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Good morning. We're back again. Another
episode.
>> Time flies.
>> Yeah. You know the it's it's so
interesting. I I know I mentioned it
last time, but the I wouldn't imagine
the amount of feedback I am getting. And
actually, somebody told me something
very interesting. He says, um it's
interesting to see on these episodes
that when you interview people, they're
so into their passion, into their what
they do that the way they deliver it. So
we had uh like episodes with Pin Kashiff
from Friday on sales and everybody was
saying like it's it's contagious how
like his the energy comes across and
somebody told me exactly the same thing
is now we're doing finance and and I see
it from both sides. The energy that you
bring to the table in terms of the
finance industry and the people that are
interested in these topics are just
getting excited about it. So
>> well my understand again I don't do this
I don't do these podcasts very often. I
understand the audience. Uh these
podcasts, these episodes are not made
for seasoned experienced uh uh you know
it's it's made for people that are you
know to an a certain extent want some
knowledge. I'll call it bullet points.
Sure. Right.
>> Um and it is important to be aware of
it. Um I actually got some feedback as
well. One one person I met says I like
how you you simplified things. Yeah.
>> Claire kept it simple. And that's what
I'm trying to do. I'm just trying to
keep it simple and obviously everything
has there's more details and everything
but that the point is not that.
>> Yeah. And this is this is the the whole
reason about doing these episodes is is
to open up the mindset. We spoke about
it last time is a business owner just to
know these things exist. Um um and and a
leader that's always growing always has
to know okay what what are things that I
don't know yet and just to know not that
because they have to know everything
>> but just to know the concepts exist. So
that's that's uh it's you know it's very
helpful that we get that dialogue from
other people that are listening.
Sometime we're sitting in the studio we
have
>> I have clients that are very smart and I
have clients that are maybe I'm not so
smart.
>> Mh.
>> Uh this the the metrics on if you're
successful believe it or not doesn't
necessarily have to mean if you're if
you're smart. Uh but but if you know
that you have limitations and you're
relying on professionals that know to
ask
>> you don't have to be the the you know
you don't have to be the shrewest person
but you relying on people and you know
to ask the questions.
>> Exactly.
>> Right.
>> And surround yourself with you know
never be the smartest person in the
room. That's something I always share.
When I go into a room and I say uh oh
chances are I'm I'm on the high level
like on the smartest people. I'm the
wrong room.
>> I still I still learn new things every
day.
>> Every day.
>> Y
>> yeah. So uh any feedback on last episode
we we we dove we spoke about tax tax
planning and we dove into this whole
conversation about the difference
between the CC corpor and LLC's. Any any
feedback on that? Anything you want to
add?
>> There was there was one thing that that
actually came to mind. Someone had asked
me uh he said I had losses but my
accountant said that I can't take the
losses but it's from my business. Mhm.
>> Uh you know to that extent uh I I think
I think people should be aware of um if
there is what's called an at risk
limitation which means the IRS allows
you to take losses up until the amount
that you're at risk.
>> Right? So if you're let's say a
shareholder in an escorp and you have
losses that generates negative um ne
negative basis or negative equity in in
your business that loss technically you
can't you can't uh you can't take on
your personal return. So, it's called a
suspended loss. And the only way you can
dip into that loss is either you invest
money into your company, which means
you're adding your risk to the company,
or if the company makes profits in the
future, losses that were suspended that
you couldn't utilize, you'd be able to
utilize it at that time.
>> Um, this also ties in, and people should
be aware of this. You find it more by
real estate where you buy a property,
you invested whatever it is you invest
in a property and then at some point it
generates losses, right? And then you uh
refinance and took money out where you
have negative equity in the company
which means your the accumulated amount
of losses that was generated and it
could be depreciation loss or whatever
it is and or the amount of money you
took out from refinance. you took out
more money than you invested, you're at
a negative you're at a negative basis,
let's call it, right?
>> When you sell the property and even if
you don't sell it for a big profit,
chances are you're going to have to pick
up a gain. you may have to pay tax on
what phantom income that you had because
in theory the IRS says, "Okay, now is
when you recognize the loss or whatever
it is, but you got profits throughout
the year on distributions on refinance
money that you never really pay tax on."
