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Find the Lost Dollars is the ultimate business management guide for Architecture, Engineering and Environmental Firms.
Abridged Version of the Best-seller update in 2017.
This book tells how to find lost money in your accounting books before and after a crippling economy. It explains if business closes how it would have a devastating effect on mankind from diaper to depends. The book explains how a simple accounting error can ruin the economy and may have contributed to stores or businesses closing before and after the pandemic. Read this book and find your lost MONEY!
Jim Paul's meteoric rise took him from a small town in Northern Kentucky to governor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, yet he lost it all--his fortune, his reputation, and his job--in one fatal attack of excessive economic hubris. In this honest, frank analysis, Paul and Brendan Moynihan revisit the events that led to Paul's disastrous decision and examine the psychological factors behind bad financial practices in several economic sectors. This book--winner of a 2014 Axiom Business Book award gold medal--begins with the unbroken string of successes that helped Paul achieve a jet-setting lifestyle and land a key spot with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. It then describes the circumstances leading up to Paul's $1.6 million loss and the essential lessons he learned from it--primarily that, although there are as many ways to make money in the markets as there are people participating in them, all losses come from the same few sources. Investors lose money in the markets either because of errors in their analysis or because of psychological barriers preventing the application of analysis. While all analytical methods have some validity and make allowances for instances in which they do not work, psychological factors can keep an investor in a losing position, causing him to abandon one method for another in order to rationalize the decisions already made. Paul and Moynihan's cautionary tale includes strategies for avoiding loss tied to a simple framework for understanding, accepting, and dodging the dangers of investing, trading, and speculating.
Georgie Girafe uses his detective skills to help Monkey find his lost money.
A humorous and horrible tale of real estate investing gone awry. So many are clamoring to scoop up their first rental property, but when things can go so right they can also go so wrong. Read and learn from my mistakes so you too don't experience this tale of woe.
There is so many millions of lost personal and business type listings over thousands of pages of UCP (Unclaimed Property) sites. Granted, most are under $100. Also, there are thousands of nonprofit organizations with lost money. Some have lost money in all fifty states, Australia and most of Canada's providences. Several organizations or companies are no longer active, I often wonder if they HAD this lost money that was meant for them...would they still be active? I look at it like this, I have found 60 BILLION DOLLARS, $25 of it was mine. I feel somehow, I have a responsibility to tell others what I found and how to find it. With that said, there is multi-millions of lost dollars out there for people and the estates of their relatives that is easy to reclaim. However, I believe the billions more is harder to find unless you know a few tricks and know how things work in the cyber world of lost money. Remember, 60 billion dollars isn't something the states want to easily give up...even if it is rightfully yours. So, I have 20 years of money finding experience of which I am about to show you...tricks, short cuts, hidden money and tips.
Two months before David Silverman’s 32nd birthday, he visited the Charles Schwab branch in the basement of the World Trade Center to wire his father’s life savings towards the purchase of the Clarinda Typesetting company in Clarinda, Iowa. Typo tells the true story of the Clarinda company’s last rise and fall — and with it one entrepreneur’s story of what it means to take on, run, and ultimately lose an entire life’s work. This book is an American dream run aground, told with humor despite moments of tragedy. The story reveals the impact of losing part of an entire industry and answers questions about how that impacts American business. The reader sees in Clarinda’s fate the potential peril faced by every company, and the lessons learned are applicable to anyone who wants to run his or her own business, succeed in a large corporation, and not be stranded by the reality of shifting markets, outsourcing, and, ultimately, capitalism itself.
“An intriguing amalgam of personal memoir, philosophical speculation, natural lore, cultural history, and art criticism.” —Los Angeles Times From the award-winning author of Orwell's Roses, a stimulating exploration of wandering, being lost, and the uses of the unknown Written as a series of autobiographical essays, A Field Guide to Getting Lost draws on emblematic moments and relationships in Rebecca Solnit's life to explore issues of uncertainty, trust, loss, memory, desire, and place. Solnit is interested in the stories we use to navigate our way through the world, and the places we traverse, from wilderness to cities, in finding ourselves, or losing ourselves. While deeply personal, her own stories link up to larger stories, from captivity narratives of early Americans to the use of the color blue in Renaissance painting, not to mention encounters with tortoises, monks, punk rockers, mountains, deserts, and the movie Vertigo. The result is a distinctive, stimulating voyage of discovery.