I once considered working for Jackson Hewitt when I was in college. I went to "interview" with the franchisee who ran the office and within 2 minutes of the start of the interview I could tell the guy was a total scumbag. I wanted the position mostly to learn more about tax prep (and to have flexible hours and good pay) but the whole time he just talked about selling stuff - selling instant refunds, advance loans, etc. They even had a program where the "client" could file and walk out with a debit card that day with the refund loan on it. The interest rate they were charging was also close to usury. The guy also made several off-color remarks about the clientele - that they just wanted their money so they could go straight to the liquor store etc. I sat through about 5 more minutes of the interview, told him I wasn't interested, and walked out.
I remember seeing the dateline story sometime later about how many of these cheap tax preparer services were inflating client refunds so they could charge higher fees. I wonder if these places have gotten any better now that there are stricter paid preparer rules, but I imagine it's still a seedy business. I always tell friends to either use Turbo Tax if they have a relatively straightforward return and I look at what it spits out, or refer them to an actual CPA in town that I have worked with before and trust.
Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
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- Burnished Vanquisher of the Kooloohs
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Re: Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
"Pride cometh before thy fall."
--Dantonio 11:03:07
--Dantonio 11:03:07
Grixit wrote:Hey Diller: forget terms like "wages", "income", "derived from", "received", etc. If you did something, and got paid for it, you owe tax.
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- Caveat Venditor
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Re: Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
Having worked for a number of tax prep franchses, including Jackson Hewitt, I can tell you that no client was allowed to sign until everything was explained to them to their satisfaction. Even when I worked for a franchisee that ignored most recommended practices from corporate and fired me for giving discounts to clients who had been displaced by Hurricane Katrina (franchisee preferred one $400 client to five $100 clients).
To claim the JH kiosks in Wal-Mart are bait-and-switching is old news. I heard it many times during my four seasons working for JH (3-1/2 were at a Wal-Mart) but never from a client. Very few left after finding out they didn't qualify for a particular price or discount but many came back after finding out our fees were lower than the competitors.
Any price that was advertised was honored, if the client qualified.
A store trying to increase sales??? Shocking!!!! I never heard of such a thing!
To claim the JH kiosks in Wal-Mart are bait-and-switching is old news. I heard it many times during my four seasons working for JH (3-1/2 were at a Wal-Mart) but never from a client. Very few left after finding out they didn't qualify for a particular price or discount but many came back after finding out our fees were lower than the competitors.
Any price that was advertised was honored, if the client qualified.
A store trying to increase sales??? Shocking!!!! I never heard of such a thing!
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- Hereditary Margrave of Mooloosia
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Re: Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
And the value of a good accountant and or book-keeper should not be underestimated. But with most of them it is a once a year thing, instead of a month by month or quarterly process which gives the self-employed business owner a lot of confidence with profit generating services and in reducing expenses that are making the business not profitable. For those who go to sleazy accountants, they want to minimize paying them for questionable services. The sleazy ones, of which we see many examples on this board figure that because they are "saving" the customer considerable money, the customer will never complain. And usually they don't unless they start going down in audits; then they are bound and determined to take down the crooked preparer with them.Red Cedar PM wrote:I once considered working for Jackson Hewitt when I was in college. I went to "interview" with the franchisee who ran the office and within 2 minutes of the start of the interview I could tell the guy was a total scumbag. I wanted the position mostly to learn more about tax prep (and to have flexible hours and good pay) but the whole time he just talked about selling stuff - selling instant refunds, advance loans, etc. They even had a program where the "client" could file and walk out with a debit card that day with the refund loan on it. The interest rate they were charging was also close to usury. The guy also made several off-color remarks about the clientele - that they just wanted their money so they could go straight to the liquor store etc. I sat through about 5 more minutes of the interview, told him I wasn't interested, and walked out.
