Monday, 23 July 2012

Professional or Personality? Do you run your business professionally?

I was mentoring a bookkeeper this week who has been in business for a couple of years. Her business has grown by word of mouth because she is a great bookkeeper with a bright personality. Now that her books are filling up and her time is limited, she needed advice on how to use that precious resource more effectively. One of the problems was that her clients provided her the work when THEY were ready and it usually turned up in a shopping bag or shoe box. She was unable to plan her week and the work took longer than it should because of the way the client presented it to her.

On the one hand being flexible and fitting the work around our lifestyle was one of the things that attracted us to bookkeeping. But as you start to fill up you need to be more professional with the way you run your business in order to be more efficient with your time. This becomes critical when you start to recruit other bookkeepers. It’s no longer just about you – it’s about your team and they are the lifeblood of your business.

Often we think that being professional means we need to be selfish, hard-nosed business people who completely disregard our client’s feelings and are only concerned about our own wellbeing and schedules. That’s not true of course but our mind-games can be pretty convincing!

Osmond Vitez from Demand Media says “Professionalism is often defined as the strict adherence to courtesy, honesty and responsibility when dealing with individuals or other companies in the business environment. This trait often includes a high level of excellence going above and beyond basic requirements”.

Being professional starts with respecting yourself, your business and your needs. Making sure you feel fulfilled and rewarded energises you to continue to give a “high level of excellence” to your clients and your team. If you feel you are being used and abused you will become resentful of your clients who are consumed by their own needs and disregard yours.

You may not even realise the client is doing that or feel you have any other choice until you decide to put on another bookkeeper and suddenly you see things in a whole new light and realise:
  • If you allow the client to decide when they are ready for the work to be done that now affects your team
  • If you allow your client to pay you when they choose, where are you going to find the cash to pay your team?
  • If you allow your client to provide the work to you in a shoe box every month and it takes the new bookkeeper longer to do the processing because it’s more confusing and the client complains about the time, how are you going to justify the extra time to the client?

Often your clients expect bookkeepers to do what they want, when they want it because that’s what they’ve always done. But now we are Registered BAS Agents and the industry as a whole is becoming more professional, sometimes that means retraining your clients.

Do yourself a favour – if you are starting up think about your practice like you already have a team and retrain your clients while you only have a few. Or if you have a team and you allow your clients to run your business I’ve got one question for you. How is that working for you? Show respect for yourself by being professional about how you run your business. Don’t change your personality, just save that for your relationship with your client.

Feel free to leave a comment, love to hear your thoughts.

Article contributed by Debbie Roberts from Pure Bookkeeping
Read more about Debbie by clicking here 

Tuesday, 17 July 2012

BAS Agents are not a rose by any other name

“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet.”
– W Shakespeare

Accepting William Shakespeare’s view could lead to disaster for unwary business owners who fail to check the credentials of their “bookkeeper” before relying on their GST advice and BAS skills. Read on to learn how to get what you pay for without paying extra, by engaging a registered BAS Agent as your bookkeeper ….

Quite simply, if your bookkeeper is charging you for the provision of BAS services and they are not a registered BAS Agent or Tax Agent there will be no Safe Harbour protection for you from penalties imposed by the Tax Office. In the modern business operating environment, the person who codes your transactions and lodges your BAS needs to be a registered BAS Agent for you to enjoy several benefits - the most important being a Safe Harbour as a taxpayer.

A taxpayer who uses a tax agent or BAS agent will benefit from a safe harbour for certain Tax Office penalties in the following circumstances:
  • where a false or misleading statement (including claims made on or excluded from your BAS) is made carelessly by your BAS Agent, provided that you as the taxpayer have taken reasonable care to comply with your tax obligations by giving your BAS agent the information necessary to make the statement, and
  • where a document (such as a return, notice or statement) is not lodged on time in the approved form due to your BAS agent’s carelessness, provided you gave your agent the necessary information, in sufficient time, to lodge the document on time and in the approved form.

At a glance, other benefits of engaging a registered BAS Agent as your bookkeeper include:
  • You can lodge a complaint against them with the Tax Practitioners Board (TPB) – see the “Lodge a complaint” option on the www.tpb.gov.au Home page.
  • Registered BAS Agents are required to maintain current Professional Indemnity insurance policy (and the TPB do check).
  • Registered BAS Agents have the same extended lodgement dates for BAS and IAS as your Tax Agent does which is great when you need that extra time to get the BAS done!

Know your bookkeeper is registered; a BAS Agent is an asset and should not be a liability. Go to the TPB Agent Register and type in either 88392009 or 90175003 in the Agent number field and click search to check OUR credentials right now!

Please know this: as practicing professionals, we don’t mind so much the name you give us, as much as knowing you value our services for the value they add to your business. If you are a client wanting to learn more about hiring a BAS Agent, feel free to visit Remote Bookkeepers.

Article contributed by Fiona Mac Lean & Coralie Kemp, Remote Bookkeepers

We have just released our Blog!

That's right, we have just officially released the official Australian Bookkeepers Network Blog. Industry contributors of the blog, have written on the topics and issues affecting bookkeepers and their clients.

Be sure to stay tuned as new articles and topics will be posted to provide you with relevant information and knowledge of the Bookkeeping industry.

Share with your peers  and feel free to follow or comment. If you have an article you think should be shared with the bookkeeping community, please email info@austbook.net or leave us a comment.

Kind Regards,
The Australian Bookkeepers Network