24 Feb 2008 12:33:29 | Chris Anderson
You have permission to publish this article its entirety,
electronically, or in print at no charge, as long as the
resource box is included with the article along with my full
signature file for ezines and my Web address
(http://www.bizmanualz.com) in hyperlink for other sites. This
article is 443 words long. Thanks for your interest.
Wouldn’t it be nice to get some of your money back that you have
invested in developing policies, procedures and processes for
your organization? Well, you can with the recently restored tax
credit.
$7.6 Billion in Tax Credits are Available
In September 2004, President Bush signed the $146 billion tax
cut bill restoring the recently expired business Research &
Experimentation Tax Credit. The 18-month renewal of the research
and experimentation tax credit, which expired June 30 2004, was
the most expensive item with an expected $7.6 billion cost
through 2014.
Process Improvement Qualifies
If you are spending money on ISO 9000, six-sigma, lean
manufacturing, TQM, or any other initiative focused on improving
your products or processes, then you could qualify. This
includes software purchases, training courses, labor, and of
course the purchase of any Policies, Procedures and Forms
products or services.
An Immediate Source of Cash
This is an actual dollar-for-dollar tax credit against your tax
liability and not a deduction. You can deduct all costs in the
year incurred. And better yet, these regulations are
retroactive, which means you can get a refund for previous years.
Requirements to qualify
If you fit these five basic requirements for research, then you
might qualify under the latest regulations.
1.New or Improved Product, Process or Software. Research must
derive ways to improve a product or process such as development
or improvement of a formula, invention or technique.
2.Technological. Research objective must be to discover
technological information, based upon principals including
computer science or engineering. 3.Research Involves Uncertainty
or Risk. It must involve uncertainty or risk associated with the
design or method of design achievement, not including general
business risk. 4.Experimentation Process. It must be
well-documented and include failed and successful efforts.
5.Permitted Process. Activity for product or process improvement
must relate to a function, performance, reliability or quality.
Your Tax Credits are Waiting for You
There is no better time to obtain ISO auditor training,
well-defined process training, business process consulting, or
to get the maximum value out of a helpful key like the
Management Procedures Value Series. Tax credits may expire again
later in 2005, so act before it is too late.
About Author :
Chris Anderson is co-author of policies and procedures manual
products, producing the layout, process design and
implementation to increase performance. He is currently the
Managing Director of Bizmanualz, Inc. Visit: Bizmanualz, Inc.