Entrenomics to Begin Offering Tax Education for Small Businesses Across the United States

On the heels of Republican gubernatorial candidate Rob McKenna’s release of his jobs plan Tuesday, national entrepreneurial education firm, Entrenomics, will be adding small business tax strategy education to their business owner workshops. Entrenomics’ signature workshops have focused on entrepreneurial behavior patterns, profiling and how those tendencies can be applied to the business in a way that usually leads to more profitable sales.

Seattle, WA, May 04, 2012 --(PR.com)-- On the heels of Republican gubernatorial candidate Rob McKenna’s release of his jobs plan Tuesday, national entrepreneurial education firm, Entrenomics, will be adding small business tax strategy education to their business owner workshops. Entrenomics’ signature workshops have focused on entrepreneurial behavior patterns, profiling and how those tendencies can be applied to the business in a way that usually leads to more profitable sales. In fact, Scott Shane of Bloomberg BusinessWeek reported today that “The new monthly Intuit (INTU) Small Business Revenue index, which is based on data from 200,000 small companies that use QuickBooks Online software for financial record keeping, reveals that average revenues are up 9.5 percent since the recovery began.”

But, Why Now?
With candidates across the nation focusing on small business tax, as well as Rep. Cantor's small-business tax cut bill passing in the House (235-173), why is Entrenomics interfering with something that many claim the government has under control?

Even though this bill offers up to 20 percent tax deductions to companies with fewer than 500 workers, Shane asserts in his Bloomberg BusinessWeek article that he does not expect that the bill will pass in the Democratic-controlled Senate. Entrenomics’ research shows that the majority of small business owners rank their tax burden as a major concern and although the Democratic-controlled Senate may defeat this bill, Entrenomics takes a note from President Obama, who said:

“Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.”

Entrenomics is not only committed to being a positive change in the American economy, but in helping small business owners and their employees get more of what they want from their business, regardless of politics. With President Obama referring to small business as the backbone of the economy and Donald Trump referring to Mitt Romney as a small business guy, the one thing that seems consistent is that small business matters, and Entrenomics is doing its part to empower small business owners across the nation.
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Peter Sanok
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