Synopses & Reviews
The completely revised 9th edition of the bestselling classic (over 500,000 copies in print),
Inc. Yourself is the most comprehensive, user-friendly guide to the tax breaks and legal benefits of incorporation.
Whether you're building a company with many products and employees or you're self-employed,
Inc. Yourself can show you how to take advantage of the tax breaks and legislation that benefit start-up ventures. This latest version of the bestselling classic includes:
- new information on pension plans
- choices of business organization, and investing your corporate surplus for maximum tax-free income
- changes in tax law over the past three years
- specific advice for women and minorities
- sample forms, letters, and interactive worksheets to help you tailor the book's suggestions to your own circumstances
Inc. Yourself is the ultimate guide to incorporation--easily, intelligently, and profitably.
Review
"Inc. Yourself is an indispensable resource for the small business person. If you've recently left the corporate world to go into business for yourself, or if you're thinking of doing so, this book is a must." Stephen M. Pollan, author of Die Broke
Review
"For close to two decades now, Inc. Yourself has been saving people lots of money and, even more important, lots of time — precisely at that stage of business development when you have little of either." George Gendron, Editor-in-Chief, Inc. Magazine
Table of Contents
So you want to be a corporation -- Getting ready -- And now the paperwork -- Your office: home or away? -- Your business plan: preparing for success -- Limited liability companies (LLCs): the newest business entity -- How to profit from your S corporation -- Especially for women and minorities: taking advantage of minority-supplier contracts and business incubators, and avoiding a different "mommy trap" -- Your employees -- "Free" insurance -- Medical benefits -- All about ERISA: tax-sheltered pension and profit-sharing plans -- But I already have a Keogh plan! -- Investing your corporate surplus -- Putting it all together -- Retire with the biggest tax break possible -- Long-term planning for yourself and your heirs -- If you should die first -- Back to the future--and the present.