Mike Thrift
Marketing Manager
Billing vs. Invoicing: What's the Difference (and Why Your Cash Flow Depends on Knowing It)
Invoicing is a document; billing is the system around it. This guide defines the difference, cites the cash-flow cost of getting it wrong, and lays out a seven-step framework (standardized rates, written terms, recurring vs one-time tracks, dunning, weekly reconciliation, DSO tracking) for building a billing process that actually gets paid.
The Client Onboarding Workflow That Turns New Clients into Loyal Ones
A repeatable six-stage client onboarding workflow for accounting, bookkeeping, tax, and advisory firms — covering pre-engagement prep, the first 24 hours, structured intake, system setup, client education, and the handoff to ongoing support. Includes the metrics and check-in cadence that separate firms with high retention from those losing 44% of clients in the first 90 days.
Content Creator Taxes: The Complete 2026 Guide for Influencers, Streamers, and YouTubers
A 2026 tax guide for creators covering the new $2,000 1099-NEC threshold, self-employment tax at 15.3%, home office and Section 179 deductions, quarterly deadlines, and fair market value rules for gifted products.
Credit Card Authorization Forms: A Guide to Recurring Billing, PCI Compliance, and Chargeback Defense
A credit card authorization form documents cardholder consent for charges and is required by card networks for card-not-present and recurring billing. Covers the required fields, PCI DSS storage rules, and how a signed form shifts the burden in chargeback disputes.
Days Sales Outstanding (DSO): A Practical Guide to Faster Collections
Days Sales Outstanding measures the average days it takes to collect on credit sales. This guide covers the DSO formula, 2026 industry benchmarks from 7 to 90 days, and concrete tactics to shorten the cash collection cycle.
The DSO Formula: How to Measure (and Fix) the Gap Between Sales and Cash
Days Sales Outstanding measures the average days between a credit sale and cash collected. This guide covers the DSO formula, industry benchmarks (30-45 days is typical, single digits for e-commerce, 60-90 for construction), common miscalculations, and seven practical levers to lower it.
Engagement Letters: The Complete Guide to Protecting Your Business Relationships
A practical guide to engagement letters for service businesses covering the eleven components every letter needs, the drafting mistakes that cost professionals real money, and how a signed letter connects to accurate revenue forecasting and accounts receivable in your books.
Final Demand Letters for Unpaid Invoices: A Complete Guide
A final demand letter is the last formal step before court for an unpaid invoice. This guide covers what to include, when to send it, the seven mistakes that sink most letters, and the bookkeeping systems that prevent the need for one in the first place.
Tax Implications for Foreign-Owned US Businesses: A 2026 Compliance Guide
Foreign-owned US LLCs face a $25,000 Form 5472 penalty per missed filing, 30% default withholding on US-source income, and tighter 2026 BOI rules. This guide covers the entity choices, forms, treaty benefits, and bookkeeping habits non-resident owners need to stay compliant.
IRS Audits Demystified: What Triggers Them, What to Expect, and How to Survive One
Fewer than 1% of individual returns are audited each year, and over 75% of audits are handled entirely by mail. This guide explains what triggers an IRS audit in 2026, the step-by-step process, how far back the IRS can look, and how to prepare records that hold up to scrutiny.
IRS Form 843 Explained: How to Claim a Refund or Request Penalty Abatement
IRS Form 843 is how taxpayers formally request a penalty abatement or a refund of interest and improperly assessed tax. This guide walks through eligibility, the three-year/two-year deadline rule, line-by-line instructions, and the documentation that separates an approved claim from a denial letter.
IRS Form 8821 Explained: How to Authorize Tax Information Access Without Giving Up Control
Form 8821 grants read-only access to your IRS tax information for lenders, accountants, and verifiers. Learn how it differs from Form 2848, when to use it, how to complete each of its six sections, the 120-day signature rule, and how to revoke it.