Psychologists
agree that the ability to concentrate is key to achieving our goals.
But today's high-tech world is full of distractions, from thousands of
cable TV channels to millions of internet sites, with smart phones
constantly within reach. Some experts say our attention span is actually
shrinking. So should it be any surprise that Americans have fallen in
love with Twitter, the online social networking and "microblogging" site
that lets users send and read "tweets" limited to no more than 140
characters?
Twitter
attracted confusion (and no small amount of scorn) when it debuted in
2006 — co-founder Jack Dorsey admitted that the service is "a short
burst of inconsequential information." But there are now more than 200
million "monthly active users" posting more than 500 million tweets per
day. Singer Katy Perry currently has the most followers, at 46.8
million. She's trailed by Justin Bieber (46.7 million), Lady Gaga (40.4
million), and Barack Obama (39.5 million). Twitter's ubiquitous
"hashtag," the pound sign (#) that denotes keywords, appears everywhere,
including at the Oscars, the Super Bowl, and the floor of the U.S.
Senate.
Twitter still doesn't make any money. But that didn't stop them from going public last week. On Thursday, Twitter issued 70 million shares at $26 each. The price nearly doubled in early trading before closing at $41.65 on Friday.
And it made a lot of people rich. Co-founders Evan Williams and Jack
Dorsey are billionaires. CEO Dick Costello, whose 2012 cash salary was
just $200,000, is worth $300 million. All told, about 1,600 investors
and employees became millionaires last week. (If you planned on buying a
house or a Porsche in Silicon Valley, plan on standing in line and
paying more!)
What does that all mean for our friends at the IRS? It means a #windfall, that's what!
- Twitter has granted non-executive employees over 92 million "restricted stock units" which will essentially convert to stock over the next several years. Employees will owe regular income tax of up to 39.6% plus Medicare tax of up to 3.8% on the value of those shares. They'll owe an average of $420,000 each in federal tax!
Twitter's
investors and employees have some big tax planning challenges ahead.
They're going to need more than just 140 characters to take advantage of
all the legal strategies available to pay less. It works the same for
you, even if you're not America's newest billionaire. If you want to #keepwhatyoumake, you need a plan. So call us now before December 31, when you can still do something about it!
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