Then that's when it comes back to bite
you. So, you have to you have to be a
aware of that as as well because it
could come back to hit you. And you'll
find it a lot with the uh uh with the uh
real estate guys that took a lot of
bonus depreciation where their equity is
is a real high negative uh basis where
at some point it's going to come back to
bite you.
>> This episode of the Let's Talk Business
podcast is sponsored by Flow Digital and
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>> Yeah. So, this this again another
concept that um speaking to
professionals and I and I I mentioned it
in the the earlier episodes that we did
um on the when I interviewed your father
at the Accelerate um um conference. Um,
one of the things that he mentioned over
there is, you know, having good rolodex
and and and and I like that concept
because there's there's professionals
that are really into their their lane
and and and when you have these type of
questions for setup um it's always
better to ask before
>> and or if you have some sort of um
hesitation about something, ask because
at least uh you might get a better
answer than you thinking of whatever you
plan to do,
>> right? And if you have an issue in
business where you're thinking about it
for a month and you can't come up with
with a solution or you coming up, we've
had situations where I can do A or B and
then I want to sit down to discuss with
you which one should I do A or B and
then
>> I come and say hey how about C?
>> Yeah.
>> And then you say I didn't think of that.
>> Think about that. And this brings me to
another point um um which is I always
tell people is you could have a
professional that you're actually
dealing with. Let's say in this case,
you could have an a great accountant,
but they have a limited skill set
because they've never done transactions
like that. Um, it's it's perfectly okay
to take a second opinion sometimes just
to see if what's out there in terms of
concepts, especially when it comes to um
going back a second to tax savings and
stuff like that. Um, you know, some
>> even even accountants um again there is
a limitation. Everybody has their
limitations and you have to acknowledge
those limitations. you stay in your lane
and where what you're good at you're
good at and where you believe somebody
else is better
>> bring them in.
>> Beautiful. And even even for tax
strategy, there are firms that are
strictly focused on tax strategy.
Meaning there are profirms that do firms
that do certain uh certain structures
that's specific for tax strategy, which
the accountant doesn't necessarily have
a day-to-day doesn't happen very often,
>> but these firms
>> um this is what they do. Mhm.
>> Uh it would be good advice for the
accountant or the client to be aware of
that and when needed bring those
professionals in.
>> Got it.
>> So today is we're going to have a fun
topic because it's a little bit more
more less technical more emotional which
is how do you pay yourself without
hurting your business.
>> Um obviously everybody that does your
works you could have as much passion as
you want for your business. you want to
take you want the business to be
profitable because you want to take out
as much as you can for your own
benefits. So I want to start off with
the difference between um salary versus
distributions. What's your opinion about
business owners that are growing the
business is growing? Some people you see
they're never oh I'm not taking out a
salary. I'm just taking out whatever I
need for distributions. Some some people
will say as soon as you have employees
everybody's on salary also take out a
salary. like what's your opinion about
it?
>> So the you should take out a salary and
there could be various reasons for it.
>> Uh let's I'm not saying that all the
money that you take out of your company
should be via salary. Uh you should make
a there should be a judgment call as far
as what salary makes sense for me to
take out of the company. A based on the
function that I have in the company and
B what the company can afford.
>> Uh but you want to take out a salary. Uh
just to note, this is one of the
differences between a a corporation and
an LLC. A corporation as the
shareholder, you can take a salary like
any other employee. You get a W2. An
LLC,
the partners in the LLC's really should
not take salary, W2 salary. A
partnership,
um monies that they take out is not
salary and they shouldn't really run it
through salary. Although you know I've
seen situations where partners run their
salaries through although their business
is an LLC. So how do they then take out
money on a consistent basis
um they take out a distribution which
they deem as a guaranteed payment.
Guaranteed payment means where the own
the partners agreed that I'm entitled to
take out every week a thousand dollars
or $2,000 regardless of what the profits
of the company is. I want to make I I
want to live. I have to have a
continuous consistent flow of income. So
we determine we each can take $2,000 out
and that's as if we're employees, right?
