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Poor old Sue
Started a set of books anew
without reading these lines few
and now Sue is in a Stew 

 

Client Letter - What this idea is about  

What This Idea Is About - Client Letter

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Type in this area an introduction to this topic.  State what it is about, state whether this is an introduction, beginner level, imd or advanced.  State whether any special knowledge is required - for example, law, mathematical, management, knowledge of a specific industry, etc.

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Engagement Status Letter 

You have not engaged Bob Parrish CPA PC, Bob Parrish CPA, pro1040, Consulting on line, any related parties, or the ISP to perform any services for you or offer you advice.  This entire site is for educational or informational purposes only.   You are not to use the forms, concepts, strategies, or knowledge without assistance from a professional.   The author, the corporation, the ISP, Bob Parrish CPA, Bob Parrish CPA, P.C. or other parties related to those or this site do not guarantee or warrantee in any manner the suitability, usefulness, accuracy, timeliness, or results of any portions of this site, nor the links contained in this site which link to other areas.   At times, information is taken from other sources and is believed to be accurate, but no verification or confirmation is performed.  Furthermore, if any federal or state law invalidates a portion of this disclaimer, the other portions still apply.   In addition, any allegations or actions are restricted to arbitration only and must be arbitrated by the Better Business Bureau in Sarasota Florida.  Reading of these pages constitutes complete acceptance and agreement with all disclaimer provisions on all pages of this site. ....... Thursday, February 22, 2007 11:45 AM  

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YOUR ANSWERS

What it does, Explanation of this topic and how it may affect you:

The IRS has issued Revenue Procedure 2000-22, which permits businesses with average gross receipts of $1 million or less to use the cash method of accounting even if the taxpayer would otherwise be required to use the accrual method due to the presence of inventories. This change is effective for tax years ending after December 16, 1999.

Qualifications are twofold: a gross receipts test and a conformity test.

Qualifying for the Cash Method

Gross receipts test. The three-year average gross receipts must be calculated after the end of each year for a taxpayer and all related entities that have been in existence for three years or longer. If the average for the three prior years exceeds $1 million, the taxpayer is not eligible for the cash method of accounting.

When the entity has been in existence for less than three years, the average annual gross receipts is determined by the number of years the entity has been in existence. Any short-period receipts must be annualized. For purposes of the test, gross receipts include all sales net of returns and allowances (but not cost of goods sold), all service income, interest, dividends, capital gains, rents, and royalties, plus any income from incidental or outside sources.

The procedure requires the aggregation of the gross receipts for all entities treated as a single employer under the provisions of sections 52(a), 52(b), 414(m), and 414(o). Section 52(a) includes brother, sister, and parent-subsidiary groups as defined in section 1563(a), except that a more than 50% stock ownership test is substituted for the more than 80% stock ownership test. Section 52(b) aggregates trades or businesses under common control whether or not they are incorporated. Sections 414(m) and (o), which define commonly controlled entities for the purposes of calculating limitations on the work opportunity credit and retirement plan benefits, were enacted to limit the taxpayer’s ability to divide activities between entities so as to maximize the work credit and pension benefits of business owners. For example, a sole proprietor who also owns more than 50% in a partnership must aggregate the gross receipts of the proprietorship and the partnership.

Conformity test. The conformity test requires regular use of the cash method of accounting for book and reporting purposes for the current and prior three tax years. Reporting includes any financial statement or other report provided to owners, beneficiaries, or creditors. If a taxpayer uses the cash method for tax purposes but issues a financial statement on the accrual method the conformity test would not be met. Isolated violations of the conformity rule are disregarded (for example, a one-time accrual statement in order to obtain a bank loan).

The Benefits

Assuming a business qualifies for (and, if applicable, elects) relief under Revenue Procedure 2000-22, it can—
defer the net difference between receivables and payables until realization avoid the complexities of inventory accounting, although ending merchandise inventory is capitalized on the cost basis and expensed as used retain applicability of the installment sales method.

Making the Conversion

Taking advantage of the benefits of Revenue Procedure 2000-22 is simple for new businesses and for existing cash method businesses that can satisfy the gross receipts and conformity tests.

For accrual method taxpayers, however, the process is more involved. For qualifying taxpayers that can satisfy the gross receipts and conformity tests, Revenue Procedure 2000-22 grants automatic consent to change to the cash method of accounting if the procedures of Revenue Procedure 99-49 are followed [with the modifications provided in Revenue Procedure 2000-22, section 6.02(l)]. A Form 3115 (Change in Accounting Method) must be filed with the first tax return for which the cash method is used, and a copy of Form 3115 must be sent to the IRS National Office. Form 3115s filed under this revenue procedure should include the notation “Filed under Revenue Procedure 2000-22” at the top of page one.

