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How To Improve The Company’s Cash Flow?

How To Improve The Company’s Cash Flow?

Introduction

Cash flow is the amount of money coming in and out of the business. It is a great indication of an entity’s liquidity or its ability to short term obligations. Positive cash flow in the form of cash sales and collections means that the incoming cash is higher than what is going out like purchases and payments. A shorter cash flow cycle or the amount of time needed for a business to convert assets to profits indicates robust profitability. Accounting services in Singapore include cash flow audit and design to improve liquidity and profitability.

The goal is to sustain a positive cash flow at a shorter cash flow cycle. However, the cycle is also dependent on one’s business model and operations. The time between spending cash in making the purchases of raw materials to collections on sales is not totally controllable. But, there are ways we can liven up sustained positive cash flow.

1. Improve collection processes

A significant amount of your cash inflow could be stuck in cash receivables. These liquid assets can easily turn bad and hold up your access to cash. Take a closer look at your Accounts Receivables (commonly known as Trade Debtors). How long is the average collection? Do you see a lot of overdue accounts? Give incentives to good clients and early payors and apply more aggressive collection efforts to delinquent accounts. You may also have to cancel the bad accounts.

2. Keep a closer eye on expenditures

Review your expenses. Check on the items that take a chuck of your expenditures. You might want to find more affordable alternatives or shift to better suppliers. Also, take a look into the smaller items, many of these are avoidable like the interest expenses and penalties.

3. Improve sales campaigns

Call on your sales team to boost their marketing efforts. Are your marketing campaigns still relevant and effective? Is your packaging outdated? Discounted sales and promotions are great at driving up sales, but could negatively affect profitability. Review your customers’ buying patterns and behavior. Do you have more repeat customers or complaints?

4. Open new markets

Widening your customer range will bring in more buyers and improved sales. There are plenty of ways to open new markets – branch out to a new market segment with different products, develop new products relevant to your existing ones, open stores in new locations, or open an online store to capture the online market.

5. Manage inventory

Inventory is ready-to-sell items that are kept in the warehouse. They are liquid assets stuck in storage. Furthermore, keeping your inventory safe costs money, which adds your expenses. Good forecasting and inventory management will ensure enough goods at hand while keeping the warehousing expenses at a minimum.

What Affect Company’s Cash Flow

A business, economic, or environmental crisis can throw off even the most careful and intensive business planning. Natural disasters and unforeseen events are unpredictable and immeasurable. Although we can set aside funds and prepare procedures in preparation for it happening, we cannot fully assess its effects on the business.

In any business crisis, there are several ways we can quickly implement in order to sustain positive cash flow and save the business.

1. Injecting fresh capital

Find new investors who can bring in new capital to the company. Owners can also add in new financing to ensure liquidity and continued business operations.

2. Emergency loans

You can secure term loans to carry the business over the rough patch. Your business bank can offer quick business loans at reasonable interest rates.

3. Discounted Sales

Converting liquid assets to cash through discounted sales is a good way of bringing in badly needed cash. It will also eliminate old stocks and slow-moving items.

4. Government Aids

Governments often provide a helping hand during economic disasters and business crises. In Budget 2020, Singapore Government has announced relief measures to help businesses tide over the trying times. Any business entity can claim for government help, provided that they fulfill the key eligibility criteria. Here are the few statutory bodies and organizations in Singapore that help companies to cope with the company cashflow during this coronavirus crisis:

a. “Helping Our Promising Enterprises” (HOPE) Fund

S$5-million was launched through the partnership between Singapore Business Federation Young Business Leaders Network (SBF-YBLN) and Goldbell Evolution Network (GEN) to provide an accessible short-term working capital loans for local SMEs. Each company can take a fixed quantum of S$50,000 with a tenure of 12 months, at a minimal administrative fee. The affordable interest rates range from 0.5% to 0.75% per month. Funding is secured over the personal guarantee of the company’s directors or shareholders. The allowance to defer the first loan repayment to start from the third month onwards is the HOPE Fund’s attractive feature.

b. Enterprise Financing Scheme – SME Working Capital Loan (EFS-WCL) by Enterprise Singapore

The loan quantum capping is increased to S$600,000 from the previous S$300,000 and the life-span’s extension to March 2021 enhance the previous scheme to help in financing a company’s daily operational cashflow needs for the unexpected COVID-19 challenge. Despite that the risk-share is also increased, the standard loan recovery procedure remains. If the company has an on-going overseas project, the management may also consider the Project Loan scheme.

