What Your CPA Isn't Telling You: Life-Changing Tax Strategies
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About this ebook
Mark J. Kohler
Mark J. Kohler (ID, CA and UT) is an Attorney, Certified Public Accountant, and Entrepreneur. Kohler’s principal career has been as a partner in the law firm Kyler, Kohler, Ostermiller, & Sorensen, LLP, where he specializes in the areas of business, estate and tax planning. Mark is the author of three previous books selling over 30,000 copies (“Lawyers are Liars”, “What Your CPA Isn’t Telling You”, and “The Tax and Legal Playbook”). Mark has been hosting a national internet radio show weekly for the past 9 years, a regular contributor to Entrepreneur.com, national speaker and consultant for small business owners nationwide.
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Reviews for What Your CPA Isn't Telling You
9 ratings1 review
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5just get to the God damn point holy crap. He just babbles on and on like a novel.
Book preview
What Your CPA Isn't Telling You - Mark J. Kohler
Table of Contents
Praise
Title Page
Dedication
Epigraph
Acknowledgements
AN ELUSIVE DREAM
CONCEPT 1 - THE SECRET TO TAX PLANNING
THE MEETING
EXITING
A LEAP OF FAITH
TWO WORLDS
CONCEPT 2 - A NEW PERSPECTIVE
THE TEMPTATION
A VISION
ELIMINATING FEAR
PATIENCE
TRACKING THE LITTLE THINGS
CONCEPT 3 - FOUNDATIONS
REAL FRIENDS
ENCOURAGEMENT
STRUCTURE
ENTITIES
CONCEPT 4 - TECHNIQUES IN BUSINESS PLANNING
PLANNING TO FAIL
THREE DIFFERENT PLANS
BATTLE PLANS
THE PERFECT MARKETING PLAN
CONCEPT 5 - RENTAL REAL ESTATE
THE VEIL LIFTED
HIDDEN WISDOM
TO BE OR NOT TO BE
CONCEPT 6 - LEAVING A LEGACY
LAW OF THE HARVEST
LEARNING TO CATCH FISH
ADOPTING A SYSTEM
PERSONAL ACCOUNTABILITY
CONCEPT 7 - YOUR HEALTH CARE
COMMITMENT
INSURANCE
WRITING IT OFF
TAKING CONTROL
CONCEPT 8 - DISCOVERING PLUTONIUM
THE SHOCKING REALITY
WHAT WALL STREET DOESN’T WANT YOU TO KNOW
THE DOS AND DON’TS
MY RESOLUTION
APPENDICES - ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
ONLINE VIDEOS TO SAVE YOU MORE IN TAXES, BUILD YOUR WEALTH, AND PROTECT YOUR ASSETS!
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ...
Subscribe to Entrepreneur Magazine
Copyright Page
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ...
"Mark’s sage advice to small business owners navigating tax planning is
worth its weight in gold."
—CLATE MASK, CEO, INFUSIONSOFT
"Mark’s book offers outstanding tax strategies that will help you bring
your American Dream to life! I loved it!"
—KRISTA BLOOM, PH.D., AUTHOR OF THE ULTIMATE COMPATIBILITY QUIZ
"Mark is no ordinary CPA; he actually makes the topic of taxes
interesting and fun to learn about"
—ELLIE KAYE, AUTHOR OF LIVING RICH FOR LESS
"Mark’s enthusiasm and passion for a topic usually associated with pain
and grief is only matched by his expertise and ability to break down
complex principles into simple actionable steps. This is a
must-read for any business owner or entrepreneur."
—BRYAN ELLIOTT, FOUNDER, LINKED ORANGE COUNTY
"Mark is a brilliant writer whose uncanny ability to weave educational
principles into engaging stories has made him one of my favorite authors.
This book is a must-read for anyone interested in saving or making money.
I have recommended it to all of our staff and customers alike."