If a qualifying accrual basis taxpayer has already filed its 1999 return on or before July 15, 2000, an amended 1999 return along with a Form 3115 can be filed to elect the cash method for 1999. The amended return must be filed no later than November 13, 2000. Additionally, a copy of the Form 3115 must be filed with the IRS National Office no later than the date the amended return is filed.

The section 481 adjustment, which is required as a result of changing to the cash method of accounting and making any necessary change to the taxpayer’s inventory method (including the discontinuance of capitalizing inventory costs under IRC section 263A), is normally taken into account over four years.

Converting back. If the taxpayer initially qualifies for the relief but subsequently fails either or both of the $l million gross receipts and conformity tests, the taxpayer must use an appropriate inventory method and, in all probability, convert to the accrual method of accounting, at least for the sale and purchase of merchandise. Such a change will qualify for the automatic consent provisions of Revenue Procedure 99-49 (or its successor), which means that Form 3115 must be filed with the tax return for the year of change and a copy sent to the national office. The section 481 adjustment from such a conversion back to the accrual method would normally be recognized over four years.

 

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Commentary

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Revenue Procedures

REV. PROC. 2000-22

SECTION 1. PURPOSE

This revenue procedure provides that the Commissioner of Internal

Revenue will exercise his discretion to except a qualifying taxpayer with

average annual gross receipts of $1,000,000 or less from the requirements

to account for inventories and to use an accrual method of accounting for

purchases and sales of merchandise. This revenue procedure also provides

the procedures by which a qualifying taxpayer may obtain automatic consent

to change to the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting (the

cash method).

 

SECTION 2. BACKGROUND

.01 Section 446(c) of the Internal Revenue Code generally allows a

taxpayer to select the method of accounting it will use to compute its

taxable income. A taxpayer is entitled to adopt any one of the permissible

methods for each separate trade or business, subject to certain

restrictions. For example, section 446(b) provides that the selected

method must clearly reflect income. In addition, section 1.446-1(c)(2)(i)

of the Income Tax Regulations requires that a taxpayer use an accrual

method of accounting with regard to purchases and sales of merchandise

whenever section 471 requires the taxpayer to account for inventories,

unless otherwise authorized by the Commissioner under section

1.446-1(c)(2)(ii). Under section 1.446-1(c)(2)(ii), the Commissioner has

the authority to permit a taxpayer to use a method of accounting that

clearly reflects income even though the method is not specifically

authorized by the regulations.

.02 Section 471 provides that whenever, in the opinion of the

Secretary, the use of inventories is necessary to clearly determine the

income of the taxpayer, inventories must be taken by the taxpayer. Section

1.471-1 requires a taxpayer to account for inventories when the

production, purchase, or sale of merchandise is an income-producing factor

in the taxpayer's business.

.03 Section 1.162-3 requires taxpayers carrying materials and supplies

(other than incidental materials and supplies) on hand to deduct the cost

of materials and supplies only in the amount that they are actually

consumed and used in operations during the tax year.

.04 Section 263A generally requires direct costs and an allocable

portion of indirect costs of certain personal property produced or

acquired for resale by a taxpayer to be included in inventory costs, in

the case of property that is inventory, or to be capitalized, in the case

of other property. However, resellers with gross receipts of $10,000,000

or less and producers with $200,000 or less of indirect costs are not

required to capitalize costs under section 263A. See section 263A(b)(2)(B)

and section 1.263A-2(b)(3)(iv).

.05 Section 446(e) and section 1.446-1(e) state that, except as

otherwise provided, a taxpayer must secure the consent of the Commissioner

before changing a method of accounting for federal income tax purposes.

Section 1.446-1(e)(3)(ii) authorizes the Commissioner to prescribe

administrative procedures setting forth the limitations, terms, and

conditions deemed necessary to permit a taxpayer to obtain consent to

change a method of accounting in accordance with section 446(e).

.06 Section 481(a) requires those adjustments necessary to prevent

amounts from being duplicated or omitted to be taken into account when the

taxpayer's taxable income is computed under a method of accounting

different from the method used to compute taxable income for the preceding

tax year.

