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Virtual Assistants Kansas City MO

Keeping payroll costs down is just one of the many reasons to use a Virtual Assistant for your business. Read on and knwo more details.

Bell Richard I
(816) 531-5620
Vfw Bldg
Kansas City, MO
Beaubien Richard
(816) 455-1235
4770 N Belleview Ave Ste 101
Kansas City, MO
Accountaxx Accountin
(816) 923-0781
5928 E 40th Ter
Kansas City, MO
Payroll Service Ensured
(816) 436-3008
7269 N Oak Trfy
Kansas City, MO
Candice Bookkeeping
(816) 997-9124
7146 Prospect Ave.
Kansas City, MO
Blanck And Lancey
(816) 531-4290
210 Westport Rd
Kansas City, MO
Acctnt Payroll Express
(816) 931-4229
105 Ward Pkwy
Kansas City, MO
Professional Accounting Services
(816) 436-4006
7915 N Oak Trfy Ste 120
Kansas City, MO
Northland Payroll Services Llc
(816) 468-6700
200 Nw 72nd St
Kansas City, MO
Addon Data Services
(816) 822-2722
7427 Troost Ave
Kansas City, MO

Virtual Assistants

If business is picking up and you can’t do all the things you need to get done by yourself (or with your existing staff), consider outsourcing some work to a virtual assistant (VA). No, the assistant isn’t an avatar; he or she is a real person that works remotely from you. The VA is not your employee but rather an independent contractor with his or her own business, and there are many benefits to working with one.

Why Use a VA

Increasing the number of people on your payroll may add more costs to your overhead than salary alone. In figuring the cost of an employee, to the salary you pay also add the cost of workers compensation, unemployment insurance, and the employer’s share of Social Security and Medicare taxes, as well as any benefits you provide to your staff.

Even though there’s a payroll tax holiday in place for any new employee you take on before the end of 2010 (you don’t have to pay the Social Security portion of FICA for the balance of this year), the tax break doesn’t amount to savings sufficient to offset all of the tax, insurance and benefit costs of an employee. For a VA, you have no tax responsibilities, other than to provide an annual Form 1099-MISC if your VA is a sole proprietor. You don’t pay insurance and benefits either.

Saving money isn’t the only reason to use a VA; space may be a consideration for you as well. Instead of obtaining larger quarters, your assistant occupies his/her own space (and the costs associated with it). Your VA also supplies his/her own computer, Internet access, and other supplies (although some costs may be billed to you per agreement).

Finding a VA

As with an employee, you’ll want to find a VA with whom you can work well and who is qualified to do the work you need to have done.

Find VAs through:

  • AssistU
    Post your needs here and receive responses from interested prospects.
  • AVirtualResume
    Check listings under skills. Note: There are no listings under certain skills, such as social networking.
  • International Virtual Assistants Association
    Check a directory to find VAs who are members of this association.
  • Virtual Assistance Chamber of Commerce
    Select a listing from the directory of members, or submit a request for partnership and receive responses from interested prospects. To guide you through the selection process, a handy and informative client’s guide ( www.virtualassistantnetworking.com/find.htm ) is available.

You’ll want to make your needs clear from the start so you can find the appropriate person to work with. Do you need a VA to do bookkeeping? Social media work? Scheduling? While some people may be able to provide an array of skills, make sure you find someone with expertise in the areas you deem most important for you.

A personal interview—by phone—is highly useful to make sure you can communicate well with each other. Some VAs, for example, may be on the other side of the world and English may not be their first language; decide whether this is a p...

Author: Barbara Weltman

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