RevMen
Well-known member
My boss does some pretty questionable things with the company's money. For instance, he owns the building and rents it to the company at easily twice what the going market rate is.
When he figures out quarterly profits for profit sharing (10% of profits are divided between him and the other 2 engineers in the company, yes he cuts himself in on the 10% he doesn't pay directly to himself) he rolls any losses from the previous quarter in. For instance, if there is a loss of $6000 in the first quarter, we start the second quarter at -$6000.
Is this a normal practice? I honestly don't know.
It was frustrating last year because, despite the poor economy, we actually had good second and third quarters. But for the first quarter we showed a loss (due very much in part to the boss taking a company-paid trip to Eastern Europe for 2 weeks), and rolling that loss forward ate up our quarterly profit figures for the rest of the year. Q2 and Q3 were my best quarters ever in my career and it was disheartening to not see any reward for making real money in a crappy economy.
When he figures out quarterly profits for profit sharing (10% of profits are divided between him and the other 2 engineers in the company, yes he cuts himself in on the 10% he doesn't pay directly to himself) he rolls any losses from the previous quarter in. For instance, if there is a loss of $6000 in the first quarter, we start the second quarter at -$6000.
Is this a normal practice? I honestly don't know.
It was frustrating last year because, despite the poor economy, we actually had good second and third quarters. But for the first quarter we showed a loss (due very much in part to the boss taking a company-paid trip to Eastern Europe for 2 weeks), and rolling that loss forward ate up our quarterly profit figures for the rest of the year. Q2 and Q3 were my best quarters ever in my career and it was disheartening to not see any reward for making real money in a crappy economy.