That's a guaranteed payment. It's
treated like salaries, meaning it's
subject to social security and Medicare.
um and uh and it's actually reported on
your K1. If you get a K1 from an LLC,
right, you have the income that the
business generates and then there is a
box specifically for guaranteed
payments, right? So that's the
consistency of it. You do want to take a
salary because you want to have that
consistent income like any other like
any other employee. I find that also
when you're in business and you don't
take a salary and you're going for a
mortgage for your house or whatever it
is and they look at your tax return,
they say, "Hey, yeah, you're making
income, but I don't see consistent. I
don't see the the salary line." You want
to have a consistent income that you
know you can rely on and then you can
take distributions on on profits, but
you should take a salary. Question is,
how do you determine what the salary
should be? You're in control of the
checkbook and you can do whatever you
want.
>> So, let's talk about that. I think the
question is are you
>> are you could you afford what you want
to pay yourself,
>> right?
>> Um I I I think what your question was
the difference between salary and
distributions. Um from a profit and loss
standpoint, if you determine that my
salary either based on what the market
would pay someone for doing what I'm
doing is X dollars, that's on your
profit and loss. Meaning, if I'm not
here, I would have to pay somebody else
to do what I'm doing. That's justifiably
on your profit and loss. If you decide
to take distributions of profit out,
that's not a income. That's not an
income. Uh uh it's not a deduction
against your income. It's how you use
the cash generated by your income that
you took it out, but it's not an expense
on your company. Right? So, so
>> where does it make a difference?
>> Where it would make a difference? for
instance um um on on on which meaning
from a dollar from a cash standpoint
there's no difference it's cash
>> correct cash your P&L at the end of the
day let's say in terms of uh
understanding the profitability of the
company that's where it's going to
>> so distributions tend to be volatile
it's when there is money I give myself a
distribution if you want to do cash cash
projections you want to see how much
money you're going to have to cover and
you know consistently the amount of
money I take out is x which could be as
salary or maybe you have consistent
minimal distributions that you take. At
least from a consistency standpoint,
you're treating it like an expense on
the company,
>> right? But if you're just taking out
money here and there, it can throw
things off where now we're cashri
have a reserve for A, B, and C.
>> Uh you run you run into problems. Uh but
the clear differential is salary.
consider that taxable on your personal
it's your personal income that you have.
You're going to pay social security tax
on it, which you can argue if it's a
good good thing to do or not. Um but
that's a salary. And then distributions
are profits that you're distributing to
yourself.
>> Could you could you um could the the
full check be a distribution even if
it's like as you mentioned before like a
guaranteed salary or consistency? So if
it's a C if it's a corp where you're
taking a W2 wage then it's like
everybody's you use outside payroll
company and you get every week a check
there's withholding on it
>> etc right so that that's in the flow
with everything else
>> um from a from a distribution standpoint
um and and escort there isn't guaranteed
payment that guaranteed payment is on
the LLC right
>> if you're in an LLC and you want to put
in guaranteed payments. It means I as
the owner, I'm putting in a lot of work.
I want to get paid a salary which is
consistently the same way the employees
get every week a check. I want to get a
check consistently every every single
week.
>> And you get that and the guaranteed
payments can run through your payroll
company. Meaning, even though you're not
getting a W2, the payroll company can
process that where you're going to get
your if it's direct pay or whatever it
is, didn't go into your bank account,
>> but it does it's not reported on your
payroll uh filings because it's not
payroll. It's a guaranteed payment.
>> Uh so guaranteed payment is the same
thing as a distribution.
>> Um no,
>> it's different.
>> Guaranteed payment is the same thing as
salary.
>> It's just not there's no withholding.
>> There's no withholding on a guaranteed
payment. And then you have to be careful
because if you're getting if you're in
an LLC getting guaranteed payments and
100 $200,000 a year, whatever it is,
being that there's no withholdings, you
have to know that you're going to have
to pay tax on that. And that includes
social security tax, Medicare, it all is
calculated on your personal return.
>> So, you got to make sure that you're
paying in quarterly estimates to cover
that. If it's a W2, you're withholding
the taxes. I'm I'm good. One of the
things that I I hear a lot from, you
know, CFOs, bookkeepers, is that like
they're trying to help the owners uh get
more in a rhythm and consistency so they
could plan better. Uh I want to take a
step back and I think we covered a
little bit of cash flow in the past but
I think u um related to this
conversation
um in terms of um a business as you said
if everybody's getting a paycheck and
you have a function in the business um
you need to get a paycheck. I I I once
heard from um from somebody like early
on when I went in into business and I
went in with the partner he says there's
two things there's partnership for for
profitability and distributions and then
there is salary for whoever is actually
doing a function in the business because
that function could have been done by
somebody else you needs to hire. So how
do you how do you determine um when it
comes to partnership or even just in
general to know that you're not draining
the business of just putting that that
number on say this is the amount of
money I have to take out.
