The 5 Things You Should Be Doing NOW to Close Out the Year

by | Oct 22, 2013 | Business-end-of-things | 4 comments

endofyearNo, your eyes are not deceiving you.  That calendar says it’s the end of October.

Look, I know you’re perfect, you don’t procrastinate, and you follow all your goals to the letter, so don’t go another word further reading today’s blog.  You’d just be wasting your time.

The rest of you read on.  Do as I say, not as I do, ’cause Lord knows I’m behind on a number of tasks I’d hoped to achieve by now.  Let me offer just 5 thoughts that might put you in better shape come Dec 31, 2013.

1) Have a chat with your accountant.  Or at least your financial planner, or your CPA, or your spouse…or whomever it is you plan your business finances with.  Chances are some tax codes have changed, you’re behind on posting transactions to your accounting software, or at the very least that accounting software has an upgrade you need.  Pay attention to this.  By January 1st, it may be too late to take advantage of some nuance in the law that could save you money.

2) Check your automatically recurring charges.  I keep an Evernote file on all the online charges I’ve scheduled to be paid automatically.  This might mean reviewing some PayPal transactions you’ve set on auto-pilot.  You might want to consider whether it’s even prudent for some of those charges to even be on automatic renewal.  Hard-Drive back-up (Carbonite?) Yup.  Anti-Virus?  YES!  But do you really need that subscription to SmugMug or PhotoBucket anymore?

3) Purge the crap.  I’m particularly guilty of this, ’cause I’m a pack-rat.  By purge, I mean equipment gathering dust in your studio, unnecessary files in DropBox, old file folders full of paper scripts on the shelf, old receipt from 7 years ago, audition files from 2010.  You get the drift.  Once you get into the spirit of “purge the crap”…it gets to be almost fun.

4) Update your .csv, .xls, or email lists.  This may be a low priority for you, but you know it’s hanging around back there in the cobwebs of your mind, and needs to be done.  Especially lists of current/past clients, and prospective clients.  If you’re set up to constantly update this list as each day goes by, congratulations, you’re actually organized and shouldn’t be reading these five suggestions anyway!  🙂   The rest of you/us probably have an email file FULL of names/addresses that need to be added to a mailing list somewhere.

5) Have someone listen to a sample of your audio-chain.  Seriously.  When’s the last time you did this?   Maybe your clients just haven’t taken the time to mention that something sounds kinda fuzzy lately.  Wires, cables, contacts, plugs, switches, and all manner of electrical connections CAN degrade over time, and the next thing you know, you have a less than optimal sound coming out of your studio.  This is something you should do as a matter of course every few months anyway.

So there you have it.  5 Ideas you probably knew already.  Or you knew them, but were ignoring them.  Or you knew them and have several suggestions to add to the list.  Great!  Let’s hear ’em!

CourVO

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4 Comments

  1. Debbie Irwin

    Dropbox vs. Carbonite vs. BitTorrent Synch?
    This article endorses Carbonite over Dropbox, but does Dropbox + BitTorrent Synch do the same thing?

    Reply
  2. Debbie Irwin

    Dropbox vs. Carbonite vs. BitTorrent Synch?
    This article endorses Carbonite over Dropbox, but does Dropbox + BitTorrent Synch do the same thing?

    Thanks for continuing to help us focus on the TO DO list!
    😉

    Reply
    • CourVO

      Deb,

      I have no idea what BitTorrent Sync is. Never hoid of it.

      I was not comparing DropBox and Carbonite. I don’t think of them as the same or equals.

      Both serve a different purpose, although I could see how DropBox could be a back-up system, but Carbonite is designed for that, is automated, and brainless. DropBox would take constant administration to make it a back-up solution.

      Does this make sense?

      Thanks for commenting!

      Dave Courvoisier

      Reply

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