Sunday, February 11, 2007

Discover The Secret To Lowering Your Small
Business Taxes -- Instantly And Easily! How
To Quickly Slash Your Tax Bill -- Legally,
Ethically -- With No Fear Of An IRS Audit

The Internet's Leading Tax Reduction Expert reveals just how easy (and legal) it is to reduce your taxes by $2,000 ... $3,000 ... $4,000 or more -- GUARANTEED!

The tax burden of the Sole Proprietor is staggering.

According to conservative estimates, small business owners and the self-employed are overpaying their taxes by $160 billion every year.

A statistic like that can mean only one thing to you:

You overpaid your taxes, too!

My name is Wayne M. Davies, author of The Tax Reduction Toolkit. I've been helping small business owners and self-employed people pay less tax for the past 15 years, and I'm here to tell you that you are entitled to your share of that $160 billion pot of taxpayer gold.

Everybody knows that the wealthy have been using fancy tax-reduction schemes for decades. With enough high-paid tax attorneys, any "fat cat" can get away with paying no tax at all.

But what about the average, middle-class small business owner? What about the self-employed person who is just starting out and who doesn't have an extra 5 or 10 grand to spend on complicated tax-avoidance strategies and exorbitant tax consulting fees?

So, what can you do to reduce your taxes, without spending an arm and a leg?

And what can you do to protect yourself from the onslaught of frivolous, time-consuming and potentially business-ending lawsuits that clutter our court systems today?

The answer is simple:
Incorporate your business for free.

Perhaps you've heard that advice before. And perhaps you've thought, "Yeah, I should look into that." But you've stopped short. You've hesitated. You didn't follow through, for any number of reasons.

Maybe you thought it would cost too much to incorporate: lawyer fees, filing fees, and the like.

Maybe you thought it would be too time-consuming, too much hassle, too much paperwork: forms, forms and more forms!

And now you're back where you started, wondering (again), "Is it worth it? Are the advantages of incorporating really worth it?"

Or maybe you have incorporated your small business but are wondering, "Did I make the right choice of entity?" (In case you didn't know, there are 3 (yup, three) different types of corporations, and each one is taxed very differently!)

So even if you already formed a corporation, how do you know you picked the one that enables you to pay the least amount of tax?

Perhaps this story will help you decide.