Kathy Kristof

Devil in the Details

Free Bookkeeping for Small Business

By Kathy Kristof | Jul 7, 2009 |

Organizing financial records can be a challenge

Organizing financial records can be a challenge

Small businesses get lots of special tax deductions and credits–the trouble is remembering to claim them. Now there’s a web site that will help–for free–by offering free bookkeeping services.

You plug in your income and expenses. The site will then estimate the amount you need to pay in taxes and keep a running tally of your profit or loss. At the end of the year, you can give the whole spread sheet to your accountant–by email even–for fast and easy tax preparation. Or, of course, you’ll have the data to do your taxes yourself.

Is the software clunky or hard to use? Not at all. I started plugging in my data to test it. While it will take me some time to dig into my records to plug in everything, the test told me that the site is simple and intuitive–even for a technological neophyte like me. The founders are former executives of Intuit–the manufacturer of a variety of personal finance software tools, including QuickBooks. They’ve apparently figured out how to make this easy.

If you’re an unintentional entrepreneur–one of the millions who were laid off in the past year, who are starting their own companies or consulting businesses to survive–trust me on this.  Keeping good records is going to be your toughest challenge. Most of us throw receipts into a file folder or box all year and then do our level best to interpret what we saved once annually prior to doing our taxes. If you forget to save something–or can’t figure out what it is–you lose the write-off and that costs real money. This web site actually allows you to track and label things as they arrive–in seconds–which reduces the chance that you’ll lose or forget something.

What’s the catch? If there is one, I can’t find it.

Normally, you find the unpleasant underbelly of a deal like this in the “terms of service.” Here the terms are not only reasonable, they’re readable. Aside from the normal disclaimers, like they reserve the right to charge for things in the future (but you don’t provide a credit card number or payment information, so you’ll know about charges before they happen) and that they don’t warrant a free service (Duh), they demand only that you’re over the age of 13; a real live person (not a “bot”) and that you act ethically and professionally. That part strikes me as a plus.

My favorite demand in their terms of service: “Any form of abuse or intimidation (written, verbal, physical, implied or otherwise) is strictly prohibited. Be nice, be professional…or be booted.”

Why are they doing it? Campbell, Calif.-based Outright.com says they’ll eventually start offering services for a fee–and you might like them enough by then to pay for it. But they say they plan to offer the bookkeeping service for free indefinitely.

 
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  •  
    1

    yvbinc

    08/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Free Bookkeeping for Small Business

    Kathy - just a point of clarification - Outright.com does provide free software but not a bookkeeping service. As you noted, you must enter and keep track of your income and deductions. Certainly software helps but if you're not a bookkeeper or an accountant will the information be accurate and acceptable to the IRS?

    We are definitely biased but, we think you should concentrate on doing what you do and outsource those backroom activities like bookkeeping to experts. You'll have more time to do what you do. That should make you more profitable and happier.

    Michael G Murray
    Chief Solution Provider
    Your Virtual Bookkeepers, Inc.

  •  
    2

    Kathy Kristof

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Free Bookkeeping for Small Business

    Hi Michael.

    Hiring a bookkeeper is a great when you can afford it. But a
    lot of the people who have launched new businesses right
    now are doing so out of necessity and struggling to make
    ends meet. In that environment, free is exactly the right
    price. I would imagine that the people who manage to make it
    through this recession will have thriving businesses some day,
    though. Then, I'm guessing, a lot more people will be able to
    afford to hire out.

    Best--
    K

  •  
    3

    yvbinc

    08/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Free Bookkeeping for Small Business

    You're right Kathy, free is always great and we think Outright.com is to be commended on their offering. But we're not sure that that's why the new business struggles. Consider this....

    Those who are struggling (the forced entrepreneur) may be struggling because they just haven't done the math. If you assume that the new businessperson has a $2500 per month mortgage that equals 33% of the monthly budget, that's a $7500 monthly after tax cash requirement. If you gross that up for taxes the hourly rate is above $75. So for every hour the entreprenuer spends earning less than $75 doing bookkeeping, secretarial, and other overhead jobs, the business must earn a proportionally greater hourly rate.

    We think that outsourcing those overhead tasks can free the entreprenuer to focus on the high value hours while getting the job done for less than the cost of hiring employees. Plus companies like ours hire work-at-home employees that keeps the dollar in the good old USA so we all win.

    Michael G Murray
    Chief Solution Provider
    Your Virtual Bookkeepers, Inc.
    847-932-4400
    www.yourvirtualbookkeepers.com

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Kathy Kristof

Kathy Kristof is a syndicated personal finance columnist, speaker and author of three books, including the recently updated Investing 101 (Bloomberg, 2008).

Kathy Kristof

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