>> So on the partnership side the usual
scenario is when you have an active
partner and an and and meaning an
operator one that's an in inside guy
let's call it and then you have an
outside guy which is uh let's say the
investor right or the money the money
guy. Mhm.
>> Um and yes, it's justified for a
partnership uh for a partnership to to
to to have in there that the active
partner gets paid for his services. The
argument there is is that for the
investor he's better off if the partner
that's that he has that his partner is
actively involved in the company because
if his partner becomes passive and
starts doing other things then you're
dealing with an issue where there's no
>> so for the investor or the money partner
he for him it's an advantage for the for
dear to be an active partner because he
has skin in the game it's his company or
he's a partner in the company and you're
better off, it's safer that way. The
flip side on that is if he wouldn't be
there, you'd have to hire somebody, it's
perfectly fair or it's fair to argue
that the active partner should be
entitled to a salary for the work he
does. The passive partner is the money
investor. he's going to reap the
benefits of the profits, but the the
investing partner has other businesses
in where he earns money and takes a
salary maybe in his other business. So,
you want to level level the playing
field to a certain extent.
>> One thing that keeps on coming up on
these episodes is all about cash flow
and financing for businesses. Now, if
you're a growing business, you sometimes
have a cash crunch. Why? You're
investing in infrastructure, inventory,
and or sometimes you just want to have
something available. That's called a
line of credit. For lines of credit, I
want to introduce you to my friend
Moishi from Capitalize. He is somebody
I've known personally. I've recommended
them for many, many businesses when it
comes to businesses line of credit. So,
if you are looking to have a line of
credit available for your business or
maybe you have a need immediately um in
order to expand and grow your business,
reach out to Moshi. Go to
ptxgroup.com/loans
where you're going to be directed to
Moshi directly and he will actually
guide you through the process, tell you
your options, see what's available and
ultimately help you to the finish line.
Remember, financing and loans, you have
to be responsible how you use it. We
spoke about it on the podcast and we'll
continue to speak about it. But if you
need it or you want to have it available
for reserve, reach out to Moishi. Again,
pxgroup.com
loans where you'll speak to Moishi and
when you speak to him, make sure to tell
him that many have missio. You're
mentioning this. It's a very important
point and I I want to make sure that it
comes across because I've seen this
where somebody's starting a new business
and they're finding a um an investor in
order to get them off the ground and
they say okay my I'm going to be have
sweat equity. I'm going to be putting in
the effort and that might be the first
few months a year at one point that
person needs to take out a salary and
that's a lot of times not discussed
properly in the beginning and that
becomes a whole a whole big deal with
the partnership. I think we should do a
separate episode on on on partnerships
and the issue that can come up and and
to make sure that you're
>> properly in in that topic. We'll we'll
actually cover that. We'll also cover
about syndications and everything that
goes along with partnerships.
>> That is a and I've I've done a lot I'
I've been involved in a lot a lot in
partnership disputes or part not
disputes but disagreements and or
assisting partners with putting together
an operating agreement that's going to
work on the long haul. So that's
>> Yeah. So let's leave that. So let's
let's go back to the topic of okay so
the people that are working there is a
salary because that's for the work they
do and then so how do you determine that
is that market value is what the company
could afford obviously you can say both
the question is so you have you have
that issue comes up more when you have a
partnership
>> um or there are two shareholders and one
is actively involved and not is coming
out of the other other partners' pocket
or at least this percentage of it is how
much salary could he take out?
>> You find out that you're a 50/50 in a
deal. Okay, the guy's actively involved.
Then you find out that he took out a
million dollars uh before I even got any
of my profits. And he says, "Yeah,
because I'm working, right?" So, you
obviously have to come up with a value
that makes sense. And that's negotiated
between the partners, uh, you know, as
to what makes sense. Um, they can either
go with market value or they come up
with a number that they can both live
with.
