Saturday, February 16, 2008

Business revenue

Business revenue is income from activities that are ordinary for a particular corporation, company, partnership, or sole-proprietorship. For some business such as manufacturing businesses and grocery stores, most revenue is from the sale of goods. Service businesses such as law firms and barber shops receive most of their revenue from rendering services. Lending businesses such as car rentals and banks receive most of their revenue from fees and interest generated by lending assets to other organizations or individuals.
Revenues from a business's primary activities are reported as Sales, Sales revenue or Net sales. This excludes product returns and discounts for early payment of invoices. Most businesses also have revenue that is incidental to the business's primary activities, such as interest earned on deposits in a demand account. This is included in revenue but not included in Net Sales.[7] Sales revenue does not include sales tax collected by the business.
Other Revenue (a.k.a. Non-Operating Revenue) is revenue from peripheral (non-core) operations. For example, a company that manufactures and sells automobiles would record the revenue from the sale of an automobile as “’regular’” revenue. If that same company also rented a portion of one of its buildings, it would record that revenue as “other revenue” and disclose it separately on its income statement to show that it is from something other than its core operations.
A public company reports its total annual revenues based on its fiscal year. Public companies also report quarterly revenues.
Internally, companies break revenue down by operating segment, geographic region, and product line

Make Money Fast

The "Make Money Fast" chain letter encouraged readers of the email to forward one dollar in cash to a list of people provided in the text, and to add their own name and address to the bottom of the list after deleting the name and address at the top. Using the theory behind pyramid schemes, the resulting chain of money flowing back and forth would supposedly deliver a reward of thousands of dollars to the ones participating in the chain, as copies of their chain spread and more and more people sent one dollar to their address.
The text of "Make money fast" originally claimed to be "perfectly legal", citing Title 18, U.S. Code, Sections 1302 (which deals with postal lotteries) and 1341 (which deals with mail fraud).[4] The U.S. Postal Inspection Service cites 18 USC 1302[5] when it asserts the illegality of chain letters, including MMF:
[Chain letters are] illegal if they request money or other items of value and promise a substantial return to the participants. Chain letters are a form of gambling, and sending them through the mail (or delivering them in person or by computer, but mailing money to participate) violates Title 18, United States Code, Section 1302, the Postal Lottery Statute.[6]
It also asserts that "[r]egardless of what technology is used to advance the scheme, if the mail is used at any step along the way, it is still illegal."[6] The U.S. Postal Inspection Service asserts the mathematical impossibility that all participants will be winners, as well as the possibilities that participants may fail to send money to the first person listed, and the perpetrator may have been listed multiple times under different addresses and names, thus ensuring that all the money goes to the same person.[6]
As of this writing, few chain letters use the U.S. mails to transmit the money. A common chain letter suggests that the participant transfer $6 using the Paypal electronic funds transfer service to send $1 to each of 6 people. However, the mathematical impossibilities of the claims noted in the U.S. Postal Inspection Service blurb survives the change in medium and pyramid schemes are still illegal in most places around the world, possibly as investment frauds or consumer frauds or illegal lotteries. (You pay for what amounts to a tiny chance on a prize.)

Saturday, February 2, 2008

A new teleseminar series titled Follow My Success will be organized at followmysuccess.com. Each week followmysuccess.com will do a teleseminar with one of the top Internet marketing experts who will reveal their successful methods used for building profitable Internet businesses and making a lot of money online.Here are some of the insider tips you'll learn when joining Follow My Success series:
Robert Butwin will show how to build a massive team with the least amount of work and how you can copy his success...
Dale Calvert will teach you the proven ways to generate lead for your business...
Tellman Knudson will guide you to creating and growing lists which will generate multiple income streams for your online business...
Tom "Big Al" Schreiter delivers the goods to make you a better marketer, no matter how much you think you already know...
Johnny Wimbrey will show you his #1 secret for achieving complete success and will inspire you to reach your peak performance level...Interested to participate this teleseminar series? You may go to http://followmysuccess.com to find out how to get in this teleseminar series

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