
Just take a look at some of the savings we have obtained for some of our clients:
Skipton Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
Haslingden Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
Barrow-In-Furness Business saved 50% on rates payable per year
Hayes Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
Brampton Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
London Business (N17) saved 50% on rates payable per year
Ilford Business saved 13% on rates payable per year.
Romford Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
London Business (SE1) saved 50% on rates payable per year.
London Business (SE3) saved 46% on rates payable per year.
London Business (E2) saved 50% on rates payable per year.
Upminster Business saved 15% on rates payable per year.
Ilford Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
Burnham-On-Crouch Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
London (SW2) Business saved 18% on rates payable per year.
London Business (E4) saved 50% on rates payable per year.
London Business (NW2) saved 31% on rates payable per year.
London Business (N9) saved 44% on rates payable per year.
Woodford Green Business saved 49% on rates payable per year.
Westcliff-On-Sea Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
Westcliff-On-Sea Business saved 30% on rates payable per year.
Halstead Business saved 14% on rates payable per year.
Ilford Business saved 26% on rates payable per year.
Leigh-On-Sea Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
South Ockendon Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
Chelmsford Business saved 48% on rates payable per year.
Hornchurch Business saved 38% on rates payable per year.
London Business (NW6) saved 16% on rates payable per year.
London Business (SW1V) saved 10% on rates payable per year.
London Business (SE19) saved 50% on rates payable per year.
Coventry Business saved 50% on rates payable per year.
BBC News - Home

The latest stories from the Home section of the BBC News web site.
1 - World leaders to discuss Somalia
2 - Homs reporters' deaths condemned
3 - Comic Frank Carson dies aged 85
4 - Probe into gender abortion claims
5 - MP held over Parliament 'assault'
6 - Degree courses 'cut by a quarter'
7 - Cost-price drink plan criticised
8 - Attacks on business snobbish - PM
9 - Gillard calls leadership ballot
10 - Strauss-Kahn released by police
11 - Man due in court over two murders
12 - Slow broadband 'hits many homes'
13 - Rare US comic books fetch $3.5m
14 - Male extinction theory challenged
15 - Yen falls to seven-month low
16 - HP sales fall short of forecasts
17 - NHS 'will be Cameron's poll tax'
18 - Cherie Blair starts hacking case
19 - Time link to sudden cardiac death
20 - Skin cancer drug hopes from study
21 - Visa rules 'may deter students'
22 - 'John Lewis' model for schools
23 - EU court to rule on Acta legality
24 - Million homes 'need TV filters'
25 - Cruise finds Fukushima pollution
26 - Path of tsunami debris mapped out
27 - Brit ratings 'biggest since 2005'
28 - Bonham Carter honoured at Palace
29 - 7 questions on fashion faux pas
30 - Is English or Mandarin the language of the future?
31 - Man City 4-0 FC Porto (6-1 agg)
32 - Mancini ready to consider Tevez
33 - Celtic 2-0 Dunfermline
34 - GB claim World Cup diving bronze
35 - Hamilton praises new car's speed
36 - Toddler girl abandoned in library
37 - America's Cup 'brought city £9m'
38 - Report queries oil fund benefits
39 - Rangers ex-chief questions Whyte
40 - Phoenix Supply to cut gas prices
41 - Man dies after caravan incident
42 - 35 years for pregnant teen killer
43 - Peacocks sold but 3,100 jobs lost
44 - South Sudan expels oil firm boss
45 - Nigeria rig 'may burn for months'
46 - Karzai urges calm over Koran row
47 - Arroyo pleads not guilty to fraud
48 - Putin supporters plan mass rally
49 - More bodies from Concordia found
50 - Buenos Aires train crash kills 49
51 - Mexico arrests riot prison guards
52 - US dismay at IAEA Iranian visit
53 - Car bomb kills eight in Baghdad
54 - Santorum in spotlight in Arizona
55 - NYPD 'spied on' Newark Muslims
56 - In pictures: Argentina train crash
57 - Day in pictures: 22 February 2012
58 - In pictures: Afghanistan protests
59 - In pictures: Danube ice chaos
60 - Day in pictures: 21 February 2012
61 - In pictures: Rio carnival
62 - In pictures: Mumbai - Chronicles of a past life
63 - Week in pictures: 11-17 February 2012
64 - VIDEO: House of Commons
65 - VIDEO: Is Somalian capital on the mend?
