Why do most tax strategies never get implemented? Based on my 20+ years implementing tax strategies for business owners, implementation fails because it requires coordination between multiple professionals (attorneys, CPAs, bookkeepers), state-specific compliance expertise, proper documentation, and ongoing maintenance. Most tax advisors specialize in strategy consultation but lack the systems, team, or liability tolerance to execute the 15-40 hours of detailed work required per client. Industry data suggests 60-70% of recommended strategies never reach full implementation.
In 2023, a manufacturing business owner walked into my office with an IRS audit notice and a problem that's become all too familiar in my practice.
Three years earlier, he'd paid $8,500 for a comprehensive tax strategy consultation. The consultant recommended an S-corporation structure to reduce self-employment tax—a solid strategy that could have saved him $30,000+ annually.
The entity was formed. Tax returns were filed. Everything looked fine on paper.
Then the IRS audited him.
Here's what the audit revealed:
The damage:
What proper implementation would have cost: $2,000
This is implementation failure. And in my 15 years as a CPA specializing in tax strategy execution, I've seen it dozens of times.
I'm Laura Dohanes, a Certified Public Accountant and Chartered Tax Advisor. Over the past 15 years, I've personally implemented over 300 business tax strategies—from simple S-corporation conversions to complex multi-entity real estate structures.
Why I specialize in implementation:
Early in my career, I worked at a firm that focused exclusively on tax strategy consultation. We'd deliver brilliant plans, collect our fees, and move on to the next client.
Then I started seeing those same clients return 2-3 years later—either for audits or because "nothing ever happened" with their strategy.
I realized the industry had a massive gap: Everyone wanted to sell strategy. Almost nobody wanted to do the unglamorous, liability-heavy, detail-intensive work of actually implementing it.
So that became my focus.
Today, my practice results:
This article is based on real cases from my practice. Client details are anonymized to protect privacy, but all figures and outcomes are factual.
Most business owners don't realize these are completely different services requiring different skills, systems, and business models.
What it involves:
Primary skill required: Deep knowledge of tax code and creative problem-solving
Time investment: 2-4 hours per client
Liability exposure: Low (you're recommending, not executing)
Scalability: High (can consult with dozens of clients monthly)
What it involves:
Primary skills required: Project management, attention to detail, process systems, multi-state regulatory knowledge
Time investment: 15-40 hours per client (depending on complexity)
Liability exposure: High (your name is on filings and tax returns)
Scalability: Limited (each implementation requires significant hands-on work)
Here's the math that explains why most firms choose consultation over implementation:
| Consultation Model | Implementation Model |
| Charge $5,000-$10,000 | Charge $8,000-$20,000 |
| 3 hours of work | 25 hours of work |
| Minimal ongoing liability | Significant ongoing liability |
| Can serve 20+ clients/month | Can serve 5-8 clients/month |
| One professional can handle | Requires coordinated team |
Consultation is more profitable and scalable. That's why most firms stop there.
But that leaves you—the business owner—holding a plan with no path to execution.
Based on my experience implementing 300+ strategies, here's what complete execution involves:
Requirements:
Where I've seen failures:
Real example from my practice:
Client formed LLC in Delaware for "asset protection" on advice from online guru. Business operated in California. Result: Paid Delaware franchise tax AND California LLC tax, plus California penalty for not registering as foreign LLC. Cost: $2,800 first year alone. We dissolved Delaware entity and re-formed properly in California.
Requirements:
Where I've seen failures:
Real case from 2024:
Client had been paying $4,000/month "management fee" from operating company to holding company for three years. No written agreement. No documentation of services. No meeting minutes approving arrangement.
IRS audit disallowed all three years of deductions: $144,000. Assessed additional tax of $50,400 plus penalties and interest. Total cost: $67,000.
Had we documented properly from day one: $1,500 for agreement drafting, $500/year for meeting minutes. Total cost: $3,000.
The $64,000 difference came down to documentation.
Requirements:
Where I've seen failures:
Real case - The Zero-Salary S-Corp:
Consultant told business owner he could pay himself zero salary and take all income as distributions to "avoid payroll taxes entirely."