>> And then this is your guarantee. This is
what you're getting. and then the rest
is going to be based on based on
profits. Uh but when you're a soul owner
or you're a soul owner, you're the only
owner, you're in control. You can you
can do whatever you want, right?
>> The question is how what should you do
>> to give yourself a large salary, meaning
I'm going to give myself I'm going to
take threequarters of a million dollars
on W2.
that may may not be so smart because
you're pay you're you're paying um uh
you're paying although it's limited but
you're paying Medicare you're paying uh
uh social security or whatever I mean
what's the point right uh but you want
to have a salary that makes sense and
there's another angle that people and I
and I've had it with IRS audits also
I've I've had a situation where an owner
in an escorp again because escorp is
here salaries are taken. There's no
salary really in a LLC
>> where the only didn't the owner took he
took a $25,000 salary on a company that
was doing $10 million of sales.
>> Why? The owner says, "What's the
difference? I'm I'm I'm taking money out
of distributions. I'm paying tax on the
income anyway, so I'm not taking it as a
salary." the IRS came back and and said
X amount of his distributions should
really be deemed salary and he should be
paying in social security on that.
>> Why?
>> Because it it does not it it it does not
make sense for a shareholder not to have
a salary of whatever whatever amount it
is. The IRS says, "Of course, I know why
you didn't take it out in salary because
you don't want to pay in Social Security
and Medicare. So if I'm going to keep my
W2 down to $25,000 and instead take it
out as a distribution, you don't pay
social security and Medicare on a
distribution.
>> So there comes the end market value like
for whatever function you have.
>> Or if in my scenario you come up with a
salary where if the IRS would say would
in other words they would look at the
amount of because there's a separate
line on the tax return. The first
expense under cost of goods sold is
officer salary.
>> Yeah,
>> it's a separate line. Why is it there?
>> They want to see.
>> They want to see that they're taking out
salaries. Now, if a guy runs a two,
three, $4 million business and he takes
out of 70 $80,000 of salary, that's
probably enough. But you want to have a
you want to have a salary line uh line
in there, right? So, that's another
angle where you should take that into
account. The question is how much,
right? The answer to that is if it's
strictly salary, then again, don't go
crazy. It should just make sense. where
you know you could look at market value
or what you would have paid somebody
else etc. If you want to give yourself a
little more give yourself a little more
and then the rest you can take out as
distributions on uh distributions on on
on profit.
>> Um but the benefit is you're getting a
salary. You know you're covering your
mortgage, you're covering your rent or
you're covering whatever uh uh regular
expenses you have. The money comes into
your bank account as a regular salary.
Okay. Mhm.
>> As far as distributions, you can take
out distribution, but again, try to have
a s a try to have a consistent method in
how you take out distributions for cash
flow so that you can always
>> uh project.
>> Got it. And now let let me go back a
second on on the salary side of things.
Um in terms of
um understanding the healthiness, I want
to go back a second to we spoke about it
in the one of the previous episodes
about cash flow.
um you've seen a lot to where where
business owners are actually draining
their business and that's actually
ruining cash flow. So it's not so much
about sales slashexpenses, it's the your
cost of living in the way you're
actually um um taking out money from the
business.
>> So that's that's really not a salary
thing, right? Um
>> a discipline.
>> No, no. What I mean to say is that you
you can argue with the fact that the
owner should have the ability and take
out a salary. The issue is when the
owner takes money out of the company
because there are other things that they
get involved in or you have owners that
just think that their business is their
personal checkbook, right? Where they um
you know they just from the business
they take um whatever it is they takes
that have that has absolutely nothing to
do with the business. We're not going to
get into that component for a moment,
but just from taking money out of the
company when there is no right, you it
really it really goes it accumulates to
a significant amount uh rather quickly
if you're if you if you're not if you're
not careful. Um, so you should keep it
rather consistent so you know how much
you take out every month and then as the
business generates cash where it can
afford for you to take out a significant
distribution, take that out.