—BOB SNYDER, RENATUS, LLC
"I’ve been an investor for 15 years and was always taught my NETWORK is
equal to my NETWORTH. If you are serious about creating a great
NETWORTH, then you must have Mark and his team as part of
your NETWORK for tax and legal support. My business and
family thank you, Mark, and wish we would have
met you 15 years ago."
—CHRIS D. HAKE, REHAS-R-US
"Mark is a very gifted and inspiring man. He has such an ability to connect
with everyone he meets and teaches vast knowledge and skills to the
common person. Since taking his tax and legal classes I have saved over
$30 thousand with different tax incentives and have made even more
knowing how to embrace the different tax and legal strategies. What I
like best about Mark is that he operates with the highest of integrity,
and I know that I am in great hands when he is assisting me."
—CHASE DIXON, DIRECTOR OF MARKETING, THE OG MANDINO GROUP INC.
"Mark has me jumping out of my seat and ready to rock and roll my taxes and the
law. Now that’s takes skill with the law and a special rapport with people ..."
—VINCE GREAVES, INNOVATIVE PROPERTY SOLUTIONS, INC.
"We attended two classes on taxes taught by Mark and the amount of
information I got from them was and still is priceless. My husband and
I got more organized in our businesses expenses, like Mark said, and the
end result was impressive. After seeing Mark in action, we decided to
become his clients and Mark became our tax attorney. Let me tell you,
in our first tax return we recovered Mark’s fee and MORE, just
because we were aware of what to do."
—FRANK & AIDA DODARO, F&A ENTERPRISES, INC.
"Mark is an extremely intelligent individual who makes complex issues simple.
I now use Mr. Kohler as my legal and tax planning professional."
—TONY LEENKNECHT, LEENKNECT FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
"I had the pleasure of attending one of Mark’s workshops and couldn’t
recommend him more highly. He offers brilliant advice, and he has the
unique ability to teach in a manner that everyone can understand.
The knowledge he shares with everyone is amazing and he has a
staff behind him that is second to none."
—KAREN HALABY, KARADA MARKETING, INC.
"My husband and I attended Mark Kohler’s seminar and were just awestruck.
We loved that he could provide both an attorney and CPA perspective to
our real estate holdings. His office is now handling our taxes and we will
begin working on asset protection shortly. We are very impressed with
Mark as a speaker because he is so knowledgeable, entertaining, and
charismatic. We walked away with value from his seminar."
—MICHELLE BRODERSON, MICHELLE BRODERSON, INC.
"Mark is unique in that he has found a way to make a boring subject fun and
entertaining, using stories and analogies and dancing! Yes it’s true a person
can be competent/professional and laugh!! It was so hard inviting people
to an all-day Saturday ‘tax and legal’ workshop; they looked at
me like huh? But those that came had an amazing time."
—CHRISTINA HAFTMAN, SOCIAL MEDIA STRATEGIES 4 YOU
"I have been in several of Mark’s classes,, and I have used his company for
accounting. In the last three years he has saved us thousands of dollars.
His classes are so entertaining and he is very knowledgeable on the subject
of tax law for real estate. He is able to make his classes enjoyable despite
the subject. I can’t wait until he comes to Chicago again."
—GENE MACKIN, 4 CAPITAL RESULTS, INC.
This book is dedicated to taxpayers trying to live the American Dream and who doesn’t know where to turn for meaningful tax planning.
Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
—ALBERT EINSTEIN
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I don’t think people realize how hard it is to write a book and how many people work behind the scenes to make it a success. I say this, because I had no idea what an enormous undertaking it was to write my first book and then had selective memory when I was enjoying the success of Lawyers Are Liars. I forgot how much work it really was.
This book was even harder for me to write because it forced me well beyond my comfort level with writing, and I got exposed to the art of fictional writing. I couldn’t have accomplished this huge undertaking without the unfailing support of my wife and children. They were consistently supportive when I took hours away from them to sit in coffee shops in the evening and escape to any quiet place I could to write. My love and desire to help them succeed in their own endeavors has only grown during this process.