66 - VIDEO: Colvin's mother: 'She was committed'
67 - AUDIO: Corden: 'So hard' cutting Adele short
68 - VIDEO: Conroy's wife 'feared he was dead'
69 - VIDEO: Argentina train crash kills dozens
70 - VIDEO: Vicar and teacher murder charges
71 - VIDEO: Breakthrough in radio wave energy
72 - VIDEO: President Obama sings the blues
73 - Race to the bottom of the ocean
74 - Why do men become Catholic priests?
75 - Globe celebrates first two PhDs
76 - In pictures: Somali samosa seller
77 - How much Christianity is hidden in British society?
78 - The myth of the eight-hour sleep
79 - Tributes to killed Syria reporter
African and Western leaders are to discuss the future of Somalia, including the threat from terrorism and piracy, at a major conference in London.
The killings of two reporters in Homs and the reported deaths of 60 people across Syria trigger Western condemnation of Bashar al'Assad's regime.
Friends and former colleagues pay tribute to "one-off" comedian Frank Carson, whose catch phrases included "It's a cracker", after his death aged 85.
The Department of Health launches an inquiry into claims that doctors agreed to carry out abortions on the grounds of the sex of unborn babies.
A man, understood to be Falkirk's Labour MP Eric Joyce, is arrested on suspicion of assault following a disturbance at the Houses of Parliament.
The number of full-time undergraduate degree courses offered at UK universities has fallen by 27% over the past six years, data shows.
A ban on the sale of below-cost alcohol will have a "limited impact" on overall alcohol pricing, research suggests.
David Cameron is to praise business for its 'vital role' in society later and say attacks on wealth creators are motivated by "snobbery".
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard calls a ballot for the leadership of the Labor Party on Monday to end a tussle with Kevin Rudd.
Former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn is released after two days of questioning over an alleged prostitution ring but will be quizzed again next month.
A 47-year-old man is due in court charged with the murders of a retired teacher and a vicar.
Many UK addresses have broadband speeds of less than 5Mbps, research suggests.
A collection of early comic books - including those featuring the debuts of Batman and Superman - is sold for $3.5m (£2.2m) at auction in New York.
A new study comparing chromosomes in humans and rhesus monkeys suggests genetic decay of the male sex chromosome has all but ended.
The Japanese yen falls to its lowest level against the US dollar in seven months, positive news for Japanese exporters.
Computer firm Hewlett-Packard sees a drop in first-quarter sales, as it attempts to turn itself around under new chief executive Meg Whitman.
Labour leader Ed Miliband tells David Cameron he risks making NHS reform "his poll tax" - in noisy Commons clashes over the health bill.
Cherie Blair has started legal proceedings over phone hacking, her solicitor confirms.
How the time of day can increase the risk of dying from an irregular heartbeat has been identified by researchers.
A new treatment for advanced skin cancer almost doubles survival times, according to an international study.
Visa changes could see the UK's top universities and schools lose their appeal to international students, says a report.
Private companies should be encouraged to take over and run state schools as profit-making enterprises under a "John Lewis-style" business model, a think tank suggests.
A controversial anti-piracy agreement is to be referred to the EU's highest court due to concerns surrounding internet freedoms.
Filters will need to be installed in almost a million UK homes to combat TV interference likely to occur from new 4G mobile services.
An international research cruise off Japan detects radioactivity in sampled seawater and marine organisms, but well within safe levels.
A year on, modellers continue to provide daily forecasts of the likely spread of floating debris washed out into the Pacific by the Japanese Tohoku megatsunami.
The average audience to have watched the Brits ceremony on ITV1 and catch-up channel ITV1+1 comes in at 6.2 million - the event's highest audience since 2005.
British actress Helena Bonham Carter is made a CBE by the Queen, two years on from playing her mother in Oscar-winning film The King's Speech.
Vivienne Westwood says people's clothes have "never looked so ugly". See if you agree with our worst-dressed quiz
English has been the dominant global language for a century, but is it the language of the future? Jennifer Pak finds that for some in South East Asia, Mandarin Chinese is becoming increasingly important.
Sergio Aguero is again the headline act as Manchester City seal an impressive win over holders Porto to reach the last 16 of the Europa League.
Carlos Tevez could be playing for Manchester City within "two to three weeks" after manager Roberto Mancini accepted his apology to the club.