 

SECTION 3. SCOPE

This revenue procedure applies to a taxpayer with "average annual gross

receipts" of $1,000,000 or less (as defined in section 5.01 of this

revenue procedure) that satisfies the "conformity" requirement (as

described in section 5.07 of this revenue procedure).

 

SECTION 4. SMALL TAXPAYER EXCEPTION

Pursuant to the discretion under sections 446(b) and 471, and to

simplify bookkeeping requirements for small taxpayers, the Commissioner,

as a matter of administrative convenience, will except taxpayers described

in section 3 of this revenue procedure from any requirement to account for

inventories under section 471 or to use an accrual method under section

446. A taxpayer described in section 3 that does not want to account for

inventories must treat merchandise inventory in the same manner as a

material or supply that is not incidental under section 1.162-3. Section

263A does not apply to such merchandise inventory.

 

SECTION 5. DEFINITIONS

.01 AVERAGE ANNUAL GROSS RECEIPTS DEFINED. A taxpayer has average

annual gross receipts of $1,000,000 or less if, for each prior tax year

ending on or after December 17, 1998, the taxpayer's average annual gross

receipts for the 3-tax-year period ending with the applicable prior tax

year does not exceed $1,000,000.

.02 GROSS RECEIPTS DEFINED. Gross receipts is defined consistent with

section 1.448-1T(f)(2)(iv) of the temporary regulations. Thus, gross

receipts for a tax year equal all receipts derived from all of the

taxpayer's trades or businesses that must be recognized under the method

of accounting actually used by the taxpayer for that tax year for federal

income tax purposes. For example, gross receipts include total sales (net

of returns and allowances), all amounts received from services, interest,

dividends, and rents. However, gross receipts do not include amounts

received by the taxpayer with respect to sales tax or other similar state

and local taxes if, under the applicable state or local law, the tax is

legally imposed on the purchaser of the good or service, and the taxpayer

merely collects and remits the tax to the taxing authority.

.03 AGGREGATION OF GROSS RECEIPTS. For purposes of computing gross

receipts, all taxpayers treated as a single employer under subsection (a)

or (b) of section 52 or subsection (m) or (o) of section 414 (or that

would be treated as a single employer under these sections if the

taxpayers had employees) will be treated as a single taxpayer. However,

when transactions occur between taxpayers that are treated as a single

taxpayer by the previous sentence, gross receipts arising from these

transactions will not be treated as gross receipts for purposes of the

average annual gross receipts limitation. See section 1.448-1T(f)(2)(ii).

.04 TAXPAYER NOT IN EXISTENCE FOR 3 TAX YEARS. If a taxpayer has been

in existence for less than the 3-tax-year period referred to in section

5.01 of this revenue procedure, the taxpayer must determine its average

annual gross receipts for the number of years (including short tax years)

that the taxpayer has been in existence.

.05 TREATMENT OF SHORT TAX YEARS. In the case of a short tax year, the

taxpayer's gross receipts must be annualized by multiplying the gross

receipts of the short tax year by 12 and then dividing the product by the

number of months in the short tax year. See section 1.448-1T(f)(2)(iii).

.06 TREATMENT OF PREDECESSORS. Any reference to taxpayer in this

section 5 includes a reference to any predecessor of such taxpayer.

.07 CONFORMITY. A taxpayer satisfies the conformity requirement of this

revenue procedure if the taxpayer does not regularly use any method other

than the cash method to ascertain the income, profit or loss of the trade

or business for purposes of its books and records and reports (including

financial statements) to shareholders, partners, other proprietors, or

beneficiaries and for credit purposes for the current and prior 3 tax

years (excluding tax years ending before December 17, 2000). A taxpayer

that uses the cash method of accounting for purposes of its books and

records and reports but, on an isolated basis, prepares financial reports

using an accrual method (for example, on a one-time basis to obtain a bank

loan) will not be considered to violate the conformity requirement.

.08 EXAMPLE. Taxpayer A, a calendar year taxpayer, manufactures and

sells widgets. For federal income tax purposes, Taxpayer A uses an overall

accrual method of accounting. Further, Taxpayer A complies with the

requirements of section 1.471-1 to use inventory accounts and section 263A

to capitalize direct and indirect costs.

Taxpayer A has gross receipts (as defined in section 5.02 of this

revenue procedure) of $200,000 in 1996, $800,000 in 1997 and $1,100,000 in

1998.

To determine whether it qualifies for the small taxpayer exception set

forth in section 4 of this revenue procedure beginning with the 1999 tax

year, Taxpayer A computes its average annual gross receipts each prior tax

year ending on or after December 17, 1998, that is, its 1998 tax year.