c. Singapore Budget 2020

Generous provisions in the Budget 2020 were set to provide for the different needs of households, workers, and businesses affected by the pandemic COVID-19. The obligations to pay are reduced through these useful schemes such as the popular Corporate Income Tax Rebate, Property Tax Rebate (up to 30% of the property tax payable) and one-time offset for 3 months of staff wages under Jobs Support Scheme. The enhanced Wage Credit Scheme gives 20% of co-funding for salary increments in 2019, which is higher than the rate for 2020. This is a valuable benefit as a result of a past event. Additional support is also available to help the industries affected by the coronavirus – tourism, aviation, food and beverage, retail, and point-to-point transport services.

d. Temporary Bridging Loan Programme (TBLP) for Tourism Sector

TBLP, an additional cashflow support for local SMEs in the tourism industry, is a newly-introduced measure. Eligible enterprises can obtain loans, from participating financial institutions, of up to $1-million, with the interest rate capped at 5% per annum. It is open for application till March 2021 and the maximum loan tenure is 5 years.

e. DBS Relief Measures and Support

DBS Bank Limited understands that managing the cash flow needs is the top priority of every company. Besides being one of the participating financial institutions under TBLP, the other short-term liquidity relief measures and initiatives offered by DBS include but not limited to:

• DBS customers with existing secured property loans would only need to service the loan interest for the next 6 months, upon effect.
• The due dates for import facilities will be extended up to 60 days.
• Rebates are offered for certain bank services.
• Small business loans (up to S$50,000) can be obtained within 1 working day upon loan acceptance, without the need to submit any financial report.

Singapore Finance Minister will deliver the supplementary Budget on the coming Thursday, March 26. The supplementary measures are additional support to assist households, workers and businesses in surviving through the coronavirus outbreak. We will share the business-related measures in our Facebook and LinkedIn pages. Stay tune!

Do you have other questions or want to know more on how to improve your company’s cash flow? Get the right advice coming from the experts on accounting and corporate secretarial solutions.

Contact Mighty Glory Corporate Solutions today and let us discuss your business needs.

How To Choose The Right Accountant For Your Business?

How To Choose The Right Accountant For Your Business?

Introduction

The accountant is a vital team member of your business. Accountants are the people to call for your financial reporting, analysis and taxation as part of your company’s compliance requirements in Singapore. The ideal accountant should have the expertise and knowledge of diversified business industries, law and regulations which are important, invaluable and inevitable in business.

Partnering with the right accountant is in the best interest of your business. An experienced, skilled, and capable person to handle your company’s financial reporting, business analysis, and taxation will bring in immeasurable advantage to your organization. While engaging someone who doesn’t have a full grasp of the position and its importance can be disastrous to your company. Thus, the importance of engaging the right person to handle the job is high.

Here are five major considerations when choosing the right accountant for your business:

The Accountant’s Location

Are you looking to hire an internal accountant or looking to outsource your accounting needs? If you need an internal accountant, your candidate pool is limited to those near you. With cloud accounting, connectivity, and availability of safe and reliable accounting software, outsourcing your accounting needs is a viable option. If a virtual office is compatible with your needs, your accountant can be anywhere in the world, then the location wouldn’t matter. For best work arrangements, we recommend engaging an accountant who is cognizant of your local business taxation, regulations, and accounting laws. This is why accounting firms in Singapore are the best option for Singapore businesses.

The Accountant’s Expertise, Credentials and Specialization

Knowing the accountant’s level of expertise, skills, credentials, and prior experiences are vital to find a good fit. Do you need an experienced accountant who can bring in expertise, lead a team, and make decisions? Or are you looking for someone you can train to handle the bookkeeping? Are you looking to hire a team of accountants or just one person? Do you need an expert in taxation or one who is adept in cost accounting?

Workload Allocation

Which areas of the accounting process are you going to delegate and which are you going to keep in-house? As external accountants can be expensive and charge by hours, it is customary for small businesses to outsource the more complex tasks of reviewing the results produced by the bookkeeper, generating financial reports or working on bank reconciliation and taxation while keeping the laborious bookkeeping in. You can resolve this issue and work seamlessly with your accountant by using a user-friendly cloud accounting software, which is compliant with IRAS’s technical requirements, like Xero, QuickBooks, and Financio.