>> But it should be based on not fly by
night where I have a checkbook, there's
money sitting in the account and I'm
gonna I'm g You have a you have a
controller or a CFO that's trying to do
cash management. And I've had a
situation, believe it or not, where the
owner used to take from the controller
blank checks. This is back when you had
the books. He used to go to the back of
the the book, rip out three, four
checks, put it into his pocket, and he
used to use it. He's busy with this
monitoring the bank, the cash flow, see
checks cleared. Now, whoa, there's a
$50,000 check. Who? What is this? The
owner was hiding it from the CFO, but he
doesn't cap. The CFO is monitoring the
bank. that working for you
>> and this is first of all it's it's it's
reckless.
>> I know that if I was the CFO I would
lose respect for my owner if if if
that's what he does if I'm if he think
if he's hiding it from me I'm like it's
it's part of my function
>> and it it just doesn't make sense.
>> Um
>> yeah, so that's that's that's an
important point. Um but I do feel that
that
business owners that really work hard,
they should reward themselves with
actually making sure that they're not
the you know there's uh in leadership
there's a book a very famous book it's
called eater um leaders eat last. Yeah.
That yeah that comes in leadership
because you want to um give autonomy.
You want to build your people but
financially a business owners has has to
be rewarded for the effort they're
putting in. So not to put themsel last
and
different angle of looking at this. You
have business owners that are very on
top of their people, right? Why are we
paying so much for this? Or could we
bring the cost down, right? Which is
galic. I mean, that's part of part of
what a business owner should do is sit
with their team and analyze the cost or
whatever. It really pokes a hole in the
morale of the team that you're trying to
hold accountable to keep costs down when
they know that you're taking out money
recklessly out of the company. So that's
that's that's it's a leadership issue.
Meaning if you want to have credibility
within your organization for them to
keep an eye on the money and we want to
run a tight chip and we want to you know
whatever it is where there's a dim with
how we spend money. Don't be you you
don't be reckless. You can say, "Yeah,
I'm the owner. I can do whatever I
want." Fine, you could. Nobody can
nobody can fight fight against it. Uh
but chances are that the results you're
going to want from your team, uh they
they won't have as much motivation when
they when you're when you yourself are
being reckless to your company.
>> Very important point. Especially your
your core leadership team.
>> Your core they know that you're doing
left and right. There's money going in,
money going out. It doesn't lend well
aside from the casual component, but
just from a leadership from a leadership
standpoint where you're trying to uh uh
institute certain policies, procedures,
and you go yourself and circumvent that.
>> Yeah.
>> Uh it it could be a problem.
>> It just reminds me uh it reminds me a
very interesting story off topic on
finance, but it's still important for
business owners. Um I met a person that
was a number two guy in a company like
really really um you know the COO I
think was his title officially and he
was looking for another position and I
asked him like you're there for so many
years like like what's what happened.
says you want what happened that
everything I tried to do the owner comes
around and says tell me some examples
says you what what was the kicker I'll
tell you what happened there's this one
person very important role in the
company but they just never they don't
show up in time we have meetings
scheduled they don't show up in time
they have to be there 9:00 they just
don't show up in time so I knew that the
person will be asking for a raise
whatever I said you know what this is
going to be my conversation with a
person so comes to the conversation says
I want to give you a you're very
valuable, but you have to fix the timing
issue. And they made a they made a deal
the next we're going to I'm going to
give you something now. Let's do this
for three months and then if that three
months you're improving, you're getting
a raise.
First week, beautiful. Second week and
then third week, fourth weeks, things
are falling back. And he says, you know
what? Okay, the three week I know
already my answer for the three months.
Three months comes and he doesn't come,
he doesn't come asking for this
additional raise. He was thought he was
like this guy will come for his raise
and then he bothered him very much and
he said like what's going on? He he he
went over to the guy and asked like like
it's three months. He says I got the
raise. What do you mean? He went to the
boss. He told him like the whole story
and he said I'll I'll adjust it. Don't
worry.
>> Yeah.
>> He said that that was my kicker. like if
I'm he wants I should run a tight ship
and I should work the company and
everything else and and all of a sudden
>> that's a leadership discussion which
which I do see you know I'm not going to
say I see it often but it is not unusual
>> where it's it's a very it's a big
problem when you're when you have
certain policies in a company and you
yourself don't adhere to it
>> why should everybody else
>> yeah and I I'll I'll yes bring it back
to what the point that you were
mentioning I think it's so important
important and and I'm just thinking even
broader than what you said is any type
of any type of expenditure any type of
spenditure like if if you're trying to
tighten the ship and telling them okay
stop doing this doing that and all of a
sudden you're just not a buying but it's
it just brings brings down the morale
>> right
>> absolutely
>> if you're in the trenches and you're
going through or or adhering to policy
within your company where
>> I'm the owner and I'm doing the exact
same thing or whatever you you know, you
you chances are you could be more more
successful in getting your team lined up
with that mentality.