Taxpayer A's average annual gross receipts for 1998 is $700,000 ($200,000

(1996) + $800,000 (1997) + $1,100,000 (1998) = $2,100,000 / 3).

Taxpayer A's average annual gross receipts for each prior tax year

ending after December 17, 1998, does not exceed $1,000,000. Therefore,

Taxpayer A qualifies for the small taxpayer exception for its 1999 tax

year. By following the procedures set forth in section 6.02 of this

revenue procedure, Taxpayer A may change to the cash method and a method

of treating merchandise inventory in the same manner as a material or

supply that is not incidental under section 1.162-3 for the tax year

ending December 31, 1999.

Taxpayer A must determine its applicability for the small taxpayer

exception set forth in section 4 of this revenue procedure each year.

Thus, to qualify for the exception for its 2000 tax year, Taxpayer A's

average annual gross receipts for 1999 (that is, the average of A's gross

receipts for 1999, 1998, and 1997) also must be $1,000,000 or less and

Taxpayer A must meet the conformity requirement of section 5.07 of this

revenue procedure. If, in any later year, Taxpayer A ceases to qualify for

the small taxpayer exception set forth in section 4 of this revenue

procedure, it must change to an inventory method and an accrual method

with respect to purchases and sales of merchandise in accordance with

section 6.03 of this revenue procedure.

 

SECTION 6. CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING METHOD

.01 IN GENERAL. Any change in a taxpayer's method of accounting

pursuant to this revenue procedure is a change in method of accounting to

which the provisions of sections 446 and 481 and the regulations

thereunder apply.

.02 AUTOMATIC CHANGE FOR TAXPAYERS WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THIS REVENUE

PROCEDURE.

(1) AUTOMATIC CHANGE TO THE CASH METHOD. A taxpayer that qualifies for

the small taxpayer exception described in section 4 of this revenue

procedure that wants to change to the cash method must follow the

automatic change in accounting method provisions of Rev. Proc. 99-49,

1999-52 I.R.B. 725 (or its successor) with the following modifications:

(a) The scope limitations in section 4.02 of Rev. Proc. 99-49 do not

apply. However, if the taxpayer is under examination, before an appeals

office, or before a federal court with respect to any income tax issue,

the taxpayer must provide a copy of the Form 3115, Application for Change

in Accounting Method, to the examining agent(s), appeals officer, or

counsel for the government, as appropriate, at the same time that it files

the copy of the Form 3115 with the national office. The Form 3115 must

contain the name(s) and telephone number(s) of the examining agent(s),

appeals officer, or counsel for the government, as appropriate.

(b) A taxpayer making a change under section 6.02 of this revenue

procedure for its first tax year ending on or after December 17, 1999,

that, on or before July 14, 2000, files its original federal income tax

return for such year, is not subject to the filing requirement in section

6.02(2)(a) of Rev. Proc. 99-49, provided the taxpayer complies with the

following filing requirement. The taxpayer must complete and file a Form

3115 in duplicate. The original must be attached to the taxpayer's amended

federal income tax return for the taxpayer's first tax year ending on or

after December 17, 1999. This amended return must be filed no later than

November 13, 2000. A copy of the Form 3115 must be filed with the national

office (see section 6.02(5) of Rev. Proc. 99-49 for the address) no later

than when the taxpayer's amended return is filed.

(c) For a change in method of accounting within the scope of this

revenue procedure, the provisions of Rev. Proc. 99-49 are effective for

tax years ending on or after December 17, 1999.

(d) Taxpayers filing Form 3115 for a change in method of accounting

under section 6.02 of this revenue procedure are reminded to complete all

applicable parts of the form, including Part II, line 17 (regarding

information on gross receipts in previous years) and Part III (regarding

the section 481 adjustment). Such taxpayers must also complete Part I of

Schedule A of Form 3115, but need not complete Part II. Taxpayers should

write "Filed under Rev. Proc. 2000-22" at the top of the form.

 

(2) CHANGE TO COMPLY WITH SECTION 1.162-3. A taxpayer that qualifies

for the small taxpayer exception described in section 4 of this revenue

procedure that does not want to account for inventories must make any

necessary change from the taxpayer's inventory method (and, if applicable,

from the method of capitalizing costs under section 263A) to treat

merchandise inventory in the same manner as a material or supply that is

not incidental under section 1.162-3. For purposes of such a change, the

rules of section 6.02(1) of this revenue procedure apply. Taxpayers may

file a single Form 3115 for both changes described in sections 6.02(1) and

(2).

