PrintRunner Launches a Holiday Marketing Ideas Page
01.01.70
PrintRunner recently launched a Holiday Marketing Ideas page to help businesses prepare for the 2011 holiday season. Their top-selling holiday products will conveniently be located on one page.
Chatsworth, CA (PRWEB) November 08, 2011
PrintRunner.com recently launched a Holiday Marketing Ideas page to help businesses prepare for the 2011 holiday season. The company's top-selling holiday products will now be in one convenient location, making it easy for businesses to find all the printing services they need this holiday season.
"We've combined the 9 most popular holiday-related products for businesses under one roof and offer special discounts on these products," said PrintRunner Vice President of Marketing Igor Krakovsky. The top nine products include calendars, catalogs, club card flyers, flyers, flat holiday cards, folded holiday cards, post cards, rubber stamps and vinyl banners. PrintRunner hopes that their conveniently located and specialized product list will help business professionals find all the products they need quickly and easily.
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (press release)
IRS Chief Offers Ideas to Make Tax System More User-Friendly
01.01.70
By John D. McKinnon
While the GOP presidential candidates continue talking up a fundamental tax-code overhaul, the Internal Revenue Service is working on a few ideas of its own for streamlining and simplifying the system.
The IRS plans are less sweeping and ambitious than the flat tax proposals being pushed by the likes of Rick Perry or Newt Gingrich , or Herman Cain ’s 9-9-9 plan. But they could stand a better chance of being implemented, given the big political obstacles facing fundamental reform. They probably will become elements of any big revamp.
In a speech to the American Institute of CPAs, IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman offered new details on his vision for making the current tax system more user-friendly. A key element involves faster data matching to detect errors on returns quickly, so taxpayers can fix them during the filing season. That would reduce the need for time-consuming audits that now occur years after the fact.
Source: Wall Street Journal (blog)