Accounting Software

Most, if not all, accounting firms in Singapore use one or more accounting software to facilitate work, sharing and collaboration with their clients. They would have several names for you to choose an accounting software that will fit your business needs, budget and usage. Some software can be integrated with most of your business processes and financial aspects like banks, invoicing, inventory and collections. The most popular online accounting platforms include Xero, QuickBooks and Financio. Each has its benefits and drawbacks. To choose the best software, it is best to discuss with your accountant.

Check out this article Five Advantages of Million Accounting System

Costs

The cost of hiring an accountant should not exceed the savings you get from the services rendered. If the cost of outsourcing your accounting department to an accounting firm is less than what you are spending to maintain the said department, or if it frees you time to work on other tasks, then outsourcing is a good option for your business. The cheapest accountants are not always the best deal. Expertise, experience and industry knowledge come with a premium. Shop around outsourcing firms in Singapore for comparable rates, consider the inputs that come with the price, and compare the fees and the service scope.

Steps in Hiring an Accountant for your Business

The process of finding, choosing, and hiring an accountant for your business should not be rushed. Careful considerations of the five basic aspects of engaging an accountant mentioned above have to be observed. Sharing your company’s most sensitive data with the wrong person might have serious repercussions. Extra precaution must always be exercised in hiring the right person for any accounting position, regardless junior or senior. Here are the steps in finding and choosing the right accountant for your business and its considerations;

1. Evaluate your company’s needs

Assess the accounting and bookkeeping tasks you need to delegate > volume, complexity and types of data. Can you afford to outsource, or would you rather keep it internal? For small business needs, we recommend engaging an external accountant to provide all your accounting needs. An external accountant can perform all your accounting needs without the need to hire, train and provide workspace.

2. Profile the right accountant

Based on your company’s needs, create a profile of your accountant. This should include his / her experience, prior industry exposure, certifications, location, preferred software used, skills, and expertise.

3. Shortlist the best candidates

Start looking for your accountant. You can do this by posting a job ad, asking for referrals, or going online to search for accounting firms in Singapore. Compile a list of no more than ten possible candidates. Reach out and schedule a face-to-face interview or meeting.

4. Conduct interviews

The goal of the interview or initial meeting with the accountant candidate is to verify the initial information you have gathered about the accountant and his / her firm. Ask the more important details such as the software they are using, price ranges, service coverage and their work processes. Let them share with you as much as they would like.

5. Do background checks

After meeting them for the first time, you will have fewer candidates on your shortlist. Filter further by conducting background checks. Call company partners and affiliations to check out if their claims match. Check for their online profiles and social media presence. Cross out any candidate with any misrepresentations and false claims.

6. Conduct final interviews

You should have no more than three candidates now. Before you make the final selection, ask for a final interview. This time discuss with the candidates as many details of the job as you can and ask how they are going to go about it.

Conclusion

After the final interview, you should have a very good idea of who to pick. If all final interviewees are qualified and ideal for the position, go for the one whom you think can contribute the most to the company in terms of expertise, savings and teamwork.

We offer quality accounting services in Singapore. Connect with us to discuss more of your staffing needs and company compliance requirements in Singapore. We look forward to helping you identify your business needs and providing you with efficient and holistic solutions.

Let’s discuss your business needs today.

Overview of GST Reverse Charge

Overview of GST Reverse Charge

In Budget 2018, two regimes to levy GST on imported services, are announced to be implemented from 1 January 2020 onwards, namely Reverse Charge regime for Business-to-Business (“B2B”) supplies and Overseas Vendor Registration regime for Business-to-Consumer (“B2C”) supplies.

Reverse Charge Regime subjects the B2B procurement of imported services to input tax or GST. The current GST rule only requires input taxes to be applied on services procured from local GST-registered persons. The Reverse Charge (RC) regime stipulates the transfer of GST obligation to the buyers of imported services intended for business use.

The advent of technological advancements initiated the influx of virtual business solutions. This offered an option for Singapore businesses to procure service from outside of the country. The goal of the changes is to level the GST treatment for services procured locally and those obtained overseas.

Example

Company A obtains payroll services in Singapore from Payroll Company who is based in Singapore, and marketing services from an online marketing solutions provider.