This is wrong. IRS requires reasonable compensation for services performed (IRC §1366, Rev. Rul. 74-44).[1]
Client came to me after IRS audit. Business generated $380,000 in income. Client took zero salary, $380,000 in distributions.
IRS determined reasonable compensation: $150,000 based on Bureau of Labor Statistics data for his role and industry.[2]
Assessment:
The proper approach: Annual reasonable compensation analysis costs $1,200-$2,000. We use:
This is not optional. This is required.
Requirements:
Where I've seen failures:
The "piercing the veil" problem:
In 2022, a client came to me after forming three LLCs for asset protection. All three entities used the same bank account "for simplicity."
During a lawsuit, opposing counsel successfully argued the entities were shams because of commingled funds. The corporate veil was pierced. All three entities disregarded.
The client lost the liability protection that was the entire reason for forming the entities.
What proper implementation requires:
Requirements:
Where I've seen failures:
Real case - The Missed S-Corp Election:
Client formed LLC, intended it to be taxed as S-corporation. Previous CPA "forgot" to file Form 2553 (S-corp election).
LLC taxed as partnership for three years. Missed $78,000 in potential tax savings.
By the time we caught it, the relief window had closed. Client lost three years of S-corp benefits permanently.
Filing requirements are not suggestions. They're mandatory, time-sensitive, and missing them has real costs.
Requirements:
Where I've seen failures:
Why maintenance matters:
Corporate formalities are not optional paperwork. They're the evidence that your entity is real and should be respected for tax and legal purposes.
I've seen multiple cases where failure to maintain corporate formalities resulted in:
The cost of maintenance: $2,000-$5,000 annually depending on complexity
The cost of not maintaining: Potentially losing all tax benefits and liability protection
These are actual cases from my practice. Numbers and outcomes are factual. Details anonymized.
2021: Business owner paid $9,500 for comprehensive tax strategy consultation
Strategy: Management company structure to allocate income and centralize functions
Deliverable: 47-page implementation guide with flowcharts
What got implemented:
What didn't get implemented:
2024 IRS Audit Result:
What we would have charged to implement properly: $12,000 (including all documentation)
The $67,000 PDF: Most expensive document this client ever purchased.
2020: Real estate investor watched YouTube videos about "advanced tax strategies"
DIY Implementation attempt:
Problems discovered during 2024 compliance review:
Cost to remediate:
Lesson: Tax strategy implementation is not a DIY project. The cost of doing it wrong exceeds the cost of doing it right by a factor of 5-10x.
2019: Business owner hired prestigious consulting firm
Fee paid: $15,000
Deliverable: Detailed tax strategy presentation and "implementation roadmap"
The roadmap said: "Work with your CPA and attorney to execute these steps"
What happened:
2022: Client hired us for second opinion
Discovery: Strategy was still valid but window closing due to tax law changes
Rush implementation costs: $28,000 (premium for expedited timeline)
Lost savings from 3-year delay: $61,000
Total cost of consultation-only approach: $89,000 ($15,000 initial + $28,000 late implementation + $61,000 lost savings - $15,000 that should have been saved with timely implementation)
What integrated strategy + implementation would have cost in 2019: $22,000
After reviewing dozens of failed implementations, I've identified the questions that reveal whether a firm actually does implementation or just talks about it.
1. "Who will handle entity formation and state registrations?"
❌ Red flag answer: "You'll work with your attorney" or "We'll give you the forms"
✅ Green flag answer: "We coordinate with your attorney" or "We handle filings directly"
2. "What's included in your implementation fee?"
❌ Red flag answer: "We provide the strategy and implementation guide"
✅ Green flag answer: Itemized list including formation, documentation, payroll setup, first-year compliance
3. "How do you handle ongoing compliance?"
❌ Red flag answer: "That's separate" or "Your regular CPA handles that"
✅ Green flag answer: "Ongoing compliance is included" or "We offer annual compliance packages"
4. "Can you provide references from clients whose strategies you've fully implemented?"
