Review
Frankly, I'm appalled at just how many otherwise sensible business people aren't taking care of themselves by creating and funding a retirement plan. Get this very useful book-or look forward to a threadbare retirement -- Dr. Jeffrey Lant's Sure-Fire Marketing Newsletter, March 1990
The first in a series dubbed the Small Business Bookshelf discusses the benefits and variety of IRS-approved retirement programs available to small businesses. Capriciously illustrated by clip-art, the discussion leads into a five-step procedure for setting up a Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) plan... -- American Library Association's Booklist, November 1989
The first in a series dubbed the Small Business Bookshelf discusses the benefits and variety of IRS-approved retirement programs available to small businesses. Capriciously illustrated by clip-art, the discussion leads into a five-step procedure for setting up a Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) plan... -- American Library Association's Booklist, November 1989
From the Back Cover
Less than 20 percent of small businesses in this country currently have retirement plans for their employees. As a result, businesses with 25 or fewer employees cover an average of only one in seven workers with company pension plans. Thanks to recently revised federal pension laws, almost any business that is profitable enough to pay its employee(s) a salary can now start a retirement plan immediately, as explained in Five Easy Steps to Setting Up an IRS-Approved Retirement Plan. The author shows the advantages of Simplified Employee Pensions (SEPs) for most small businesses and walks the reader step-by-step through the process of setting up and maintaining a SEP. All needed forms are appended.