In the current GST rule, Payroll Company has to report the GST on the payroll services in its GST return, while no GST is chargeable for the marketing services.

With the RC regime, Payroll Company will shoulder the GST for the payroll services, while Company A will be accountable for the GST on the marketing services.

Who are subjected to RC?

The following are covered by the changes in the RC regime;

  • A GST-registered entity who is
    1. A business not entitled to claim input tax in full;
    2. An organization who carries out non-business activities (such as charities or welfare groups who offer free or subsidised services, and investment holding companies which derive dividend income) and receives non-business receipts, is not entitled to claim input tax in full; or
    3. A fully taxable person who chooses to apply RC.
  • A Non-GST registered business
    1. Whose total value of imported services, procured within a 12-month period, exceeds the S$1 million threshold; and
    2. Who is not entitled to claim input tax in full even if it was GST-registered.

Exceptions to the Rule

By announcing these changes in the announcement in Budget 2018, this move gave the affected businesses about 22 months, providing ample time to prepare. Once the law takes into effect, no extension will be granted to anyone who might attempt to request for leniency. However, there are exceptions to the rule:

  1. Businesses that create and provide non-taxable goods and services may qualify for partial GST claims. Products and services include but not limited to:
    • Tax-exempt supplies under the 4th Schedule of the GST Act.
    • Zero-rating supplies under Section 21(3) of the GST Act.
    • Non-taxable government services under the Non-Taxable Government Supplies Order of the GST Act.
  2. Businesses that provide free or subsidized products and services.
  3. Regulations 28 of the GST General Regulations or the De Minimis Rule is not satisfied.
  4. RC is not applicable to supplies that have been previously taxed in Singapore.

Example

Singapore Corporation engages Foreign Services to conduct a market research for $20,000. Foreign Services will outsource the job to Local Research Firm for $15,000. After the completion of the project, GST computation is as follows;

Local Research Firm will bill Foreign Services $15,000 plus the 7% GST of $1,050 to get a total of $16,050.

Foreign Services will bill Singapore Corporation $20,000. Singapore Corporation will account for 7% GST on $5,000 as the $15,000 has already been taxed. GST charged to Singapore Corporation for this transaction is $350.

Which transactions are affected?

Although the law was announced as early as 2018, the blanket implementation of the rule is on 1 January 2020. RC will apply to all transactions of the affected services paid or delivered, whichever is earlier, on or after the implementation date.

  1. General Rule – The earlier of when the invoice in respect of the supply is issued and when the payment is made.
  2. Consistent Application – Businesses may also account for RC at the earlier of when the invoice in respect of the supply is posted and when the payment is made, if all GST returns are prepared on the same basis.
  3. RC Business Applying RC At The End of Longer Periods – The day immediately after the last day of the longer period. If the accounting period end on 30th June, the time of supply is 1st July.
  4. Special Rules
    • Intra-GST group and interbranch transactions – The earliest of when the invoice in respect of the supply is issued, when the payment is made, and 12 months after the basic tax point. This rule done not apply to continuous supply of services.
    • Transactions straddling the registration – Services performed before registration can be (a) excluded from RC or (b) the time of supply set to the service date or when the service was rendered.
    • Transactions straddling the de-registration – Services performed before de-registration are subject to RC, with the time of supply set to the day immediately before the de-registration takes effect.
    • As an administrative concession, GST-registered businesses who are unable to accurately determine if they will be partially exempted from year to year, they may elect to apply RC only at the end of the longer period.

Mighty Glory Corporate Solutions provides accounting and tax services, bookkeeping, payroll services, and more corporate solutions in SingaporeConnect with us today to know more about the Reverse Charge Regime and how it may affect your business. We look forward to helping you identify your business needs and provide customized, efficient and holistic solutions.

GST Implication From Customer Accounting

GST Implication From Customer Accounting

Starting from 1 January 2019, customer accounting for prescribed goods is mandatory required under the GST regulations. This is applicable to the supplies of certain prescribed goods acquired by a GST-registered customer intended for business use, provided that it is (a) a local sale of prescribed goods with a GST-exclusive value of over S$10,000 and (b) not an excepted supply.

Customer accounting transfers the responsibility of GST accounting from the seller (or supplier) to the buyer (or customer). The changes are aimed to counter non-reporting and other fraud schemes where the supplier or seller absconds with the collected GST.