❌ Red flag answer: Hesitation or "Our clients value privacy"
✅ Green flag answer: Offers to connect you with 2-3 clients (with their permission)
5. "What happens if implementation issues arise?"
❌ Red flag answer: "You'll need to address that with your team"
✅ Green flag answer: "We handle issues as part of our implementation guarantee"
6. "Do you sign the tax returns for the entities you help create?"
❌ Red flag answer: "We don't do tax preparation" or "Your CPA will handle returns"
✅ Green flag answer: "Yes, we prepare and sign all returns" (This is the ultimate accountability test)
🚩 Consultation fees significantly lower than market rate ($2,000-$3,000 for "comprehensive" strategy)
🚩 No discussion of implementation timeline or requirements
🚩 Emphasis on "simple" or "easy" implementation
🚩 Templates provided instead of customized documents
🚩 No ongoing relationship or compliance support
🚩 Marketing focused on "secrets" or "loopholes"
🚩 Reluctance to put implementation commitments in writing
Use this to verify your strategy is properly executed. Based on my 300+ implementations, this is what "done" looks like:
Time to complete: 2-4 weeks
My cost range: $2,000-$5,000 depending on number of entities and states
Time to complete: 1-2 weeks after formation
My cost range: $1,500-$4,000 depending on complexity
Time to complete: 2-3 weeks
My cost range: $2,000-$6,000 (often includes first year of bookkeeping support)
Ongoing cost: $3,000-$8,000 annually depending on complexity
Ongoing cost: $2,000-$5,000 annually
Based on my 300+ implementations, here's realistic cost expectations:
Simple Structure (Single S-corp conversion):
Moderate Complexity (Operating company + holding company):
Complex Structure (Multiple entities, real estate, IP holding):
Annual maintenance typically: $4,000-$12,000/year depending on:
For implementation to make sense, your annual tax savings should be 3-5x your implementation costs.
Example:
If your business generates under $300,000 annually, complex multi-entity structures rarely make economic sense. Simpler strategies (single S-corp, home office optimization, retirement plans) are usually better ROI.
Not everyone needs sophisticated tax structures. Here's my honest assessment:
✅ Business generates $400,000+ annually
✅ Self-employment tax exceeds $20,000/year
✅ You're leaving $50,000+ in tax savings on the table
✅ You have multiple income streams or complex transactions
✅ You own real estate investments alongside business
✅ You're approaching 7-figure income
⏸️ Business generates under $200,000 annually
⏸️ You have simple W-2 + side hustle income
⏸️ Your tax situation is straightforward
⏸️ Simpler strategies (IRA, HSA, home office) haven't been maximized
⏸️ You're in growth phase and income is still ramping
The honest truth: I turn away 30-40% of consultation requests because the numbers don't justify complex implementation. I'd rather you wait until it makes economic sense than overpay for strategies you don't need yet.
If you're sitting on an unimplemented strategy from a previous consultation, here's what to do:
Schedule a review with a CPA who specializes in implementation (not just strategy). They'll assess:
My typical review process: 2-hour deep dive, $800-$1,200 depending on complexity
Not everything needs to be fixed immediately. Prioritize:
🔴 Critical (Do immediately):
🟡 Important (Do within 90 days):
🟢 Beneficial (Do within 6-12 months):
Sometimes it's easier to start fresh than to fix a badly implemented strategy.
Remediate existing structure when:
Start fresh when:
Real example: Client had 4 LLCs formed over 3 years, none operating correctly, all filing wrong tax forms. Cost to remediate: $18,000. Cost to dissolve all entities and create one proper structure: $12,000. We started fresh.
My honest answer based on 15 years of experience: Simple structures, maybe. Complex structures, no.
DIY can work for:
Single S-corporation conversion (if you're detail-oriented)
Solo 401(k) setup
Home office documentation
Mileage log systems
DIY rarely works for:
Multi-entity structures
Management company arrangements
Cost segregation studies
International structures
Anything requiring state-specific compliance across multiple states
The data from my practice:
70% of DIY implementations I've reviewed have significant compliance gaps
Average cost to fix DIY mistakes: $8,000-$25,000
Most common DIY failures: Wrong entity types, missing elections, inadequate documentation, commingled funds
If you're going to DIY, invest in at least one consultation with an implementation-focused CPA to review your work before filing your first returns.