>> But I will I will go back to what I said
before and I think it's important for
people to understand that if you are
really in the trenches and actually
working hard, don't forget about
yourself.
>> Right. Right. So getting back to it. So
getting back Yes. Obviously uh you know
if your if your business is doing well
uh color cavoid you take out what you
what you what your business can afford
and
>> and put the money away or do some
investments or whatever it is uh but you
have you have to do it responsibly and a
different thing that I should bring up
let's let's even assume that your
business can afford for you to take out
money
>> how are you taking it out
>> so I've seen many times where directly
from the
You're going into a real estate
investment, right? I'm going in for a
half a million dollars. I'm taking money
for my company and I'm putting sending
it to the investment. That's a problem.
Why is your company cutting a check to
ABC LLC?
Is your company the partner over there?
>> Then the K1 goes to the company.
>> Well, we know the K1's not going to the
company. But why is company why is your
your business sending money to that LLC
and vice versa? What's if you had a
refinance in an LLC and you told the the
bank or whatever it is wired the
proceeds to my company? Why is money
coming from that LLC into your company?
You get ordered by the IRS. You're going
to say, "Oh, it's because it's a
refinance in this LLC. I put it into my
company." IRS is going to say, "How do I
know? Maybe it's income in this company
and it's not money that you just put in
there, right? So, if you want to make an
investment, how should you distribute to
yourself money? And it's this I see very
very often.
If you want to justify at some point
that you invested a half a million
dollars in that LLC and you personally
are a partner there, show me the check.
Sorry. Show me the personal check where
you invested in that LLC. The half a
million dollars. You don't have it. What
are you going to show me? You're going
to show me a check from your business
and then tell me, yeah, it's it's this
is what it really is.
>> So, what is the right way?
>> The right way to do it is cut a check to
you personally to your personal account.
Now, that's a distribution. Perfectly
legit. You're allowed to take a
distribution, right? As far as we're
concerned, that's where the relationship
ends with this half a million dollars.
That's where the relationship ends with
your company. Now, from your personal
check, cut a check to that LLC. Now five
years from now I ask you where did you
where did you invest the half a million
dollars you have a personal check
showing it.
>> So you would say the same thing as if
you have a partner let's say both
partners want to invest in the real
estate.
>> Same exact same exact thing will take
the only way it makes sense on if your
company cuts the check to that LLC is if
your company is the is the partner over
there.
>> Get into the question if it's a smart
thing to do. But if your company
happened to be the partner over there
then that is the correct way to do it.
Send it directly. But if you're going
into a deal, right, and you're taking
the money out of your company, take it
out personally and then from your
personal account, invest it. Don't skip
steps. If you skip steps, yeah, you'll
run into problems.
>> Got it. I I want to speak about another
important topic which uh comes up very
much um which is obviously you're taking
out distributions, you're taking out
certain certain expenses which uh we're
not going into the legal side of things
if it's if you're allowed to do it, if
full deduction or not, whatever it is,
but it's showing on your P&L. The end of
the day, it's showing on your P&L. Now,
what people don't realize is it might be
um more expenses. So when it comes to
taxes, you know, going back to what we
discussed on the the pre previous
episodes, but the end of the day is
tomorrow you want to take a bank loan.
Um uh you know, two years from now, five
years from now, you want to exit a
business. The concept of adbacks um
where certain expenses are known to be
expenses of the company versus and
become or some of the stuff becomes a
blurred uh line. What can you share
about that where related to
distributions or draws from the company?
So I guess let's talk about the scenario
where it was a situation that over the
years people had had had
ran had ran p uh had run personal
expenses through their business. I'm not
getting to the right and the wrong and
all that. That's in reality what
happened. Um you then what happens is
you know why you're doing it. We're not
going to get into that right but it's
wrong. uh any expenses that run through
the business. Even if it's personal
related, but it's related to the
business, right? Where you're
reimbursing yourself for personal
expenses that you had for the business
and you can justify it.
