Most S-Corp owners leave $50K-$200K+ on the table every year - and their CPA never tells them.
Disconnected planning leads to missed opportunities and surprise tax bills
Your CPA sees your books once a year — by then it's too late to optimize. Opportunities have passed.
No systematic approach means overlooked deductions, credits, and retirement contributions worth tens of thousands.
No visibility into tax reserves until April surprise. Scrambling to find cash for unexpected tax bills.
No documentation trail for deductions taken. Hope-and-pray approach to IRS scrutiny.
Tax savings with nowhere to go. No plan for investing, retirement, or building long-term wealth.
No defensible salary analysis. One IRS audit away from reclassified distributions and back taxes.
Most CPAs only work on the 10% above the waterline. See the 90% of strategies hiding below the surface.
Why would you choose your CPA that way?
When you're choosing a physician, you don't shop for the cheapest one. You look for someone who will actually diagnose what's wrong—not just treat symptoms. Someone who stays current, looks at the whole picture, and catches problems before they become expensive.
Tax planning works the same way.
A low-cost CPA will file your return. That's the equivalent of checking your vitals and sending you home. But they're not running the diagnostic tests. They're not looking for the $50,000 in deductions hiding in your entity structure, your retirement accounts, or your real estate holdings. They're not coordinating your tax strategy with your wealth-building goals.
You already know the cost of a missed diagnosis in medicine. It compounds.
The cost of a missed tax strategy is the same. Every year you overpay is a year that money isn't working for you.
The question isn't "what does this cost?"
It's "what is this costing you not to have it?"
Calculate your true cost — including what goes to the IRS
What you're actually paying — including what goes to the IRS
"You didn't hire a cheap CPA. You hired an expensive one — you just paid the IRS instead of them."
See the difference between compliance-only tax prep and strategic tax optimization
| Feature | Traditional CPA | The Eiduk System™ |
|---|---|---|
| Approach | ✗ Reactive — files after year-end | ✓ Proactive — plans year-round |
| Tax Strategies | ✗ Not discussed | ✓ 80 documented strategies |
| Quarterly Reviews | ✗ Annual only | ✓ 4 strategy meetings/year |
| Retirement Planning | ✗ "Talk to a financial advisor" | ✓ Solo 401k, Cash Balance Plans |
| Bookkeeping | ✗ Separate provider | ✓ Included monthly |
| S-Corp Optimization | ✗ Basic compliance | ✓ Reasonable comp analysis |
| Documentation | ✗ Just the tax return | ✓ IRC citations for audit defense |
| Typical Result | Overpay taxes | $13k – $300k+ savings |
"I just need someone to file my return."
→ Traditional CPA is fine
"I want to stop overpaying and build wealth."
→ The Eiduk System™ is for you
Three integrated components working together to minimize taxes and build wealth
Tax Strategy Framework
Investment & Asset Management
Tax-Ready Bookkeeping
80 strategies organized into a systematic framework
The foundation that supports your tax strategies and wealth building
Books closed and reviewed every month — no year-end scramble
Quarterly estimates calculated and set aside — no April surprises
W-9 collection, 1099 prep and filing handled for you
Quarterly review meetings to catch issues and optimize
Systematic cash flow management — DIY assessment or fully managed ($97/mo)
Most tax strategists sell you on buying a short-term rental, a private jet, or some exotic write-off. That's not wealth building — that's a tax deduction that forces you into an investment you didn't need. Real wealth comes from extracting profit from your business and investing it consistently.
Your business already generates the income. The Cash Allocation System™ directs 5-15% of revenue to your Profit bucket before it disappears into overhead. Here's what happens when you invest it.
Let's identify exactly which strategies apply to your situation - and how much you could be keeping instead.