A new thread - so we can get right to the issue without complaints about all caps, multimillion dollar portfolio management firms who won't tell us who they are, and other small talk.
Fact of the matter - when going behind Turbo Tax returns, I find errors some 80% of the time. More often than not, the taxpayer has cheated himself -- on the average I would say between $700 and $1000, although I was able to reduce one lady's liability by some $4400 once. I think other tax preparers have experiences similar to mine.
However, we are not seeing the vast majority of Turbo Tax returns. The only ones we see are cases where the taxpayer doesn't have enough tax savvy to negotiate the interview, or other aberrations which Turbo Tax can't program around.
There are millions of Turbo Tax returns (practically ALL of their short forms) that we will never see, and the market for simple returns has been successfully invaded by Intuit. I'm not crazy about doing a $35 short-form, but if I did hundreds of them, this would probably be more profitable time-wise than the tougher returns that I do.
There are also millions of Turbo Tax users that could save money if they came to a preparer, but we will never see them either. These are "know-it-all" types. Engineers, attorneys, etc. who think Turbo Tax has made taxation simple. They have no idea how much money they are leaving on the table.
And being honest with each other, probably 70% of all returns are "short" forms, 1040As and 1040 EZs. We also know that for a short form, the tax refund/payment will be the same regardless of whether that return is filed by Turbo Tax, HRB, JH, or the finest CPA or EA money can buy.
I believe a realistic estimate of 25 million Turbo Tax returns, some 15 million of them have no opportunity for variance (short forms), another 5 million are people that we COULD help but won't have the opportunity because they think they know everything, and there are maybe another 5 million for people who cannot make relevant their electronic interview, are not computer-savvy, or can't deal with other complexities.
If my estimate above is reasonable, then when we post glowing results about rescuing Turbo-Tax users from the tar pit, saving them big money, and TurboTax creating new customers for us, we are only dealing with a small percentage of Turbo Tax users -- namely those whose situations are not adequate to deal with the software or too complex for them to deal properly with the interview.
When we give these testimonies we are focusing on those 5 million returns where the client should not have bought TurboTax to begin with. The REAL story is that we have lost the other 20 million returns to Intuit.
Fact of the matter - when going behind Turbo Tax returns, I find errors some 80% of the time. More often than not, the taxpayer has cheated himself -- on the average I would say between $700 and $1000, although I was able to reduce one lady's liability by some $4400 once. I think other tax preparers have experiences similar to mine.
However, we are not seeing the vast majority of Turbo Tax returns. The only ones we see are cases where the taxpayer doesn't have enough tax savvy to negotiate the interview, or other aberrations which Turbo Tax can't program around.
There are millions of Turbo Tax returns (practically ALL of their short forms) that we will never see, and the market for simple returns has been successfully invaded by Intuit. I'm not crazy about doing a $35 short-form, but if I did hundreds of them, this would probably be more profitable time-wise than the tougher returns that I do.
There are also millions of Turbo Tax users that could save money if they came to a preparer, but we will never see them either. These are "know-it-all" types. Engineers, attorneys, etc. who think Turbo Tax has made taxation simple. They have no idea how much money they are leaving on the table.
And being honest with each other, probably 70% of all returns are "short" forms, 1040As and 1040 EZs. We also know that for a short form, the tax refund/payment will be the same regardless of whether that return is filed by Turbo Tax, HRB, JH, or the finest CPA or EA money can buy.
I believe a realistic estimate of 25 million Turbo Tax returns, some 15 million of them have no opportunity for variance (short forms), another 5 million are people that we COULD help but won't have the opportunity because they think they know everything, and there are maybe another 5 million for people who cannot make relevant their electronic interview, are not computer-savvy, or can't deal with other complexities.
If my estimate above is reasonable, then when we post glowing results about rescuing Turbo-Tax users from the tar pit, saving them big money, and TurboTax creating new customers for us, we are only dealing with a small percentage of Turbo Tax users -- namely those whose situations are not adequate to deal with the software or too complex for them to deal properly with the interview.
When we give these testimonies we are focusing on those 5 million returns where the client should not have bought TurboTax to begin with. The REAL story is that we have lost the other 20 million returns to Intuit.
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