Wednesday, June 17, 2026

How to set up a TikTok business account



Step 1: Download TikTok from the app store. Users can download the app for free by visiting their device’s app store, the Apple App Store (iPhone users) or the Google Play Store (Android users). Search for TikTok, tap Download, and follow the instructions to get started.


Step 2: Set up your Business Account. In the app, tap the three dots (…) at the top right of your Profile page, go to Settings and privacy, select Manage account, and switch to a Business Account. Then, choose the category that best fits your business to unlock personalized content, events, and helpful tools.


Step 3: Start creating. Get started and start creating content! Explore TikTok’s creative tools, test and produce videos, and have fun connecting with your audience. You can also visit the TikTok Business Center for additional guidance, resources, and tools to help your business get started.


Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Speed up your typing (by deleting faster)


If you spend a significant portion of your day typing—emails, documents, Slack messages, posts on Reddit about your hyperspecific hobby—and a lot of that time is wasted deleting things character by character. Holding down the backspace key like some kind of caveman is inefficient and frankly beneath you. These keyboard shortcuts will help you delete entire words, or even lines, at once, which is especially useful when you change your mind midsentence or realize you need to start over. Here’s how to do it—and keep in mind that your cursor has to be after the word or sentence you want to delete.

Delete entire words:

  • On Mac: Press Option + Delete.
  • On PC: Press Ctrl + Backspace.

Delete the whole line:

  • On Mac: Press Command + Delete.
  • On PC: Press Ctrl + Shift + Up Arrow + Delete on Windows (yeah, I realize this isn’t the easiest hack).

Once you get these shortcuts into muscle memory, you'll never go back to pecking away at the delete key one letter at a time. 

Check your URLs


Cybercriminals are apparently registering domains like rnicrosoft—yes, that's r-n-i-c-r-o-s-o-f-t—because in most fonts, "rn" looks very similar to "m” (especially on mobile), then sending fake security alerts to users so they click on them.

These fake sites mirror companies’ branding perfectly, making them nearly impossible to spot unless you're really paying attention. The fix: Hover over every link to check it before you click, and when in doubt, just type the URL yourself.

Monday, June 15, 2026

A reply is a buying signal, not just a conversation starter.


Your goal isn’t to get opens, it’s to earn responses. 

The good news? You don’t need long, complicated messages to do it. Nearly every high-performing cold email can be reduced to a simple structure: four sentences and an optional PS. When paired with the right signals, timing, and perspective, this approach cuts through the clutter and leads to real conversations.

SENTENCE 1

This is your opener and your preview text. It’s just as important as the subject line. 

It should be a well-researched observation / trigger / signal that explains why you’re reaching out today. 

Examples of what this might reference: 

A hiring spike in their sales team 

A new product launch 

A recent outage / incident 

An internal initiative you heard about from someone on the team 

Tech stack insight (i.e., they use a tool you replace or complement)

Goal: Show “I did my homework” and give context for the outreach in one line.


SENTENCE 2

Current state / problem

Don’t jump straight to your solution. 

Describe the current state/pain that someone in their role is likely dealing with. 

This should connect directly to the signal you used in Sentence 1. 

Examples: If they’re hiring a bunch of reps: ramp time, inconsistent messaging, enablement pain. 

If they just had downtime: risk to revenue and trust if it happens again. 

Goal: Make them think, “Yep, that’s exactly what’s happening here.” 


SENTENCE 3

Future state + social proof

Now introduce how you help, but framed as the future state: 

“Teams like X are doing Y instead.” 

Tie it directly back to the problem you just described. 

Ideal to add social proof: 

Name a similar customer 

Mention a concrete outcome (i.e., “cut ramp time by 30%”) 

Goal: Bridge their current reality to a better one, with proof that it’s not theoretical. 


SENTENCE 4

Low-friction, interestbased CTA

Don’t ask for 30 minutes on their calendar right away. 

Use interest-based or value-based CTAs:

Examples: 

“Worth exploring?” 

“Is this something that’s even remotely interesting right now?” 

“If I showed you 2 plays that teams like [peer company] are using to do X, would that be helpful?” 

Goal: Make it easy to say “yes” without committing to a full meeting yet. 


OPTIONAL

The key to personalization is relevance first, personalization second. 

Many reps try to weave “random” personal details (golf, dogs, school, sobriety milestone, etc.) into the main email, and it gets awkward or off-topic. 

Keep the body business-relevant, and use the PS for:

A compliment on a post 

A personal detail (hobby, bio nugget, etc.)

 A little joke / human moment 

Goal: Add personality without derailing the core message.

Tax return audit test...


Here is a simple test for your tax return.

Pull up your last return.

Now answer these questions:

Can you point to a specific line item and say, "My CPA saved me money here"?

Do you know exactly which deductions were maximized vs. which were missed?

Did anyone mention cost segregation, or WOTC?

If you answered "no" to more than two of these questions, you don't have a tax strategist.

You have a tax preparer.

And the difference is costing you thousands.

A tax preparer fills out forms.

A tax strategist finds savings.

A tax preparer reports on the past.

A tax strategist plans for the future.

A tax preparer waits for you to ask questions.

A tax strategist brings you opportunities.

Want to see what you've been missing?

The free online calculator identifies savings through specialized tax incentives, financial audits, and employer strategies—helping businesses reclaim lost cash flow from multiple overlooked areas.

Not only that, but a new tax law just dropped, and it’s changing the business game for any size business!

Sunday, June 14, 2026

What billionaires know about taxes


Ever wonder how billionaires like Warren Buffett pay a lower tax rate than their secretaries?

It's not magic. It's not illegal. It's not even that complicated.

It's a tax strategy.

They have teams of advisors who examine every area of the tax code:

  • Retirement 
  • Deductions 
  • Entity structure 
  • Insurance 
  • Investments 
  • Credits 
  • Niche-specific strategies
  • Tax law updates

These teams don't wait until April. They plan all year long.

They structure income strategically.
They time deductions perfectly.
They leverage every legal opportunity.

The result? Billions in savings.

Now here's what most business owners don't realize:

  • You don't need billions to use these strategies.
  • You just need someone who knows they exist.

The same entity structure that saves a billionaire $10 million might save you $40,000.

The same retirement strategy that shelters $500,000 for a hedge fund manager might shelter $66,000 for you.

The same tax code applies to everyone.

But only some people have advisors who actually use it.

$43,000 hiding in plain sight


Last week, a smaller business owner sent us her 2025 return

She'd been with her CPA for 7 years. Never had an issue. Returns are always filed on time.

"I just want to make sure I'm not missing anything," she said.

Within 5 minutes, we found $43,000 in missed opportunities.

Here's what her CPA overlooked.

None of these are complicated strategy.

They're not aggressive. They're not risky.

They're just sitting there — in plain sight — waiting for someone to notice.

But her CPA didn't notice.

Because noticing isn't their job. Filing is.

Ask yourself:

Has anyone actually looked for savings?
Or are they just filling out forms?