Again, my partners and team members at the law firm and accounting firm truly help me be the best I can be as a professional. More specifically, Mat Sorensen and LaDell Eyre continue to be pillars of strength to me and have become eternal friends.
Special thanks to my publicist Melanie Thomas and her amazing skills at making a CPA interesting to talk with and look at. Also to Jason and Shelley Andrus, and Julie Fletcher for their editorial comments and review.
With all of that said, this book’s quality and success is directly related to the enormous support, encouragement, and cooperation from my publisher Entrepreneur Press. Their willingness to take a leap of faith on such a unique book about taxes was truly visionary.
AN ELUSIVE DREAM
I am convinced that millions of Americans are starving for tax advice, but the shocking reality is that many don’t know where to turn for answers.
Taxes are the number-one cost in our lives. We know this. But for some reason we believe that the topic is either too boring or complex to be worth investing any time into. Hell, I felt the same way even after I was a CPA.
However, after teaching and advising thousands of clients, I have discovered that there are several, if not many, things CPAs don’t know or just don’t tell their clients for one reason or another—information that would change their clients’ tax returns and their lives!
Maybe it’s because they are poor communicators. Maybe we don’t give them a chance. Maybe it’s because we believe deep down that our tax return is what it is,
and there is nothing we can really do to change the bottom line. Whatever the reasons are, I know there are tax strategies that can change your life.
Now with that said, I face the daunting task of writing a book that you might actually want to read and share with your loved ones.
What are these tax strategies and guiding principles that don’t change every year with new legislation? What is it that my CPA should be telling me in a planning meeting each year, or even more often than that?
I chose the medium of a story to convey this essential information.
It’s actually a fairly short story to tell. Call it a fable, an allegory, or parable. The bottom line is that whatever you call it, it’s the saga of how a group of individuals found answers to one of life’s biggest challenges in an unlikely place.
The story starts with a fictional family that may seem very similar to yours. Now, please know I’m not talking about the resemblance to any particular family structure, but the similarities in the challenges that we all face living here in the great United States of America.
Of course, I realize that all of us come from many different walks of life. And clearly, the modern American family isn’t so traditional anymore, is it?
What this means is whether we like to admit it or not, we have single parents, inter-racial marriages, same-sex couples, no kids, good kids, and even bad kids, or should I say kids not living up to their potential. Apparently that’s the politically correct way to say it. With all of that said, you may still find this story conventional and even familiar.
There is a common challenge all the characters in this story face: the challenge of making a living. How to have a little extra money once in a while to spend on the things we enjoy, build a retirement fund for some day in the future, and along the way pay for the largest expense of our lives: taxes.
As I’ve met with thousands of clients over the years, it has been interesting to discover that many of them, including my family and friends, have consistently summed up this quest in the simple phrase Trying to live the Dream.
The meaning of the American Dream, of course, can be debated for hours on end and has been described countless ways. However, it doesn’t have to mean being retired and sipping margaritas on some beautiful beach or mountaintop. Maybe it’s just having a little more balance in life and not having to consistently stress about finances.
No matter how you define this quest, no matter what political party you align yourself with, we can agree: The Dream is an elusive one to millions of Americans today.
When I first started practicing as a CPA and attorney, I thought I had found my calling. I felt I was helping people, and I truly enjoyed the work. However, I had no idea that the concept of tax planning could actually change lives—really change lives in a meaningful way.
I realized this when more and more clients ended up on my doorstep looking for basic life
planning as they tried to find the American Dream. They didn’t have anywhere else to turn. They would tell me that if they wanted some coaching
or education
on how to get ahead in the game, they would turn to a good book.
They weren’t going to call their financial planner—although he or she would be a great resource on how to build their retirement, invest cash, or maybe get the right mortgage. But the traditional financial planner didn’t have the tools to help them climb the corporate ladder any faster or start the right small business, and they certainly weren’t going to bring up the topic of real estate.
