Forum Moderators: skibum
is this really accurate? I've never heard that before. I just started in AM recently, and I'm making a decent bit (over 100K/year if it stays where it's at), but I haven't filed taxes yet. I figured I'd do it at the end of the year. how often are you supposed to, if not yearly?
also, how extreme can the expenses be? I bought a car recently- I needed it for personal use as well as business. I don't make giant trips or anything, but I do need it from time to time (get to the bank, best buy, etc). can I write something like that off?
Definitely ask an accountant about this, but don't accpet an off-the-cuff answer, such as "you never want to pay the interest and penalties." Instead, he or she should run through a couple of tax scenarios for you under some of your profitability and witholding assumptions.
Very few things in taxes are black and white.
as far as how long ago I started... I started working on a site that at the time I thought was a non-profit deal. it got really popular, tried adsense, eventually started making decent money with that... from there I found some SEO forums/WebmasterWorld and got into more AM stuff and launched some commercial sites. probably about 4 months into things so far (before that I had done work on some sites, but it wasn't with the intention to make money)
Another example: you live at home with mom, who pays for the cable bill, which includes your 3-meg broadband connection ;) from her checking account. She invoices you for that portion, and you write her a check from your business account.
Wouldn't this screw mom and throw up red flags for her. She invoices you? Shouldn't she show income for this so called invoice? What is an alternative solution?
The only way this would be bad for the mom is if she has a business of her own and cannot expense the whole cable bill herself.
Besides, the only red flags are in the form of 1099's you send to your contractors. You don't file one on your mom, I hope.
Same thing happens in our office: one person leases the suite from the building for, say $4k / month. We sublease half of it from them for $2k / month. We're not screwing them, by asking for an invoice and writing a check. While it is cash into their account, it's offset by the cash out to the building.
eh, like I said, I've really been working on the site for more like a year- but the money just started recently. before four months ago, I wasn't earning a cent. (I had no idea how much my traffic was worth and had no advertisers)
I've got one "flagship" site (100,000+ pageviews a day), then a bunch of smaller ones... probably about 15 or so total, 5 of which are fairly well developed
I've still got a lot to learn, and I'm trying really hard to diversify and not rely on my flagship one. It's working, but I'm not doing nearly as well elsewhere ;)
I've got one "flagship" site (100,000+ pageviews a day), then a bunch of smaller ones... probably about 15 or so total, 5 of which are fairly well developedI've still got a lot to learn, and I'm trying really hard to diversify and not rely on my flagship one. It's working, but I'm not doing nearly as well elsewhere ;)
Cool, what would be the percent of profits for the flagship vs the other sites? 90-10?60-40? and are these other sites in the same industry as the flagship one?
Just trying to paint a better picture :) not that it will help me much in mine.
I got very lucky with the site. the EPC increased about 5 to 7 times over since I first started, and it's stayed high.