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The Business Owner's Guide to Personal Finance
 
 
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The Business Owner's Guide to Personal Finance [Hardcover]

Jill Andresky Fraser (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

1576600254 978-1576600252 January 15, 2002 1
If you run your own business, your personal finance needs are unique, and the time spent trying to find solutions is precious. One-size-fits-all advice won't help, but this planning blueprint from Jill Andresky Fraser will. Here at last is a step-by-step guide for building security for you and your loved ones while creating the enterprise you’ve dreamed of:
  • How and when to pay yourself
  • Ways to build your savings while funding your company
  • Low-cost ways to attain medical benefits
  • Estate-planning tools that you can't afford to overlook
  • Insurance tips to protect your family’s finances and your company’s cash flow
  • Savvy investing ideas that complement your company's risks
  • Real-life solutions and insights from successful entrepreneurs
If you run a small family business, a home-based business, a solo practice, or a budding start-up, you need The Business Owners Guide to Personal Finance.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Business owners who read it will enrich not only their intellects, but also their bank accounts." -- Jay Conrad Levinson, Author, Guerrilla Marketing series

"[A] priceless guide to preserving and balancing your financial life." -- Bob Morgan, President, Council of Growing Companies

Business owners who read it will enrich not only their intellects, but also their bank accounts. -- Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the Guerrilla Marketing series

[A] priceless guide to preserving and balancing your financial life. -- Bob Morgan, President, Council of Growing Companies

Review

"Entrepreneurs, you've worked too hard to get where you are and not harvest what you’ve earned. Here's a priceless guide to preserving and balancing your financial life."
Bob Morgan
President, Council of Growing Companies

"Rarely are business owners presented with valuable information in an extremely readable form. Jill Fraser accomplishes both with aplomb in The Business Owner's Guide to Personal Finance. Business owners who read it will enrich not only their intellects, but also their bank accounts."
Jay Conrad Levinson
Author, Guerrilla Marketing series of books

"A comprehensive guide for business owners looking to become careful custodians of their personal and corporate assets."
Jane Applegate
CEO, SBTV Corp.
Author of 201 Great Ideas for Your Small Business

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Bloomberg Press; 1 edition (January 15, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1576600254
  • ISBN-13: 978-1576600252
  • Product Dimensions: 5.8 x 1 x 8.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,784,931 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars When a business is your paycheck, you need Personal Finance, February 22, 2002
By 
This review is from: The Business Owner's Guide to Personal Finance (Hardcover)

Jill Fraser saw a hole in the market and she filled it. There are endless numbers of personal finance guides for people who work for someone. Likewise, there are numerous books on corporate finance issues. However, the high volume of calls Jill fielded at Inc. Magazine, reinforced her awareness that there were no guides to specifically help business owners with their personal finances. Jill Andresky Fraser, Inc. Magazine's well-known and respected finace editor, wrote this book as a personal finance blueprint for entrepreneurs.

As they pursue their american dream, many entrepreneurs may compromise the financial well-being of their families. We've all heard not to put all your eggs in one basket, but its hard for business owners not to do that. Half-a-million men and women start businesses each year, adding to the ranks of 15-20 million who already operate their own companies across the U.S. Yet only about half of these small businesses will survive for four years or longer.

Business owners receive pressure to put their company first, but Jill says "NO," you have to find a middle ground to value your family's goals and family's security and safety as you get your company running. She says that without ever bothering to articulate it; most business owners have a personal finance strategy that boils down to two words: my company. They often neglect to create a back-up strategy or safety net to safe guard their family's well-being. Entrepreneurs may not want to deal with the "mundane" but vital issue of "building a firewall" between one's personal and business finances until the business is solvent, goes public... or until it's too late financially! Fraser provides conservative strategies for coping with problems such as cash flow crises, extensive credit card debt, and the lack of family retirement and savings plans. She says to be sure you're always taking baby steps to protect yourself.

The self-compensation strategy is a tough one. Jill Fraser suggests the following strategy:

* As early as possible - ideally before the company ever begins operations, but if not then, soon figure out a minimum salary that makes sense for you.

* Do some family bonding about the self-compensation dilemma. You'll win emtotional support thatwill strengthen you during tough early days.

* Remember, this is temporary. Take a long-term view.

* Examine your self-compensation progress every six months during this early stage.

* When you're absolutely certain that there is no way your start-up can support even a tiny, token salary for you, reexamine this issue at the end of your operating quarter. Set a goal to pay yourself something as soon as it becomes feasible.

Franchise owners can also benefit from this book. They are given a blueprint for running the business side of the company, but there is no guarantee that personal goals will be addressed.

Mary Ann Campbell, CFP - MoneyMagic.com

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrific guidance, January 9, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: The Business Owner's Guide to Personal Finance (Hardcover)
Jill Andresky Fraser has done small business owners a tremendous service with this book. It's full of terrific advice on how to build a firewall between your personal and business finances, survive a cash flow crisis, and execute a smooth exit from your business (by choice or by necessity). The insights from successful entrepreneurs are also quite interesting. Highly recommended for all business owners; small, medium, or large!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well Designed, Valuable Resource for Entrepreneurs, December 8, 2002
By 
Roger E. Herman (Greensboro, NC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Business Owner's Guide to Personal Finance (Hardcover)
The success of any business rests in the checkbook. If the cash flow isn't there, if the revenue isn't there, the business probably won't be there. Entrepreneurs, especially in start-up mode, are concerned about sales, cash flow, and profit---on the business side of the ledger. All that is important, but if the owner doesn't take care of the personal side as well, success will be shallow, fragile, and fleeting.

Here's a book that gives you more answers than you want to hear. If you're an entrepreneur (own your own business), you may be in stage 1 (start-up and early days), stage 2 (stable and on a clear path to profitability) or stage 3 (profitable, stable cash flow, mature). In each phase, you have personal financial issues as well as corporate finance issues to address. You'll have a lot of questions looking for answers.

What better expert to counsel you than the researcher and journalist who gained so much popularity as finance editor of Inc. Magazine and editor at Bloomberg Personal Finance. She's been a writer at Forbes, the New York Times, and the Wall Street columnist for the New York Observer. As you can imagine, Jill Fraser knows her topic well. She presents a tremendous amount of highly valuable information and advice in succinct doses that always seem to be just the right length. Reading this book is like sitting in that comfortable chair in your living room chatting with a knowledgeable friend.

Want more? Fraser has brought a dozen well-known successful entrepreneurs to the party. They share their perspectives throughout the book, in focused commentary at the end of each section. I was impressed with the thoroughness of this book.

Want more? How about an eight page index in the back of the book and a full-page index of hot topics in the front of the book? As you turn the pages, you'll find more little surprises as the author keeps delivering even more than you expect. I'd recommend this book for every business owner, regardless of your stage of development . . . as well as for people who are contemplating going into business for themselves. Wish I'd had this book twenty years ago!

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
During the start-up period, the most important personal priority for any entrepreneur should be financial self-protection. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
emergency nest egg, benefit blanket, operating quarter, angel investments, personal financial goals, corporate accountant
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Stage Two, Stage Three, Internet Guide, Stage One, Holly Hitzemann, Aaron Cohen, Brian Sullivan, Incorporation Issues, Friends-and-Family Financing, Record-Keeping Rules, Where Can You Find Angel Investors, Corporate Crises, Lillian Vernon, Moving Away, Structuring Your Company's Stock, The Benefits of Bonuses, The Medical Savings Account Alternative, Broadening the Benefit Blanket, Gardener's Eden, Lucille Roberts, New York, United States, Entrepreneurial Insights, Giving Yourself, Repeat Entrepreneuring
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