Meet with their lawyer? Most lawyers aren’t trained or have the expertise to run a real business. They just solve problems, or hopefully prevent them from happening. The insurance agent? The banker? Give me a break! They all have specific agendas, and thinking outside of the box and giving practical strategies about building wealth aren’t their strong points.
I suppose that left just the CPA, the person that they should certainly have as part of their team, but who most struggle to have a meaningful conversation with at any point during the year. Come on ... we have a better chance of communicating with a taxi driver in New York City than with our accountant. No offense, taxi drivers.
However, most CPAs have clients making money, don’t they? Even clients losing money, and hopefully a few living the American Dream. It’s not a reach to assume that the CPA could give us some type of advice about how to make more money and save on taxes.
This is where I started to realize the opportunity and power I had to change people’s lives!
Regrettably, for a whole host of reasons, millions of Americans don’t turn to a CPA for this critical advice and support.
I’m confident that if many taxpayers would just let their guard down for a moment, they might find their CPA is struggling to tell them something. That is where this story begins.
CONCEPT 1
THE SECRET TO TAX PLANNING
THE MEETING
It was a dreary day in March. You know the type of day. It was cold. The flowers had not yet started to bloom. One didn’t know if it was about to rain, snow, or just stay cloudy and bleak.
What made the day even more unbearable was it was the day we went to see our accountant. It wasn’t a meeting we looked forward to. Sometimes we would talk over the phone, or simply drop off our paperwork. Today, however, we were to meet.
Any red-blooded American knows what my wife and I were feeling as we walked up to the building. How much were we going to owe in taxes? Would we have the money to pay or would we be lucky enough to get a refund?
In years past I had sometimes taken it upon myself to prepare our own tax returns relying on what claimed to be the most cutting-edge software. But I still always felt I was missing something in the process. Maybe it was a particular deduction or just the lonely feeling of hoping to have someone tell me the tax return was OK.
Nevertheless, this year my wife and I had decided we ought to try IT again—that conversation with our CPA. The hope was that a planning meeting would actually help us save on some taxes. Maybe it would even benefit our retirement plans and we would accomplish wealth building,
as some have termed it.
My wife had confided in me on the way there that all she wanted was to simply understand the concepts we discussed in the ominous meeting about to occur. She was embarrassed to admit feeling vulnerable and uneducated when it came to discussions about taxes and our finances. I didn’t belittle her or make fun of her. Deep down I felt the same way, but couldn’t admit it. I was trying to lead us into the lion’s den with as much faith and confidence as I could.
We arrived a few minutes early hoping to become familiar with the surroundings and thus lessen the intimidation we would soon feel. The waiting room was worse than a dentist’s office. At least you knew the pain would be over soon with the dentist, but with taxes we assumed we would be paying the bill to Uncle Sam well into the summer. What have they said now? We don’t start earning our own income until some time in April? Ironically, it will add insult to injury when tax freedom day finally falls on the filing deadline of April 15th.
The meeting started out as it always had in the past. Let me see your records,
our CPA said. He lowered his glasses, started thumbing through everything—asking a few questions that we thought were insightful, at least for a moment, but the feeling was fleeting. We realized he was just looking for a number to plug into a specific box or place on a line in some forsaken IRS form.
I asked a question about saving some taxes this year, and he immediately brought up the list of itemized deductions. These I was familiar with, but really wondered if they had an impact. He said they did, but who knows? One just answers the questions hoping your CPA will smile and say, Great! I was hoping you would say that.
But he never does.
Where is the interest statement for your second mortgage?
... Didn’t you have some unreimbursed employee expenses at work this year?
he asked my wife. The typical questions simply caused us to regurgitate information, and no real planning was even considered.
Then came the comment from the CPA I most hated, Well ... thanks for bringing in your medical expenses, but you phase out because of your income.
He usually then chuckles and says, I’m sorry, you just make too much money.
I wonder to myself, it doesn’t feel like I make too much money. Why does he say it that