Celtic ease to victory over bottom side Dunfermline to go 20 points clear of Rangers at the top of the SPL.
Divers Tonia Couch and Sarah Barrow win Britain's first medal at London's Aquatics Centre.
Lewis Hamilton pronounces himself impressed with the speed of his "well-behaved" new McLaren after day two of the second pre-season test in Spain.
Police search for a woman seen leaving a library in Kent where a girl, believed to be two or three years old, is abandoned.
America's Cup yacht racing brought in £9.1m for Plymouth's economy, according to a report.
A think tank questions whether an "oil fund" in an independent Scotland would be the best approach for Scotland's economy.
A former chairman of Rangers suggests the debt the club owes Craig Whyte should be written off under the terms of the takeover contract.
Phoenix Supply announces an 8.5% reduction in its prices for households and small businesses.
A man dies after he was found trapped under a caravan in Kilkeel, County Down.
A former nightclub bouncer is jailed for a minimum of 35 years for murdering pregnant teenager Nikitta Grender two weeks before she was due to give birth.
Fashion retailer Peacocks is sold out of administration to Edinburgh Woollen Mill, saving 6,000 jobs, but 3,100 staff will be made redundant.
South Sudan expels the head of a Chinese and Malaysian-owned oil firm following its investigation into Khartoum's "theft" of oil worth $815m (£518m).
A gas-fuelled fire, with flames as high as 5m, may burn for months in waters off the Niger Delta in south-east Nigeria, a Chevron spokesperson tells the BBC.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai urges Afghans "not to resort to violence" after protests over the burning of the Koran at a US airbase near Kabul.
Former Philippine President Gloria Arroyo pleads not guilty to electoral fraud before a court in Manila.
Thousands of Putin supporters are to rally in Moscow to show Russia's PM has popular support ahead of presidential elections, despite protests.
Search teams in Italy find eight more bodies in the wreck of the cruise ship Costa Concordia which capsized on 13 January as the inquiry spreads.
A commuter train crash at a station in the Argentine capital Buenos Aires kills at least 49 people and leaves more than 600 injured, officials say.
The director of a Mexican prison and 28 guards are arrested on suspicion of helping a mass breakout and the murder of 44 other inmates.
The White House expresses disappointment on the barring of UN nuclear inspectors from a site in Iran, calling the visit a "failure" for Tehran.
A car bomb kills at least eight people and injures another 24 in a Shia district of the Iraqi capital Baghdad, officials say.
Rick Santorum comes under fire from rival US Republican candidates in a crucial TV debate days ahead of two key primaries.
The New York Police Department carried out covert surveillance of Muslims in nearby Newark, New Jersey, police records reveal.
A commuter train crash in Buenos Aires
24 hours of news photos: 22 February
Protests by people angry at the burning of Koran
Rapid thaw on the River Danube in Serbia
24 hours of news photos: 21 February
Brazil's colourful carnival parades in Rio
Mumbai in the 1970s and 80s
Photos from around the world
Prime Minister David Cameron and Labour leader Ed Miliband have once again clashed over the NHS, with the PM accusing Mr Miliband of showing "a complete lack of substance" over the issue.
Ethiopian and Somali troops have taken a strategic stronghold of Islamist militants in south-western Somalia.
Rosemarie Colvin, mother of the killed journalist Marie Colvin, has said her daughter was totally committed to what she did.
James Corden told Radio 5 live how he had to interrupt Adele as she was giving her speech so that Blur could begin their set.
The wife of a British photographer working in Homs has said that she believed he had been killed when she heard news that two western journalists had died in the city.
At least 49 people have been killed in a train accident in Buenos Aires.
A man has been charged with murdering a vicar in South Gloucestershire and a retired teacher in Worcestershire.
Researchers at the University of Bedfordshire believe they have found a way of harvesting power from radio waves.
To mark America's Black History Month, a blues concert called 'Red White And Blues' was held at the Whitehouse, featuring Mick Jagger and B.B. King.
Four teams vie to reach a trench seven miles down
Why would an ex-heavy metal roadie become a priest?
How Globe audiences risk putting off the players
How a mother supports 10 children by selling samosas
How much Christianity is hidden in British society?
Is it better for us to sleep in four-hour chunks?
'Heroic face of journalism': Papers mourn Marie Colvin