We'd like all major changes to /r/bookkeeping to be made with community involvement. Finally, /r/bookkeeping functions as a democracy and we encourage all subscribers to propose ideas for the sub.If you have questions that specifically regard tax-law or accounting school/career planning, you will likely find better answers in /r/accounting.We do encourage using professional designations as your flair. Frequent contributors will be granted flair, with the default being "frequent contributor." Once granted flair, you have the power to tell us to make your flair say anything that you'd like.If someone is being an unconstructive jerk or spamming, please use the report button to let the mods know.(If a post is irrelevant, it will receive few up-votes and be quickly buried anyway, but comments that make someone feel dumb for posting are rude and accomplish nothing.) We want /r/bookkeeping to be a place where everybody feels welcome to post. If you feel that someone's post is irrelevant, or stupid, or something you've already seen posted, please keep it to yourself.If you feel that someone is giving incorrect advice or behaving rudely, please correct them respectfully.Please be respectful to others, whether they are bookkeepers or not. If you are being a jerk, you had better be offering some genuinely constructive comments in your jerk-y tone, or we won't think twice about banning you.Be respectful, offer constructive criticism, keep debates civil. Rare exceptions may be made for comments where the link is clearly relevant to the post's discussion.Rule #1: NO SPAM! If you solicit business for your company, or post/comment links to pages that are blatantly advertising a product or service, you will be banned.Posts regarding /r/bookkeeping itself are acceptable, however, we suggest running your ideas by the moderators first. ![]()
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