timesheets: the nuclear option

lamentations on the billable hour: jamey johnson’s “the dollar.”

nuke ’em: kill timesheets before they kill the profession.

by ed kless

the litany of “challenges for the profession” repeats the narrative that has been well documented and continues to grow for over the last decade:

  • while there are more people graduating with degrees in accounting, fewer of them are sitting for the cpa exam. this is leading to fewer new hires for firms.
  • the new hires they do have are “millennials” who desire a challenge and think they should be made partner sooner rather than later.
  • attrition, especially at the mid-career level, is over 10 percent and is mostly initiated by the professional, not the firm.
  • the loss of people in the middle and bottom of the pyramid is eroding the traditional economic model. non-equity partners are increasing and funding for partner buyouts is disappearing.
  • cries of “we must become more efficient,” and/or, “we must embrace new technology,” and/or “we must hold people more accountable,” reverberate in meetings.
  • compliance work continues to flatline and while new offerings are growing revenue, they are not growing fast enough. worse still those that do this work are often not even cpas!

more ed kless at 卡塔尔世界杯常规比赛时间: your time has no inherent value  |  ed kless: what is strategic pricing?  |  ed kless on factors affecting price sensitivity  |  a radical close look at value pricing  |  billable hour in the extreme  |  the four factors for fixed pricing

goprocpa.comexclusively for pro members. log in here or 2022世界杯足球排名 today.

presentation after presentation is viewed on the modern equivalent of the campfire, the conference room projector. “our profession is sick, even dying. we might have cancer. we really don’t know, but it is bad.” it’s true, the profession does have cancer. the good news is, we know the cause and it is curable.

it is called “a timesheet.” it be must cut it out completely before it kills.

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i lost a client to an accounting firm with cheaper fees

businessman holding two papers with happy and angry face each on themwhy they came back.

by ed mendlowitz
call me before you do anything: the art of accounting

i have never been the lowest-priced accountant, but neither was i the highest.

more: getting a referral from an adversary | the background to saving a business | secret success formula: e=fs4uh | becoming an expert in irs collections | how hidden bias taints results | when to keep some plans to yourself | when writeups went extinct | kennedy’s acceptance speech | what consulting is
goprocpa.comexclusively for pro members. log in here or 2022世界杯足球排名 today.

sometimes prices charged are subject to the perception of the client and not reality. fees are always related to the value provided, although that isn’t always evident.
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busy season: the busiest ever?

tax professionals expect a very busy busy season.

today’s bonus question:
the tcja impact on your practice and your clients
join the survey: get the results.

busy season barometer: 63 percent expect an increase in clients this year, and 78 expect higher revenues.

by rick telberg
卡塔尔世界杯常规比赛时间 research

one thing’s certain about the 2019 tax season: nothing’s certain.

the early results from the 16th annual 卡塔尔世界杯常规比赛时间 busy season barometer show tax practitioners hopeful but nervous.

more busy season:  tax season 2019 launches with a whimper  | 16 big questions for tax season  |  survey: tax accountants alarmed by tcja & shutdown  |  shutdown: what to tell tax clients during “the lapse”   |  beware the leeches and consultants   |  charitable giving under tcja  |  why padding tax deductions is a risky proposition  |  handling the delay in 199a regs |  survey: clients rush for tcja answers |goprocpa.comexclusively for pro members. log in here or 2022世界杯足球排名 today.

for many, the season seems to be shaping up for more clients and increased revenues. at the same time, however, practitioners are showing unprecedented concerns that instead of success, they could end up with a mess.

and mess or success, they’re in for a lot of work. read more →