Terry Scott in this exclusive interview explains how every dollar you miss shrinks your margin as a business person.

 


Recent interview about my work with clients about tax savings; especially the R&D tax credit and more! 

Interviewer: Terry, when you talk with business owners, you start with a simple premise. Every dollar you miss shrinks your margin. What do you mean by that?

Terry Scott: It really is that plain. Profit margins do not grow by accident. They grow when you find what is already leaking out of the business. At All Solutions Known, we focus on cash flow first. We unlock hidden savings, because profit margins don’t grow themselves. That is also why I often point people to [www.KnowCashFlow.com](http://www.KnowCashFlow.com). It gives them a quick starting point to see where money may be slipping through the cracks.

Interviewer: Most owners assume “tax savings” means waiting until tax time. You disagree.

Terry Scott: Completely. Many owners treat tax strategy like a yearly event, but the best opportunities show up when deadlines are close and decisions are being made right now. When owners act earlier, they keep more cash in their account during the year, not after the fact. That cash becomes payroll, equipment, marketing, debt payoff, or breathing room. When people ask where to begin, I tell them to visit [www.KnowCashFlow.com](http://www.KnowCashFlow.com) because the fastest win is often simply identifying what you qualify for and what you have been missing.

Interviewer: Let’s talk about one of the most misunderstood opportunities. The R and D tax credit. A lot of owners hear that name and tune out.

Terry Scott: That name has probably cost business owners billions. People hear “R and D” and they picture lab coats, test tubes, and a giant research budget. In reality, the credit has evolved and the door is much wider than most people realize. If a company is developing or improving products, processes, software, techniques, or even how they manufacture and deliver, they may have qualifying activity.

Interviewer: What types of businesses tend to qualify?

Terry Scott: Manufacturers are the obvious ones, but it goes well beyond that. Fabrication, engineering, software development, architecture, food and beverage, farming and agriculture. The common thread is that employees are doing technical work, improvement work, testing, quality assurance, automation, streamlining, or building better ways to produce results. Those efforts often translate into qualified research expenditures. It is a term that sounds intimidating, but the actual activities are common inside real businesses.

Interviewer: What makes your approach different than what many owners experience with a CPA?

Terry Scott: Many firms take a narrow pass. They might choose two or three employees, call part of their payroll “R and D,” and move on. Sometimes the business gets a small credit and assumes that is the ceiling. But the opportunity is usually in the details, across the whole organization.

Our approach looks at the business more granularly. Instead of assuming only the engineering team counts, we analyze roles and activities across departments. An administrative role may still support qualifying work depending on what they actually do. The goal is to capture every legitimate dollar that the rules allow, not leave value on the table because it is inconvenient.

Interviewer: Give me a real world example of why that matters.

Terry Scott: I have seen companies think they were “already taking it” and the number was tiny. Then, with a deeper review, the benefit was dramatically larger because we examined the full picture. That is why I tell owners not to stop at “yes, we take that.” The right question is “are we capturing it correctly and completely?”

Interviewer: What does this do for cash flow?

Terry Scott: It can be significant. A credit is dollar for dollar. That is why it matters. If a business nets a real six figure benefit, that can be the equivalent of having to generate several million dollars in new revenue to produce the same after tax outcome. Owners feel that difference immediately.

If someone wants to understand whether their business activities fit, they should start at [www.KnowCashFlow.com](http://www.KnowCashFlow.com). That is where we help you see what you might qualify for, and it frames the conversation around cash flow, not just tax paperwork.

Interviewer: You also work with commercial property owners on cost segregation. What is it, in plain language?

Terry Scott: Cost segregation is one of the cleanest ways to improve cash flow for property owners who purchased, built, or renovated commercial property. It is a tax planning strategy that accelerates depreciation in a proper, rules based way. The impact can feel immediate because it can reduce taxes due, and that changes what the owner has to send to the IRS.

Interviewer: Why do so many owners miss it?

Terry Scott: Because the default method is slow and simple. The IRS allows commercial buildings to be depreciated over a long timeline. That approach ignores a basic business truth. Cash today is better than cash tomorrow. Also, most owners are not keeping the carpet, signage, wiring, parking lot improvements, and interior components for decades. Yet the default method treats much of the building as if it lasts forever.

Cost segregation breaks the building into components and places each component into the proper category based on IRS guidelines. That shifts a portion of the cost into shorter life categories, which increases depreciation earlier. Earlier depreciation often means less tax paid now, which means more cash retained now.

Interviewer: How does that translate into “instantaneous” cash flow, as you put it?

Terry Scott: Many businesses prepay taxes during the year. They set aside money, make quarterly payments, and hold funds expecting a certain tax bill. When we identify a significant depreciation benefit, the owner may not need to send as much. The money they were about to pay can stay in the business. Even before the paperwork is finalized, owners understand the math and the relief is real, because it impacts decisions they are making right now.

Interviewer: What kinds of properties tend to be the best fit?

Terry Scott: Apartment complexes, assisted living facilities, auto dealerships, hotels, manufacturers, medical offices, and property management portfolios. Also any business that does major renovations or leasehold improvements. The more meaningful the property costs and improvements, the more meaningful the potential benefit.

Interviewer: You keep bringing this back to a broader theme. Hidden savings and margin protection.

Terry Scott: Exactly. Owners are under pressure from payroll, insurance costs, interest rates, supply chain realities, and competition. They cannot “wish” a margin into existence. We unlock hidden savings, because profit margins don’t grow themselves. Whether it is R and D credits, cost segregation, or other incentives and audits, the objective is the same. Put cash flow back where it belongs, inside the business.

Interviewer: If someone reading this is busy and wants a simple action plan, what do you tell them?

Terry Scott: Start with clarity, then take fast, practical steps.

First, identify whether your business has qualifying activities or qualifying property. If you are improving products, processes, software, manufacturing performance, quality, or reliability, or if you own or have renovated commercial property, you are worth a closer look.

Second, do not assume you do not qualify. Most of the people who qualify think they do not. That is not a slogan, it is a pattern.

Third, take action while deadlines still allow you to capture the most value. Timing matters.

And the easiest place to begin is [www.KnowCashFlow.com](http://www.KnowCashFlow.com). It is designed to help you take the first step without turning it into a project that drags on for months.

Final note from Terry Scott: If you have been thinking, “I will deal with this later,” later is exactly how money stays unclaimed. Every dollar you miss shrinks your margin, and the window to capture certain benefits can close faster than people realize. Visit [www.KnowCashFlow.com](http://www.KnowCashFlow.com) now. We unlock hidden savings, because profit margins don’t grow themselves. Do it today, not when the opportunity has already passed.











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