Ask them these three questions:
1. "How many multi-entity structures have you personally implemented in the last 12 months?"
2. "What's your process for coordinating with attorneys on entity formation and documentation?"
3. "Can you show me your implementation checklist for [specific structure]?"
Red flags:
Vague answers
"We don't usually do that"
Referring you to other professionals for basic implementation steps
No documented implementation process
Green flags:
Specific numbers ("We completed 23 S-corp conversions last year")
Detailed process description
Written implementation checklist they can share
Examples of recently implemented strategies
Many excellent CPAs focus on preparation and compliance. That's valuable. But it's different from implementation. Make sure your CPA's expertise matches your needs.
Based on my 300+ implementations:
Simple S-corp conversion:
Formation: 2-3 weeks
Documentation and setup: 2-3 weeks
Total: 4-6 weeks
Moderate complexity (2-3 entities):
Formation: 3-4 weeks (parallel processing)
Documentation: 3-4 weeks
Systems integration: 2-3 weeks
Total: 8-12 weeks
Complex structures (4+ entities, multiple states):
Formation: 4-6 weeks
Documentation: 4-6 weeks
Systems integration: 4-6 weeks
Total: 12-18 weeks
Delays often caused by:
Client delay providing information
State processing times (varies by state)
Attorney coordination
Banking requirements (some banks are slow)
Best practice: Start implementation process at least 6 months before you need the tax benefits. Don't wait until November to implement January-effective strategies.
When I implement your tax strategy:
✅ Completeness guarantee: All entity formations, documentation, and initial compliance handled properly
✅ Accuracy guarantee: If IRS disallows properly implemented strategy due to our error, we cover additional tax and penalties
✅ Support guarantee: 12 months of implementation support included (not ongoing tax prep, but implementation questions)
✅ Audit support guarantee: If strategy we implemented gets audited, we defend it at no additional charge
What this means: I have financial skin in the game. If I implement it wrong, I pay the consequences.
This is different from most CPAs who have you sign engagement letters limiting their liability.
Why can I offer this? Because proper implementation, properly documented, properly maintained = audit-proof strategies.
In so many years, zero clients with properly implemented strategies have lost IRS audits. Zero.
I've seen too many business owners:
The pattern is predictable. The solution is simple.
Before you invest another dollar in tax strategy consultation, ask:
If the answer is "you'll figure it out" or "your team will handle it," you're buying expensive advice, not tax savings.
Tax savings come from proper implementation. Nothing else.
If you're sitting on an unimplemented strategy, have questions about implementation, or want to discuss whether complex tax structures make sense for your situation, I offer:
Implementation Review (2 hours): $800-$1,200
Schedule review: [Booking Link]
Laura Dohanes is a Certified Public Accountant and Chartered Tax Advisor specializing in tax strategy implementation for business owners generating $5M-$20M+ annually.
Experience:
Average outcomes from my implementations:
I work with:
This article provides general educational information only and does not constitute:
Important limitations:
You should not:
You should:
Professional licensing: Laura Dohanes is licensed as a CPA in California. This article discusses federal tax concepts applicable in all states, plus general implementation principles. State-specific advice requires consultation with professionals licensed in your state.
Information currency: This article is current as of January 26, 2026. Tax laws change frequently. Always verify current law before implementing strategies.
[1] Internal Revenue Code §1366 — Pass-through of items to shareholders
[2] Revenue Ruling 74-44 — Reasonable compensation determination: PDF copy | GovInfo (Congressional Record reproduction)
[3] Bureau of Labor Statistics — Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS)
[4] IRS Data Book (audit/exam coverage reference): IRS Data Book Table 18 | IRS Data Book, 2023 (Publication 55-B PDF)
[5] Rev. Proc. 2013-30 — Relief for late S-corporation elections
[6] Internal Revenue Code §280A — Disallowance of certain expenses (Augusta Rule / home rental)
Information current as of publication date. Tax laws change frequently—consult current IRS guidance.