Write an article based on this "Click Employee information. Add an employee's name. Enter the employee's hourly wage. Enter the employee's tax information. Determine your employee's deductions. Add your other employees' information."
article: It's in the bottom-left corner of the Excel window. This will ensure that you're on the Employee Information sheet. Type your employee's name into the first blank cell in the "Name" column. Type the dollar amount that your employee makes per hour into the first blank cell in the "Hourly Wage" column. Make sure that you have your employee's tax information on-hand, then fill out the cells below the following headings:   Tax Status - A number (usually "1") indicated on the employee's W-2.  Federal Allowance - A number that determines an employee's tax bracket. Usually found on the W-4.  State Tax (Percentage) - Your state's income tax percentage.  Federal Income Tax (Percentage) - The employee's tax bracket's income tax percentage.  Social Security Tax (Percentage) - The current social security tax percentage.  Medicare Tax (Percentage) - The current medicare tax percentage.  Total Taxes Withheld (Percentage) - This field will automatically be calculated once you've filled in the other tax fields. This will depend on things like your employee's benefits, investments, and so on:   Insurance Deduction (Dollars) - The amount in dollars that you withhold for insurance.  Other Regular Deduction (Dollars) - Any other amount that you withhold. Once you've added a row of information for every employee, you can proceed to calculating payroll.

Write an article based on this "Consider customizing your salad. Use different vegetables. Use a different salad dressing. Add some toppings. Add a Greek spin to your salad. Make an East Asian salad."
article: Garden salads are easily-customizable. You can add more vegetables, use completely different vegetables, or even change the dressing. This section will give you some ideas. You can substitute the vegetables in your salad for other ones. You can also simply toss more vegetables into your salad in addition to the ones you already have to make it more colorful and flavorful. Other vegetables often found in garden salads include black olives, mushrooms, onions, radishes, red bell peppers, and green bell peppers. If you don't like basic salad dressing, you can use a different instead, such as French, Italian, red wine vinaigrette, or ranch. You can also forgo the dressing altogether and lightly season your salad with some olive oil and a drizzle of lemon juice or vinegar, and a pinch of salt and pepper. You can give your salad some more flavor or crunch by adding shredded parmesan cheese on top, or some of your favorite croutons. Keep the cucumber, onion, and tomatoes in the salad, but switch out the carrot for some chopped red and green peppers and sliced black olives. Add some crumbled feta cheese and crumbled oregano. Toss everything into a bowl and mix together. Finish off with some Italian salad dressing. You can make the salad with lettuce, or omit it completely. You will need a ½ cup (125 grams) of corn kernels, 1 diced tomato, ½ cup (75 grams) of diced cucumber, 3 tablespoons of diced pineapple, and a few sprigs of dried coriander. You will also need ½ cup (50 grams) sprouted mung beans (drained) and 3 tablespoons of pomegranate seeds. Toss everything into a bowl. At this point, you can some salad dressing, salt, and pepper, or keep it simple with 1 teaspoon lemon juice.

Write an article based on this "Look for companies that sponsor other events or activities similar to yours. Create a list of potential sponsors. Research every company or person on your list. Anticipate the needs of each potential sponsor."
article:
Use the research that other organizations have done before you to help give you an edge. If you are looking for a special event sponsorship for a walk or running event, look at other runs in your area and look at who the sponsors were. This could be a good place to start.  If your event is athletic in nature, consider Nike, Adidas, Livestrong, and other sports-related organizations as possibilities. If you're holding a music event or concert, consider local radio stations, music publications, and other ventures that have similar interests. If you're holding a food event, consider Gourmet magazine, the Food Network, and other big food conglomerates. Aim high. A big list of potential sponsors is great, but you don’t want to simply ask every person and company that you know to be a sponsor. Your list needs to be a list of actual potential sponsors, meaning people or companies that you think will actually consider your sponsorship request. Include companies that have been sponsors for you in the past, companies that have sponsored other ideas similar to yours and people or companies that you have a personal connection with that would be able to be a sponsor. Having background information on the potential sponsor will go a long way in helping you gain a sponsorship. Look for reasons why it would benefit the potential sponsor to sponsor you. If you learn the demographics, business model, and the goals of your potential sponsors, you can start developing some sense of the way you might pitch the sponsorship.  For this reason, more localized businesses are often a safer bet than larger corporations like Nike. While Nike's certainly got the coin to throw around, they're also probably getting several hundred sponsorship requests in a given week. The local radio station or sporting goods store? Probably much less. And if your customer base overlaps, that's potential earned income for them. Consider leveraging potential sponsors against one another. If one sporting goods store from the West side of town has already pledged at a certain level, mention that to the sporting goods store on the East side of town. They'll get the hint.