 

.03 TAXPAYERS NOT WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THIS REVENUE PROCEDURE. A

taxpayer that ceases to qualify for the small taxpayer exception described

in section 4 of this revenue procedure and otherwise is required to

account for inventories must change to an inventory method that complies

with sections 263A and 471 and an accrual method with respect to purchases

and sales of merchandise using either the automatic change in accounting

method provisions of section 5.01 of the APPENDIX to Rev. Proc. 99-49, if

applicable, or the advance consent provisions of Rev. Proc. 97-27, 1997-1

C.B. 680 (or its successor).

 

SECTION 7. EFFECT ON OTHER DOCUMENTS

Rev. Proc. 99-49 is modified and amplified to include this automatic

change in section 5 of the APPENDIX.

 

SECTION 8. EFFECTIVE DATE

This revenue procedure is effective for tax years ending on or after

December 17, 1999. However, the Service will not challenge a taxpayer's

use of the cash method under section 446 (and a taxpayer's failure to

account for inventories under section 471) in an earlier year if the

taxpayer consistently used the cash method (and consistently did not

account for inventories) and would satisfy the 3-tax-year-period gross

receipts test of section 5.01 of this revenue procedure (applied by

testing the 3-tax-year period ending prior to such earlier year), and the

conformity requirement of section 5.07 (applied by testing the earlier

year and the 3 tax years prior to such earlier year).

 

DRAFTING INFORMATION

The principal author of this revenue procedure is Cheryl Lynn Oseekey

of the Office of Assistant Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting). For

further information regarding this revenue procedure, contact Ms. Oseekey

on (202) 622-4970 (not a toll-free call).

 

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Revenue Rulings

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Private Letter Rulings

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Tax Killers  

This is about Activity Based Taxplanning - maximizing deductions, minimizing cash outlay and maximizing the amount of cash retained and the net worth.  Activity Based Taxplanning (ABT) is a methodology developed by Bob Parrish CPA, that assists people with the tax issues by focusing on the activity (or actions - events) that are being undertaken or contemplated (or have already taken place).  The,  research is compiled from the myriad of sources to help you complete the activity with the least tax cost, while maintaining compliance the tax laws, other laws and regulations and place yourself in a position to protect your objectives.

Tax is a subject that many view in order to cut costs.  Taxes are a cost just as any other cost.  It happens this cost is somewhat intangible and is defined by legislation without a tangible item to view and control.  The money is spent and the control of the expenditure is more appropriately administered by someone trained in the law.

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Cost Killers   Management Info Sys, Cost Acctg, Activity Based Costing)

 This is about Activity Based Costing  - methods to cut costs, management accounting, management information systems, decision support systems - in general about being a manager.

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Preparing for your CPA, attorney, or preparing to start your own What to gather - 

  

How to Prepare For the CPA or Legal Counsel - Save the Professional Time - Save Your Money

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 Entrance Interview

1041 Organizer

Exit Interview

From Banking Records

From Customer Records

From Signed Documents

From Your Other Business, or Financial Records

From Corporation Records or Organization Records (meetings, etc.) 

What to do

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Forms - checklists, time-line to do, etc. Assistance - What To Do - 

What to Do  - Forms, Checklists, Calendars, Etc.

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Action Checklist - What To Do

OVERVIEW OF PROCEDURES

GENERAL SETUP & STARTUP

PRINT FORMS AND DOCUMENTS NEEDED

PRESENTATION STANDARDS

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DETAILED STEPS

STARTING

FROM CLIENT OR BUSINESS RECORDS

CONTRACTS, BILLS OF SALE, AGREEMENTS, ETC.

LIST OF DOCUMENTS NEEDED

ORGANIZER

ENTRANCE INTERVIEW

EXIT INTERVIEW

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OBTAIN THE ORGANIZER AND BE CERTAIN ALL INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE

