Friday, June 5, 2026

Ten years of overpaying IRS!!


Let's do some uncomfortable math.

Say you've been overpaying taxes by $25,000 per year.

Not because you're doing anything wrong.

Just because nobody showed you the strategies available to you.

Over 10 years, that's $250,000 sent to the IRS that didn't need to go there.

But here's where it gets painful.

What if you had invested that $25,000 each year instead?

At a modest 7% return, that $250,000 in overpayments would be worth $365,000 today.

You didn't just lose $250,000.

You lost $365,000.

And that's assuming you only overpaid by $25,000.

Most business owners are overpaying $40,000 to $60,000 annually.

Run those numbers, and you're looking at half a million dollars — gone.

Not because of bad luck.

Not because of a bad economy.

Because of bad tax advice. 

Or no tax advice at all.

Here's what kills me.

That money could have hired two full-time employees.

It could have funded your entire marketing budget.

It could have been your kids' college fund.

It could have been your retirement.

Instead it is sitting in the U.S. Treasury.

Every year you delay s[ecialize tax incentives, the number grows.

The question isn't whether you can afford to work with a tax strategist.

The question is whether you can afford not to.

Want to stop the bleeding?

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Your Identity vs. Your Circumstances


Here’s what’s powerful about identity work:

Your circumstances don’t determine your identity. Your identity determines your circumstances.

Example:

Person A:

Current revenue: $60K

Identity: “I’m struggling. I’m barely making it. I’m not good at this.”

Behavior: Reactive. Desperate. Discounting. Chasing anyone.

Future: Still at $60K. Or less.

Person B:

Current revenue: $60K

Identity: “I’m a CEO building a $150K business. I’m in growth mode. I’m becoming more strategic every day.”

Behavior: Investing in growth. Setting boundaries. Building systems.

Future: $150K within 2-3 years.

Same starting point. Different identity. Completely different trajectory.

Your current circumstances don’t define you. Your identity does.

To get employees interested in AI, some companies have encouraged workers to “play” with the technology just as they would in a sandbox.


One drawback is that playtime is getting expensive, as workers rack up serious bills for their AI usage. 

Uber is the latest company to put a cap on AI, limiting monthly spending to no more than $1,500 per worker for certain coding tools.

Meanwhile, Pope Leo XIV weighed into the debate about AI in the workplace in his first encyclical released last week. He had some stern warnings about the rapid expansion of AI in the world of work and the risks it poses to humanity.

“Artificial intelligence needs to be disarmed,” the pope said in his address. “The word is strong, I know, but deliberately chosen because this moment needs words capable of attracting attention, awakening consciences, and indicating paths forward for humanity. Artificial intelligence now demands to be disarmed, freed from logics that turn it into an instrument of domination, exclusion, and death.”

His concerns mirror many of the moral and ethical debates already happening in workplaces all across the US, as employers and their HR teams navigate how employees experience and produce work with AI.

We're keeping an eye open for any specialized tax incentives for business owners and any company registered with us (takes 30-seconds) will be notified immediately.

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AI skills: AI has influenced the accounting profession.


Job postings requiring AI skills have proliferated at the Big Four over the past year, according to the Financial Times.

Staff at the newspaper examined 50,000 job listings at Big Four firms in English-speaking countries between January 2020 and January 2026. In 2025, they found, there were more than twice as many job postings where AI skills were a core requirement (nearly 7%) as there were listings for audit jobs (almost 3%).


Many of the job postings that mentioned AI as a requirement appeared to be for non-accounting roles, such as “generative AI engineers and machine learning experts in data science,” the FT observed. But others were accounting-related.


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Wednesday, June 3, 2026

AI won’t save it.


If your follow-up depends on memory, you’re leaking revenue.

No one’s memory is good enough to replace a system.

Tech isn’t your enemy. Poor strategy is.

The problem isn’t AI. It’s not knowing how to use it to help you win.

The inbox is becoming a storefront.

Buyers will soon take action without leaving the thread. The old sales cycle is getting cut in half.

If you don’t own the relationship, AI won’t save it.

Automation works best when it enhances what’s already there. Not when it tries to fake what’s missing.


Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Your Next Sale Might Start in Gmail


Gmail isn’t just email anymore.

It’s an assistant. It watches patterns, flags VIPs, and now it's learning how to follow up better than most people ever could.


Your past buyers are your future income.

Google knows who they are. So should you.


Smarter follow-up wins.

Not louder. Not more frequent. Just better timing, better context, and better offers.


AI isn’t removing human connection.

It’s rewarding the ones who already built it!!

Is cold email broken??


If your cold emails aren’t working, the problem usually isn’t the copy, the tool, or the sender reputation.

 

It’s that you don’t know what phase you’re in.

 

Let’s break it down…

 

Phase 1: No replies at all.

 

This is the “shouting into the void” phase. When you’re not even getting unsubscribes, it’s almost always a deliverability issue. 

 

Fix inbox placement first. If that’s solid, simplify the message. Clear messaging beats clever every time.

 

Phase 2: Only negative replies.

 

“No thanks.” “Not interested.” This is actually progress. 

 

Your emails are landing and being read. The issue is you don’t have context yet. 

 

Break the email into the problem, the value prop, and the CTA, then test each until you start learning why people are saying no.

 

Phase 3: Negative replies with context.

 

“We already use X.” “Wrong person.” “We’re too small.” These replies are gold. 

 

They tell you exactly how to adjust targeting, positioning, or qualification.

 

Cold email isn’t broken.

 

You’re just too focused on immediate meetings. Instead, move one phase forward at a time.