Recent Posts
- Inside Your Audit: Reviewing Expectations on What Local Governments Should be Asking Their Auditor
- How Small and Midsize Businesses Can Stabilize Financial Operations During Leadership Transitions
- What’s the Right Entity Type for Your New Business?
- Balancing Financial Reporting Needs With Compliance Costs
- Helping Your Nonprofit’s Board Make Sense of Financial Reports
- When the Sale of an Appreciated Home Triggers Taxes — and When it Doesn’t
- Accounting for Business Combinations
- Behind on Bookkeeping? Here’s How to Get Back On Track
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Is Your Company’s Pricing Strategy Still Viable?
Pricing is among the most powerful levers for business owners to calibrate their companies’ profitability. Set prices too low and you risk leaving money on the table. Set them too…
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Delisting Decisions: The Complex Road to Going Private
U.S. public companies may decide to delist — or “go private” — for various strategic and financial reasons. For example, chain retailer Walgreens recently finalized a private equity deal worth…
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How Will the Changes to the SALT Deduction Affect Your Tax Planning?
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) shifts the landscape for federal income tax deductions for state and local taxes (SALT), albeit temporarily. If you have high SALT expenses, the…
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Beyond the Numbers: How to Get Your Nonprofit Leadership Team Engaged with Financial Data
Every nonprofit leader knows the scenario: the finance team delivers pages of figures for budget planning or a quarterly board meeting, yet the conversation falls flat. Leaders flip through thick…
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Pinched Nonprofits May Want to Free Up Board-Designated Assets
In general, nonprofits can’t use restricted assets for purposes other than those specified by the original donor. Board-designated assets (or board-designated funds) are another matter. These are unrestricted funds that…