>> That's that's fine.
>> If there are expenses running through
your business because that's the way you
wanted to do it by getting into the tax
issue with that,
>> you in essence are reducing your your
financial statements are going to have
uh lower profit, right?
If in the future you want to sell your
company where part of what dictates the
purchase price or the sales price is
your track over the last uh three years,
five years, two years, whatever it is.
If you're if you have expenses sitting
in there that affects the profits
potentially can affect the amount that
you sell your company for. So you may
have saved yourself 30 40 cents on the
dollar
>> in taxes at the time, but if you're
selling your company where you're
getting four, five, six, 10 times the
profit of or average profit of your
company, that 40 cents that you saved
cost you um cost you um $4, right? Or $8
depending on on how you how you're
multiplying it, right? So it could come
back to bite you. However, it is usual
for when a company comes to buy another
company where you can justifiably
provide adbacks. What adbacks means is
that you're buying my company and you're
valuing the business based on my
historical profits. You should know that
there's X, Y, and Z expenses that I had
which day one from when you take over my
company, you will not have those
expenses. Simple example is I as the
owner have a salary of a quarter of a
million dollars. I and I took the salary
because I'm an owner, but technically
I'm not really needed in the business.
Day one tomorrow, you don't have to pay
my $250,000 salary. Add that back to my
uh to my add that back to my profit. In
other words, add add to my profit that
amount to give you the multiple on that.
Then you're going to go and say, "Yeah,
I made a two years ago and I and and I
gave the caterer a check, right? And it
was marketing or advertising or party or
whatever it is. I'm adding that back
because it really wasn't a real
expense." And then I have my personal
life insurance that I'm running through
my company and I know that it's not
really a personal, it's not really the
business exp. You're going to go through
that litany of of things that you did
and you're exposing yourself. Chances
are people are going to have a problem.
They don't know what what what what
they're getting themselves into. So you
have to train yourself not to use your
business as a personal piggy bank for a
you're running a clean clean business.
The marketability of the business is uh
gets gets gets more um attractive. Keep
it clean. Um employees don't need to
know what's going on in your personal
life. And if it's running through the
business, they know they know
everything. Why should they know
everything that's going on, you know,
and but when you have legitimate
business expenses, you know, then you
take those.
>> Does the same apply to to ad for when
you apply for a loan or something
financing that they will also look at
adbacks
>> that what they would look at over there
is no you you're not going to the bank
and saying I have this P&L and
financials, here's my tax return, but
I'm telling you that I did A, B, and C
and D. No, you're not. you go to a bank
and you say that they say goodbye
Charlie we're not dealing with you right
>> where you do find by a bank is when you
legitimately have expenses that are not
continuous so say for example somebody
had a lawsuit and he had a lot of legal
fees and this lawsuit was settled right
so this year he had a tremendous amount
of legal fees next year he knows he will
not have those legal fees then it's it's
justifiably to go to a bank and say I
have a wonderful expense it's a non non
nonrecurring expense, which is true. And
therefore, although I didn't make as
much money last year, but know that if I
keep the sales, I'm going to make I'm
going to make more money the coming year
because I don't have these expenses
going forward. That's a normal
discussion you can have with a bank,
right? By real expenses that happened
during the period in which the bank is
looking at your company versus those
expenses are not expected going forward,
right? What's your some final thoughts
on the topic of of distributions or
salary for um shareholders?
>> My final thoughts are person should be
allowed to take out as much money as his
business can afford without risking the
business. Um do it on a consistent basis
and what I think is most important is
when you do make investments or take
money out of the company, know how to
take the money out. If you're a
shareholder or a partner, write the
check to your personal name and then
once it's in your personal account, do
whatever you want to do with it.
Minimize how much how much transactions
you have running through your company
between your personal dealings because
if money goes out, it has to come back
the same way. And between me and you,
you know, once money goes out of the
company, it's not coming back. So,
>> Got it. Thank you so much. I'm looking
forward for the future. We we have a
couple of episodes left. um um some
amazing topics. So, thank you so much
for everything we've covered so far.
Looking forward for next time as well.
>> Perfect. Thanks.
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