I remember seeing the dateline story sometime later about how many of these cheap tax preparer services were inflating client refunds so they could charge higher fees. I wonder if these places have gotten any better now that there are stricter paid preparer rules, but I imagine it's still a seedy business. I always tell friends to either use Turbo Tax if they have a relatively straightforward return and I look at what it spits out, or refer them to an actual CPA in town that I have worked with before and trust.
'There are two kinds of injustice: the first is found in those who do an injury, the second in those who fail to protect another from injury when they can.' (Roman. Cicero, De Off. I. vii)
'Choose loss rather than shameful gains.' (Chilon Fr. 10. Diels)
'Choose loss rather than shameful gains.' (Chilon Fr. 10. Diels)
Re: Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
Can't get a straight answers from any of those mega tax preparers about their fees either last year or this year? Can anyone help me? Thanks.
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- Basileus Quatlooseus
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Re: Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
Most quality return preparers cannot and will not give you a fee before they have prepared your return. They will likely charge based on the forms needed. Simple 1040 with only Schedule A? $XX Add child credit form? $Y. USUALLY by telling them what forms you filed last year they should be able to give you a "ball-park" estimate. However, if when you go in they discover that in 2012, you spent six months trying day-trading, your bill will definately be higher.
Little boys who tell lies grow up to be weathermen.
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- Eighth Operator of the Delusional Mooloo
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Re: Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
Speaking as one who spent over 35 years as a tax consultant, there is nothing so absolutely useless to our economy as the tax preparation industry. Absolutely nothing of worth is created. It is simply a national disgrace that there is even a need for these firms to exist at all. Yes, what they do is legal. And anyone engaged in a legal activity is going to do whatever they can to increase business. But that is not the heart of the problem. The problem is that in anything approaching a rational world, they are needed at all. The very concept that simple wage earners with standard deductions should have to pay anyone for tax preparation is absurd.
My choice early in life was to either be a piano player in a whorehouse or a politican. And to tell the truth there's hardly any difference.
Harry S Truman
Harry S Truman
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- Quatloosian Ambassador to the CaliCanadians
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Re: Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
Agreed, and it is no different here in Canada. I spent my entire career as a tax accountant and every year I would sit down and prepare my own tax return by hand. About as simple as you can get, one employer paying me wages, some investment interest, standard deductions. Just a matter of principle. I felt I should be able to fill out a simple personal return, tedious as it might be. About a decade ago I gave up. I just couldn't get it right with all the schedules and calculations for credits, surtaxes, federal and provincial taxes etc. Everything has to have a supplementary schedule and sometimes they have sub-schedules, it was endless. So now I have my wife do it (accountant also) using a tax preparation program.Duke2Earl wrote:Speaking as one who spent over 35 years as a tax consultant, there is nothing so absolutely useless to our economy as the tax preparation industry. Absolutely nothing of worth is created. It is simply a national disgrace that there is even a need for these firms to exist at all. Yes, what they do is legal. And anyone engaged in a legal activity is going to do whatever they can to increase business. But that is not the heart of the problem. The problem is that in anything approaching a rational world, they are needed at all. The very concept that simple wage earners with standard deductions should have to pay anyone for tax preparation is absurd.
What used to be a four page form has now gotten beyond the ability of the general public to personally complete so everybody ends up going to tax preparers. No rational reason except the government's demand for more and more information and the overwhelming complexity of the Income Tax Act.
"Yes Burnaby49, I do in fact believe all process servers are peace officers. I've good reason to believe so." Robert Menard in his May 28, 2015 video "Process Servers".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XeI-J2PhdGs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XeI-J2PhdGs
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- Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
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Re: Walmart and Jackson Hewitt: Shady business
Part of what I do for a living is preparing U.S. Federal income tax returns. Overwhelming complexity seems like a perfectly rational reason to me......Burnaby49 wrote:......No rational reason except the government's demand for more and more information and the overwhelming complexity of the Income Tax Act.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet