it's a flyer reminding you of an event you might like to attend. Save stack. Maybe a report you need to file, a receipt you need to record for reimbursement, a phone message that you need to return the call. If there is anything on the piece you are reviewing that needs some action, save it. Otherwise, throw it away. You should rip through your pile very quickly and be able to throw away quite a bit. It took me about a half hour and my 3 foot pile had now become about 1. Wow! Two-thirds of the stuff I was keeping wasn't even important. This feeling alone of reducing your paper piles to just the stuff you really need causes a great feeling of control over the situation. But it gets even better.

    Now you are ready for step three. Get out your legal pad and pen and have it right next to your newly created save stack. You are going to make a master task list and reduce your stack even further. Even if you have another master task list or to-do list go through this exercise. Go through each piece of paper again. This time you are going to write down on your legal pad the action you need to do to get rid of the piece of paper you are looking at. Use one line per task. If what you write down eliminates the need for the piece of paper, throw it out. If there is further need for the paper like to read, to file, to distribute to someone else then start a new save stack. Phone message? Write down to "return phone call from Bob" and throw it out. Major report you need to review? Write down "review accounting report on first quarter sales" and place in your save stack. Letter from someone whose contact info you want to keep? Write down "Bob Smith, 123 H St., Anytown, 555-1234, bobs@smith.com and throw the paper out. You get the idea. For each and every piece record a related task in you new master list and either put the paper in the save stack or throw it out. You'll be amazed at the further reduction in paper as we tend to keep five page reports because there is a phone number on page three that we need. My experience was an hour and a half and my leftover paper was now about four inches high. Remember we started with 3 feet of paper.

    I would venture to guess that most of what is left after going through this three step process is paper that needs to be read or needs to be filed. Use your marker and folders to create the necessary files. Do not file paperclips and such. Staple multiple sheets together for easier filing. To stay on top of this in the future,

    Is Being Your Own Boss Really What It Seems To Be?
    Hating your boss… that, of course, is not a new concept. Before I started in my freelance career, I always had a job where I constantly loathed my boss. This even dates back to when I was sixteen (I am 30 now) and working at an Orange Julius stand in my local shopping mall. Though I was never that employee that would challenge my superiors, I still developed a severe aversion to anybody who could claim authority over me and have the power to show me the door if I did not follow along. Now since then, the having a boss part has not changed, just the jobs have changed. I can remember countless “write-ups,” y
    he situation. But it gets even better.

    Now you are ready for step three. Get out your legal pad and pen and have it right next to your newly created save stack. You are going to make a master task list and reduce your stack even further. Even if you have another master task list or to-do list go through this exercise. Go through each piece of paper again. This time you are going to write down on your legal pad the action you need to do to get rid of the piece of paper you are looking at. Use one line per task. If what you write down eliminates the need for the piece of paper, throw it out. If there is further need for the paper like to read, to file, to distribute to someone else then start a new save stack. Phone message? Write down to "return phone call from Bob" and throw it out. Major report you need to review? Write down "review accounting report on first quarter sales" and place in your save stack. Letter from someone whose contact info you want to keep? Write down "Bob Smith, 123 H St., Anytown, 555-1234, bobs@smith.com and throw the paper out. You get the idea. For each and every piece record a related task in you new master list and either put the paper in the save stack or throw it out. You'll be amazed at the further reduction in paper as we tend to keep five page reports because there is a phone number on page three that we need. My experience was an hour and a half and my leftover paper was now about four inches high. Remember we started with 3 feet of paper.

    I would venture to guess that most of what is left after going through this three step process is paper that needs to be read or needs to be filed. Use your marker and folders to create the necessary files. Do not file paperclips and such. Staple multiple sheets together for easier filing. To stay on top of this in the future,

    Your Propensity to Change - How Far Would You Go?
    It is easy to dream about an exotic island. It takes a bit more to prepare a trip to this island and spend some time there. But the real challenge is to take your stuff and migrate to this little island.It is said that people that migrate hold on to more conservative customs than in the country of origin. The explanation for this is that people who migrate carry their historic environment (customs, rituals and ideas of the country of origin) with them and conserve these carefully because they serve as beacons in the new country where the new emigrant could feel really lost. Perhaps that this myth is less an iss
    ack. Letter from someone whose contact info you want to keep? Write down "Bob Smith, 123 H St., Anytown, 555-1234, bobs@smith.com and throw the paper out. You get the idea. For each and every piece record a related task in you new master list and either put the paper in the save stack or throw it out. You'll be amazed at the further reduction in paper as we tend to keep five page reports because there is a phone number on page three that we need. My experience was an hour and a half and my leftover paper was now about four inches high. Remember we started with 3 feet of paper.

    I would venture to guess that most of what is left after going through this three step process is paper that needs to be read or needs to be filed. Use your marker and folders to create the necessary files. Do not file paperclips and such. Staple multiple sheets together for easier filing. To stay on top of this in the future, get yourself a three bin unit and mark one "to read" and one "to file". The top bin make an "in-bin" and anytime paper comes into your office put it in there. When you have time make sure you process your in-bin in a similar fashion that has been described here. Transfer info from your in-bin into action tasks or put on your to-do list and get rid of the paper. The trick is to handle any piece of paper once.

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