Under the Customer Accounting (CA) scheme, the sellers are not allowed to charge and collect GST from their customers. They are, however, required to issue a customer tax invoice that reflects the customer’s GST registration number and a statement to inform the customer of his/her GST accountability, and the application of CA in that purchase. The seller will also have to report the transaction in his GST returns.

What are the Prescribed Goods?

The application of CA is limited to the prescribed goods, which include but are not limited to the following:

  • Mobile Phones – Examples include smartphones, Blackberry, or tablets that can transmit and receive calls and messages over a cellular network. The purchase of a mobile phone is, however, excluded from customer accounting if it comes with a post-paid mobile subscription plan by a local telecommunication service provider. Satellite phones, walkie-talkies, smartwatches, mobile landlines, phones over 17.5 cm in screen size, and smartphone accessories such as chargers, screen protectors, and batteries are not included in the CA scheme.
  • Memory Cards – This category includes memory sticks, Secure Digital (SD) cards and CompactFlash. The exclusions are solid state drive (SSD), thumb drive, dual in-line memory module (DIMM), random access memory (RAM), portable external hard disk, hard disk drive (HDD), and other smart cards with embedded chips such as ATMs, SIM cards, and credit cards.
  • Off-the-Shelf Software – The software included in this category are those that are not specifically customized for the customer. Such software is stored in a CD or similar storage device; or the product can be accessed through a product or license key, activating or other similar code which is provided as part of the purchase. Prescribed goods for CA include software sold in physical boxed packaging like anti-virus, accounting, gaming, design tools, etc. Pre-installed software is not prescribed for CA. Software back-ups stored in CD or similar storage device, Xbox Live, software downloadable from the internet (whose key or code for access is provided via email), and PlayStation Plus are examples of software not qualified for CA.

‘Excepted Goods’ which are not subject to CA, are the supplies of goods made under:

  • Gross Margin Scheme – The computation of GST is based on the gross margin, not the full value, of the goods supplied. This scheme is applicable if (1) the primary business activity is dealing with used goods and (2) the second-handed goods are purchased free of GST.
  • Approved Third Party Logistics (3PL) Company Scheme – Under certain conditions, no import duty or GST is applicable on the supplies of goods from the overseas customers of these approved logistics companies.
  • Approved Refiner and Consolidator Scheme – Either the approved refiner or consolidator can enjoy the certain GST benefits, which are specially designed to ease cash flow and relieve indirect taxability on refining activities for investment precious metals (IPM).
  • A deemed taxability arising from the transfer or disposal of goods at no cost.

When to Apply Customer Accounting

To apply CA, the following conditions must be met;

  • The customer must be a GST-registered person;
  • The purchase of prescribed goods is conducted in the ordinary course of a business; and
  • The value of the prescribed goods exceeds S$10,000.

Connect with us today to learn more about customer accounting and how this may affect and/or apply to your business. We look forward to helping you identify your business and personal needs, and providing you with efficient and holistic solutions.

How To Choose A Suitable Accounting Software For Your Business?

How To Choose A Suitable Accounting Software For Your Business?

It is necessary to have accounting software to monitor the cash movement and financial health of your business. The application of choice will ultimately help you manage projects and monitor bills. However, choosing the right accounting software can be challenging. Different software offers different features and specifications at different prices. Here are the three basic things to keep in mind when choosing an effective accounting software.

  • Usability: The number of users involved will affect your choice of an accounting software. Usability also includes the preferred access to the system – from anywhere or from desktop only. The option of having an additional mobile app to facilitate use or access to real-time information should also be considered.
  • Cost: It is a trade between advanced features and cost-efficiency. You have the option to get either basic inexpensive or advanced and dynamic accounting software. The more sophisticated software will offer more features, great support and better usability, which will also cost more.
  • Features: The more advanced software offers more features, while the basic software generally provides the minimum applications and features. Your choice will depend on how and what applications you need for your company. What reports do you need the software to generate? Do you want to have both account payable and receivable tools?