GATHER AND SORT THE INFORMATION

OBTAIN THE WORKPAPER TITLE SHEETS

OBTAIN THE PRESENTATION TITLE SHEETS

OPEN ALL STANDARD DOCUMENTS

OVERVIEW THE ENTRANCE INTERVIEW FORM

OVERVIEW THE LIST OF INFORMATION AND CLIENT OR BUSINESS RECORDS NEEDED

START THE REQUIRED COMPUTER PROGRAMS

OBTAIN THE CHECKLISTS IF NEEDED AND WORK ON THE JOB BY EACH TYPE OF ACTIVITY OR EVENT

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PRINT ALL THE REQUIRED DOCUMENTS OR MAKE COPIES AS NEEDED

PRESENTATION STANDARDS

DETERMINE THE CORRECT PRESENTATION STANDARD TO USE

ENGAGEMENT LETTER AND DISCLAIMER

PRESENTATION IN GENERAL

WHAT THE ENGAGEMENT IS LIMITED TO

WHAT SERVICES WERE PERFORMED

HOW THIS HELPS & BENEFITS

4 WAY TEST APPLICATION

Is it the TRUTH

Is it FAIR

Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS

Will it be BENEFICIAL to all

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BEFORE FINALIZING THE WORK PROCESS CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING

Compliance

Paying Bills or other events

The professional should perform functions the client does not have time for

The  professional should perform necessary functions the client staff does not have training for

Reduce Costs

Reduce Risks

Setting Goals or objectives

Setting methods for monitoring

Setting dates, methods & procedures for follow-up

Setting guidelines for defining when variances from the guideline warrant policy or procedure changes

Identify the policies or procedures that need to be changed to accomplish the goal or objective

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OBTAIN THE STANDARD WORKPAPER FORMS NEEDED

LIST OF THE STANDARD FORMS AND W/P NEEDED

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OBTAIN THE DOCUMENTS FOR THIS JOB

PLACE BLANK FORMS IN THE CORRECT SEQUENCE

GENERAL & FOR ALL JOBS

Instructions for finalizing and completion - for example instructions for the mailing of forms to the IRS

Actions Checklist

Report Cover Letter

Required Documents and attachments

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FINAL OVERVIEW BEFORE THE JOBS IS ENDED & CLOSED

LOOK AT THE ORIGINAL QUESTION - has it been answered, were more questions added?

THE ANSWER - limit the answer to a short paragraph of about 7 sentences.  Did this solve the issue?  The ANSWER is not considered the SOLUTION

THE SOLUTION - understand the objective or goal and restate it.  Were the goals met?  What might prevent obtaining the goals. Do the benefits outweigh the costs?  Reduce Costs?  Reduce Risks?  Setting Goals or objectives:

Setting methods for monitoring

Setting dates, methods & procedures for follow-up

Setting guidelines for defining when variances from the guideline warrant policy or procedure changes

Identify the policies or procedures that need to be changed to accomplish the goal or objective

ACTIONS - checklist, calendar, columnar presentation showing separate columns for Client, CPA, Broker, Bookkeeper, Lawyer, Insurance Agent, etc.

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COST v. BENEFITS ANALYSIS

PROPOSAL

FACTS DISCOVERED & USED

COMPUTATIONS & REPORTS

TECHNICAL ANALYSIS WITH CITATIONS AND AUTHORITY

FORMS - agreements, contracts, trusts, tax forms, financial reports, management information reports, policies or procedures

REQUIRED ATTACHMENTS

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FINAL STEPS

Overview - look at the steps required and the steps performed.  Are there unusual items?  Are there exceptions or adverse results of the procedures performed?  Find resolutions for all unusual or adverse items.

Compliance - has compliance "substantially" been met.  That is no "material" adverse results?

Math Check

Proof and spell check

Theory & overview by someone not performing the procedures

Close the case and archive it.

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Forms and checklists

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How to use the forms

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Financial Accounting: Bookkeeping & Financials 

Financial Accounting

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Financial Statement Presentation

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Notes to Financial Statements

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How to Make Entries

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What Kind of Records to Keep

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Bookkeeping Methods - Cash, Accrual and Other

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How the Business Entity Affects the Recording

Sole Proprietor

Corporation - C & S

Partnerships - General, Limited, Limited Liability Company, Registered Limited Liability Partnership or Company

Trusts

Tax Exempt

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Compliance - what is required for protection, defense, etc.  

Compliance Checklist

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Alerts & Dangers - Risks, Asset Protection, IRS Defense 

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Action Checklist

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Alerts & Dangers - Risks

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Asset Protection

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Your Defense

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Tools - Spreadsheets - Documents - Reports - Checklists

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Spreadsheets & Computations 

 

Spreadsheet #1

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Contracts, Trusts, etc. 

Agreement #1

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Reports Required 

 Report #1

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Checklists for Deployment  

 Checklist #1

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Checklist for Monitoring  

 Checklist #1

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