Showing posts with label Buying Systems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buying Systems. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Great Article: Solving the Pains of Sales Tax Returns

Hand-wringing

from Avalara

A pretty good overview of why you may wish to get rid of doing sales tax returns.  This whitepaper covers the challenges of doing them yourselves, and the benefits of outsourcing.  Yes, there's a page on Avalara, but the rest of the piece is "sales-free."  Enjoy the article.



This link is part of a series called "Excellent articles that I wish I had written."  The short name is "Great Articles." 

The Sales Tax Guy
http://salestaxguy.blogspot.com

Don't forget our upcoming seminars and webinars.
http://www.salestax-usetax.com/
Picture note: the image above is hosted on Flickr. If you'd like to see more, click on the photo. 

Wednesday, February 08, 2012

Great Article: On making sure your folks are trained and STAY trained

Gate C37 at DFW

from Tim Freeman and onesourceblog.com

I'm not sure I would have used the metaphor in this article, and I've been known to stretch some. But it gives me an excuse to use an airplane picture.  The point is valid, however. If you're going to invest in systems, you must consider the downstream costs of training and development. Enjoy the article. 




This link is part of a series called "Excellent articles that I wish I had written."  The short name is "Great Articles." 

The Sales Tax Guy
http://salestaxguy.blogspot.com

Don't forget our upcoming seminars and webinars.
http://www.salestax-usetax.com/
Picture note: the image above is hosted on Flickr. If you'd like to see more, click on the photo. 

Monday, November 14, 2011

Great Article: Sales Tax Outsourcing vs. Sales Tax Automation

 Zombie Squad II

from Robert Dumas at salestaxsupport.com

A short, handy-dandy discussion of the difference between sales tax automation and sales tax outsourcing.  No, wait, didn't the title just say that?  Dang, if I say any more about the article, I'll just be repeating the article, which isn't the point.  So I'll just shut up now. 

Enjoy the article.

This link is part of a series called "Excellent articles that I wish I had written."  The short name is "Great Articles."  Enjoy.



The Sales Tax Guy
http://salestaxguy.blogspot.com

Don't forget our upcoming seminars and webinars.
http://www.salestax-usetax.com/
Picture note: the image above is hosted on Flickr. If you'd like to see more, click on the photo. 

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Great Article: Interviewing Your Sales Tax Outsourcing Provider Will Enhance Success

Xena from accounting wants your expense report right now!from http://www.taxconnex.com

What a great idea!  Who'd a thunk it?  When you're hiring a sales tax outsourcer, or any systems company for that matter, don't just make your decision based on the slick sales person and a tour of the nice offices.  Check on the people who will be providing day to day support.  That is where the rubber meets the road.

http://www.taxconnex.com/Blog------/bid/74463/Interviewing-Your-Sales-Tax-Outsourcing-Provider-Will-Enhance-Success

This link is part of a series called "Excellent articles that I wish I had written."  The short name is "Great Articles."  Enjoy.



The Sales Tax Guy
http://salestaxguy.blogspot.com

Don't forget our upcoming seminars and webinars.
http://www.salestax-usetax.com/
Picture note: the image above is hosted on Flickr. If you'd like to see more, click on the photo. 

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Great Article: Saying “I Do” to Tax Software

DVD'sfrom http://www.salestaxsupport.com

Suzy Soo outlines five popular sales tax software systems and does a pretty thorough job of reviewing how you can match your needs against what they offer.

http://www.salestaxsupport.com/blogs/sales-use-tax/sales-tax-software-automation/how-to-select-sales-tax-software/

This link is part of a series called "Excellent articles that I wish I had written."  The short name is "Great Articles." Enjoy.


The Sales Tax Guy
http://salestaxguy.blogspot.com

Don't forget our upcoming seminars and webinars.
http://www.salestax-usetax.com/

Picture note: the image above is hosted on Flickr. If you'd like to see more, click on the photo.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Monday, March 01, 2010

Watch your software

We were at the bird store making our monthly investment in seed for the feeders (I really hate squirrels). While standing at the counter signing the loan paperwork, I asked Shari, the owner of the store, to add a magazine to the bill.

I noticed that she charged me sales tax not only on the seed, but also on the magazine.

Now I really don't care about the sales tax on the magazine, particularly after having to pawn the car to buy more bird feed. But, since I am in the business, and Shari is a friend of ours, I decided that I had to give her a hard time.

"Why did you charge me tax?"

"Why not?" she said, suspiciously.

"You're not supposed to charge sales tax on magazines, they're exempt."

"But the cash register software charges it automatically. Nobody has ever complained before."

"Your software is wrong. And nobody else has complained because none of your other customers are such monumentally brilliant sales tax experts."

She was all set to refund me the tax, but I told her not to worry about it. I just like to turn the rest of my life into a never-ending sales tax seminar. I really am a boring guy.