 Support and Accessibility

To choose the best software for your company, its intended use should be carefully considered. How, when, what and where? Here are some important factors to consider:

  • Multiple business support: A software that can support multiple small businesses under one account is convenient and cost-effective too. Otherwise, the handling of several different accounts can be complicated and costly.
  • Multiple user access: How many users need or have access to the business accounts? Yourself, your partner, bookkeeper, procurement managers, sales managers and more. An accounting software that allows multiple users to access with different permission rights is ideal. Some systems provide this function at no additional cost.
  • Cloud software and mobile access: A cloud accounting software will let you access the accounts anytime from anywhere, provided that you have a computer and active internet connection. This allows you to run the business from home or on vacations.

 Are you familiar with Million Accounting System? Check out this article, The 5 Advantages of Using Million Accounting System for SME’s in Singapore.

After a choice is taken, necessary set-up must be properly completed so that the product can function, as mentioned by the vendor.  Feel free to contact Mighty Glory for a meeting in person (free of charge) so that we can understand your expectation(s) or requirement(s) to assist further.

Eight Ways Technological Innovations Changed Small And Medium Business Accounting

Eight Ways Technological Innovations Changed Small And Medium Business Accounting

The forward-thinking accounting firms in Singapore advocate cloud computing and the use of an accounting software. The benefits of using a software ideal for the needs of the company far exceed the costs and temporary disruption it might cause. The migration of files, adaption of the new system, recruitment of the right people and installation of the applications could be a hassle. But you also have the option not to go through all these! They can be delegated to the experts in the accounting firms in Singapore.

Here are eight of the top changes and benefits brought about by technological advancements to small and medium business organizations:

1. The Paperless Office

Modern business technologies shrunk the office spaces. We no longer need the bulky filing drawers, the stacks of office documents, and most of the quintessential office equipment like fax machines and photocopiers. The use of paper has gone down to the minimum. The modern and more environmental-friendly office setup only needs computers, internet connection, desks and chairs. Thus, offices are more space-efficient, clutter-free, and productive.

2. Cloud Processing

Instead of the extensive office filing and storage system that includes filing cabinets, drawers, paper files, and complex access and safekeeping management, we now have cloud computing. This is the digitized equivalent of the paper-based filing system. All office files, documents, and reports are digitized and uploaded to a central server where access is efficiently managed and security is optimized through an off-site storage facility.

3. Real-Time Postings

Cloud computing and the use of accounting software can provide real-time updates and reports. As most accounting software can now be integrated with bank accounts, payroll and productivity software, billing, and collection, users can generate financial reports that are updated and accurate. Updated reports and financial statements can be generated whenever required, any day of the year. This leads to better decision-making, forecasting and auditing processes.

Related: Why Companies Outsource Their Payroll?

4. Work Anywhere

The most significant change in business technology has impacted how we work today is the freedom to choose how, when, and where we work. Connectivity and accessibility enable us to work anywhere and anytime we prefer. Through cloud computing, work files can be accessed and shared from anywhere around the world. Thus, you can still check on your company numbers while on vacation, during your commute, or from home.

5. Simplified Work

Most accounting software, used by outsourcing firms in Singapore, already features integration with other business accounts like bank accounts, payroll features, billing and collection functions, and even inventory. Any updates are automatically posted, and the system is updated real-time. Thus, reporting is streamlined, accuracy and correctness are guaranteed, and staffing need is reduced.

6. Enhanced Securities

One key element of cloud computing is its off-site, third-party storage facility. This removes the physical files from your office and care. Everything is stored in the clouds, where access can be restricted, and file management is easily regulated by passwords and permissions. With the sophisticated security protocols in place, file loss due to thief, fire, and unauthorized access are prevented.

7. Cost Efficiency

Accounting services in Singapore are at the most affordable today. Business innovations and technological advancements allow small and medium enterprises to enjoy the best and expert services from accredited corporate service providers in Singapore. Whereas before where you need to buy the entire software, build your technical infrastructure and hire professionals, the company only needs a stable internet connection, subscribes to an accounting app service, and assign an external accounting firm to do the work.

8. Effective Delegation

The latest state-of-the-art business apps and platforms enable businesses to efficiently delegate tasks, reduce the worry. This allows the busy startup entrepreneur to focus on growing his or her company, or the team to concentrate on innovations and creative endeavors. Why go through accounting books when you can hire the best corporate service provider in Singapore? Learn more about cloud computing – its benefits, challenges, risks and your options. Choosing the right software for your business is key to a successful migration to the clouds.

Today, let’s fix a date with us to have an initial meeting. We are very glad to help you in identifying a suitable cloud computing system that will best fit your business needs.

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