Refreshingly Simple Finance for Small Business
A straight-talking guide to finance and accounting
By Emily Coltman
Refreshingly Simple Finance for Small Business
A straight-talking guide to finance and accounting
By Emily Coltman
Jacket text
**Updated for 2013**
Is fear of the money side of running a business holding you back? Would you love to turn your passion into a small business, but are frightened of getting on the wrong side of the taxman? Do you run a small business and find it’s a desperate struggle to keep all your paperwork in the right place, never mind work out how much tax you should pay each year?
In this friendly, informative book, bilingual qualified accountant Emily Coltman guides you through what you need to know on the finance and accounting side when you’re setting up and running a small business.
Emily speaks plain English as well as accountants jargon! She has many years experience of helping small business owners with their finance and accounting, and this book is written for anyone running a small business for whom double entry might as well be double Dutch!
This book explains the different ways a business can be set up and structured legally and what the advantages and disadvantages of each kind of structure are, including the different taxes that each has to pay, and when those taxes have to be paid.
It looks at where you might find the money to start or grow your business, and why you might choose the different sources.
There are suggestions for how to organise your paperwork and advice on what records you need to keep and for how long.
You’ll hear how to keep on the right side of the taxman, what expenses you can and can’t claim tax relief on, and how to claim tax relief when you buy equipment for your business – and what ‘tax relief’ actually is!
This easy-to-read bitesize guide answers all the tax and accounting questions you have – and those you haven’t thought of yet.
About the author
Emily Coltman, Chief Accountant to FreeAgent, is a very unusual Chartered Accountant - she speaks plain English as well as accounting-speak!
After graduating from the University of Cambridge, she trained and qualified with growing accountancy practice Cannon Moorcroft, where she looked after accounts and tax for a portfolio of micro-business clients.
This gave her a keen interest in accounting software and training, which led to starting up her own business making screen-capture tutorial videos, and later to joining FreeAgent, where she works with worldwide small businesses to help them use this simple online accounting system to keep their books in real time.
Emily is passionate about helping the owners of small and growing businesses to escape their fear of 'the numbers', and believes that, with the right tools and guidance - some of which she aims to provide in this book, absolutely anyone, even if they were hopeless at maths at school - can learn to look after the finances of a small business.
Reviews
“informative, practical, interesting, and very easy to read….packed full of pertinent information that will save you a lot of time (and probably money too). I think it’s a very good, very useful book and I recommend it.”
Media coverage
From Birdontheblog:
Our book review this time is Refreshingly Simple Finance for Small Business: A straight-talking guide to finance and accounting, written by chartered accountant Emily Coltman. Emily is chief accountant to FreeAgent, an online accounting service for freelancers and small businesses, and she has many years? experience working with small business owners worldwide. She has also… Read more »
Contents
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Introduction
1. How should you set up and structure your business?
- Sole trader
- Partnership
- Limited Liability Partnership (LLP)
- Limited company
2. Where's the initial money coming from?
- What costs should I think of when I'm starting a business?
- Buying equipment
- Redundancy pay and/or savings
- Family and friends
- Banks
- Angel investor or venture capital fund
- Other sources of funding
3. The paperwork
- Sole traders and partnerships, not registered for VAT
- Registered for VAT
- LLPs and Limited companies
- What paperwork will I have to think about, and how should I organise it?
4. Simple accounts
- What accounts will I need?
- What do you mean by "for a year"?
- What extra information could my records give me?
- Why would I want to prepare a profit and loss account, and see my business's profit?
- Cash
- What if I don't want to do management accounts?
- Do I have to produce more complicated accounts each year than just a list of invoices and a list of expenses?
- Handwritten cashbook
- Computerised records
- Desktop accounting software
- Online accounting software
- Do I need to learn double-entry bookkeeping to keep my records?
- Isn't it easier just to hire a bookkeeper?
- Which year end should I choose for my business?
- My business's accounts are used to fill in the tax return. Does anyone else need to see them?
5. Tax
- VAT
- Do all businesses have to register for VAT if they're making VATable sales?
- Should I register my business anyway if I don't have to?
- How do I register my business for VAT
- What other advantages and disadvantages are there to registering for VAT?
- Unpaid tax collector? How does that work?
- How often does a registered business have to file a VAT return with HMRC?
- Different ways of accounting for VAT
- Flat rate scheme
- Can using the flat rate scheme save my business money?
- I want to use the cash accounting scheme. Can I also use the flat rate scheme?
- Tax on your business's profit: income tax, National Insurance and corporation tax
- What happens if I file my tax return late?
- When must I pay my tax?
- What happens if I pay too much?
- What tax returns do I have to fill in?
- What expenses can I put into my tax return?
- What other tricky expenses are there?
- Travel
- Mileage: sole traders and partners
- Mileage: limited companies
- Business use of home
- What counts as an asset?
- How do I work out my business's capital allowances?
6. Do I need an accountant?
- Why might I need an accountant?
- How should I go about choosing an accountant?
- Why should I choose a qualified accountant?
- What makes a good accountant?
- What's the best way to find a good accountant?
7. Planning for the future
- How do I put a forecast together?
- Sales forecast
- Profit and loss forecast
- Cashflow forecast
- What tools are available for forecasting?
- How long should I forecast for at a time?
- Once my forecast for the year is done, can I change it?
Conclusion
Bibliography
Published: | 08/08/2011 |
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Edition: | 1st |
Pages: | 124 |
Formats: | paperback - ISBN 9781908003201 ebook - ISBN 9781908003065 |
If you’d like to get in touch with the author for interview or comment, or you’d like a review copy of this book, please contact us at pr@harriman-house.com or call +44 (0)1730 233870.
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