Last weekend, we stopped in again for our next purchase. Shari said, "Jim, I called the software company. They fixed it! They said they made a mistake." She was thrilled that she could tell me that I was right. I mean, we are putting her five kids through college. Did I mention I hate squirrels?

What are the morals of the story?

1. I'll bet you didn't know that magazines are exempt in Illinois. Illinois is one of the few states that has that exemption. Most states exempt magazines sold by subscription only. But in Illinois, over-the-counter magazines are not taxable. Remember that every state is completely different.

2. Don't count on your software vendor to get it right. If that company had just looked it up, they would have easily found that Illinois has the exemption. But some programmer didn't bother to look it up because everybody taxes magazines. You are responsible for getting your sales tax right. The vendor is supposed to help, but you gotta check. Luckily for the Shari, she had been over-charging taxes. If she had been under-charging taxes, do you think the software company would have stepped up and taken care of any liability she had?

I just looked out the window. Dang feeder is empty again.



The Sales Tax Guy
http://salestaxguy.blogspot.com

See the disclaimer - this is for education only. Research these issues thoroughly before making decisions.

Here's information on our upcoming seminars and webinars.
http://www.salestax-usetax.com/

Picture note: the image above is hosted on Flickr. If you'd like to see more, click on the photo.

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Quick Tip: Buying Sales Tax Software

Years ago, in another life, I sold software and computer systems...mostly accounting related. In this article, I give you a few tricks for making this investment:

  • Don't assume the sales rep is looking out for you or has your best interest in mind
  • Take control of the process
  • Get references and VISIT them (this is probably the most important piece of advice)
Here's the last paragraph...

Remember, it's not the cost of the software you have to worry about. It's the costs associated with the conversion, installation and training that are big and painful. By making the right software choice initially, you'll minimize your pain, get the most out of your investment, and make only ONE investment.

Sales Tax Guy

See disclaimer and research the issues thoroughly before making decisions

Here's information on our upcoming seminars and webinars And we do coaching!

And please don't forget to visit our advertisers!

Friday, September 18, 2009

Quick Tip: When buying sales tax software...

The best single piece of advice I can give you is to ask for and visit references. This is the most important thing you can do to stay out of trouble. And you'll drive the sales reps crazy. Read more.

Sales Tax Guy

Here's information on our upcoming seminars and webinars And we do coaching!

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

How do I find sales tax software?

This question came up twice today in a seminar...about how to pick software. I rarely get that question, so with two in one day, I figured I better use that as blog-fodder.

While I don't recommend a specific sales tax package, I can give you some pointers about choosing solutions. I used to sell software, particularly accounting systems, in a previous life, so I know the mistakes that buyers can make.

Determine your true needs. This involves research, talking to vendors, more research, more specifications, more vendor research until you get down to a refined set of objectives that you can use for your request for proposal. Do not be swayed by a good sales representative, a professional proposal, or a snazzy demo.

Remember that the sales rep is not motivated by helping you find the right solution. They'll say that, but coincidentally, their software is the right solution. Amazing, isn't it? Don't base your decisions on what the sales rep says without supporting information. They are not looking out for you. Ask them how much they'll make in commissions, spiffs, bonus rankings, etc. if they make the sale. That will give you some perspective.

Maintain control of the process by constantly working off your specifications list (which will evolve as you learn more about the available software). The side benefit here is that you'll drive the sales reps crazy. And that is worth the trouble right there.  (grin)

Need to find find software? Try typing "sales tax software" into Google or Yahoo. Here's google's directory of sales tax software as well. And there are usually ads on this blog for sales tax software. Hint. Hint.

Finally, ask for three references! And these should be references in your industry, similar in size to your organization, and with similar SUT issues. Make sure vendors know early in the process that you'll be requiring these kinds of references. That'll screen out weak vendors that you shouldn't be wasting your time with.

Visit those references. Don't call them. VISIT them. Invest a couple of dollars in travel to be able to sit down, face-to-face with the reference. Take them out to lunch, tour their operations, plan your questions, discuss your specifications, ask about problems they've had, what they'd do differently, support, quality, and anything else that springs to mind.

The benefit of visiting the reference is that you can look 'em in the eyes, spend more time with them, develop a relationship, and also build an alternate source of support when things get nutty. Plus it forces you to have a more comprehensive experience as opposed to a 5 minute conversation on the phone.

Another option is to go to the software's user conference, if you can.

Remember, it's not the cost of the software you have to worry about. It's the costs associated with the conversion, installation and training that are big and painful. By making the right software choice initially, you'll minimize your pain, get the most out of your investment, and make only ONE investment...if you catch my drift.

And, like I said. You'll drive the sales reps crazy. Which is nice.



The Sales Tax Guy
http://salestaxguy.blogspot.com

See the disclaimer - this is for education only.  Research these issues thoroughly before making decisions.  Remember: there are details that haven't been discussed, and every state is different.  Here's more information

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Don't forget our upcoming seminars and webinars.
http://www.salestax-usetax.com/