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A number of companies can
process your payroll; you simply give them
your data and they handle all aspects of
payroll, from deductions to mailing or
depositing the checks. A Professional
Employer Organization (PEO), such as
Workforce Solutions, provides payroll
processing in addition to all the services
you would expect an internal Human Resources
department to provide, but it is a separate
entity from the organization to which it
delivers these services. PEOs deliver expert
and efficient employee-related
administration, sharing the responsibility
and risk of managing workers, including
making sure they get paid correctly and on
time.
Common Sense Approaches
If you are the do-it-yourself type, or
outsourcing doesn't make sense for your
particular business, you can reduce payroll
complexity and potential for error with a
common-sense approach to the task. A few
simple steps and tried-and-proven tools will
help enormously. Payroll has been around for
a long time, and many companies offer
products and solutions to simplify it.
You'll probably discover other ways to
mitigate the risks and hassles inherent in
payroll processing, but here are some
beginning steps:
Invest in time tracking systems. If your
business began with yourself as the sole
employee, you may not have planned for ways
to track employee time. In terms of payroll
processing, however, no step is more
fundamental. Times scribbled on pieces of
paper will not do and could bring severe
legal risk. You should invest the money
necessary to create or purchase a consistent
and reliable system for tracking employee
time.
Invest in payroll software. The tedious,
repetitive tasks required to process your
payroll is what computers were designed for.
Purchase high-quality payroll software that
is user-friendly and learn to use its
features.
The fewer people involved, the better. Every
person involved in processing your payroll
adds a layer of complexity and additional
potential for error. If at all possible,
place one person in charge of payroll and
make sure she has the tools she needs to do
the job consistently and correctly.
Use direct deposit. Depositing employees'
pay directly into their bank accounts saves
you the cost and hassle of printing and
delivering checks.
Keep good records. This is a legal
requirement in addition to a necessary step
in simplifying payroll. Your payroll
software should facilitate good electronic
records, but you should keep paper copies of
applicable reports and other records as well.
Plan for Common Errors
Not that you plan to make them, of course,
but you should have policies in place to
prevent common payroll errors and to quickly
recover should they occur. And chances are,
they will occur. The longer you are in
business and the more employees you have,
the higher your chances of error. The key is
to take steps to minimize them. Here are
some common payroll-related mistakes and
what you can do to prevent them or limit
their impact.
Missing IRS deadlines. When you're
withholding taxes from employees' pay, you
are required to deliver that money to the
IRS at least quarterly. The IRS is not
amused if you miss a deadline; you will
incur fines and penalties and possibly be
subject to other legal action. Your payroll
software likely includes a scheduling
feature to alert you when a payment is due,
but you should plan 2 or 3 additional layers
of redundancy to ensure the correct amount
goes out at the correct time. Your bank can
help by setting up automatic payments.
Clerical or data errors. Ranging from loss
of records to inaccurate data entry,
innocent mistakes by payroll workers can be
costly and time consuming. You can lessen
the frequency and pain of such mistakes by
having a consistent and meticulous payroll
records system, ensuring your employees are
thoroughly trained in all aspects of its
use, and strictly enforcing policies
designed to ensure accuracy.
Systemic errors. Your time tracking software
can make mistakes; punch clocks can be
inaccurate or smudge time/date stamps;
electronic time records can be lost or
corrupted. Though any type of electronic or
mechanical equipment can be incorrect or
fail altogether, the chances of such
problems are greater if you seek to cut
costs too aggressively by always buying the
cheapest solutions. Remember the maxim: you
get what you pay for. In the case of payroll-related
equipment, you may get a lot more than you
bargained for if you try to do it on the
cheap.
Incorrect withholding. If you offer benefits
to your employees, you might withhold
insurance premiums, 401(k) contributions,
and other amounts from employee pay in
addition to the taxes required by law. If
there are garnishments or other legal liens
on employee pay, payroll processing becomes
proportionally more complex. This is where
high-quality payroll software is
indispensable. If you calculate withholding
manually, you will make mistakes in this
area, and those mistakes can be costly.
With the large and growing number of
regulations dealing with how employees are
paid, the savvy business owner will explore
all possible options. In such a high-stakes
game, it makes good business sense to stack
the odds in your favor by learning as much
as you can about payroll processing and its
potential pitfalls. You will probably learn
that outsourcing your payroll to a PEO like
Workforce Solutions is the least costly and
most secure way to ensure that payroll
complexity doesn't impede the growth of your
business.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/making-payroll-easy-156606.html
About the Author:
Workforce Solutions - Human Resource
Outsourcing is located in Utah and provides
HR outsourcing services. Learn more about
payroll processing services .
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