Three Keys to Transforming Your Accounting Firm

Clients pay for understanding, not just reports.

By Jason M. Blumer, CPA, CFE

Blumer
Blumer

The tagline of our firm is  “Numbers Tell Stories…” It’s a constant reminder of the purpose behind our industry and our firm.

The numbers we deal with everyday are outcomes of (1) relationships, (2) processes and (3) knowledge that run deeply throughout every client’s business.  Numbers are simply depictions of the good and bad interactions of these three core concepts.  As CPAs, we often get caught up in the creation of a sheet of numbers, but this is not where our strengths as an industry lie.  Our strengths are found in our ability to use and interpret numbers to help our clients make better business decisions.  I know you’ve heard that before.  We never seem to offer our clients what we are actually best at.  Let’s dive deeper into the end result of our great work, which is to help our clients make better business decisions, not give them a big sheet full of numbers.

1. Relationships

When I talk about relationships, I’m talking about the relationships inside of the client’s business.  These are the interactions that are causing transparency and accountability that lead to dollars, or the loss of dollars, in your client’s pockets.  These relationships can also be known as the culture of the company.  Truly, the culture of a company has a life of it’s own and is separate and distinct in each and every client you serve (no matter how big they are).  Be aware of this fact so you can address their numbers from the standpoint of their culture.

2. Processes

The understanding of processes should be foundational to your client before they spend money in any way (and before you offer any counseling and consulting services).  CPAs have a seat at the client’s table to help them understand this.  Whether its purchasing a new computer system, or hiring a new staff member, understanding how the process will be improved or hindered by this cash outlay is an educational opportunity for you, the CPA practitioner.  When I talk about processes, I’m talking about the intangible flow of information through your client’s business.  We, as our client’s trusted advisors, can help our clients identify these processes, make them tangible, document them, visual them, delegate them, monitor them, and ultimately improve them.

Unless we help our clients identify these processes, our clients are outlaying cash for so many “solutions” that can actually cause more problems than they solve.  Addressing your client’s processes as the core foundation of their business can bring them greater awareness to the ultimate numbers that show up on their profit and loss statement at the end of the month.  If you build a home, you will begin with the unseen foundation first.  If you don’t get that right, then the beautiful columns on the front of your home will eventually crack or fall down.  And if your foundation is not put in correctly, then no matter how much money you spend on those beautiful columns, they will continue to break and crack.  Address the foundation of your client’s business just like you would your own home.

3. Knowledge

Knowledge is another intangible asset we fail to focus on (in our own firms and with our clients).  Lead your clients to capture the “relationship intelligence” floating around in their companies by helping them understand the value of the collective knowledge of their staff, their processes, their history, their patents, their education, their contacts, and anything else that brings value to their business and work.  Ultimately, these intangible assets can turn into Goodwill if their business is ever purchased.  When I talk about knowledge, I’m talking about the knowledge of the organization as a whole, not an individual owner or a department.

Possibly, a “knowledge audit” could be done to capture the knowledge of the organization.  The creation of this “knowledge audit” will hopefully lead to an improvement of the best practices of the company, and how to improve over their competitors.  One way to harness the knowledge of your client’s businesses is to help them install a CRM (customer relationship management) system.  This could be a cloud-based software system that tracks all customers and contacts, interactions with them throughout the whole company and how these interactions could have been achieved more effectively and efficiently.  And knowledge is best leveraged when it is accessible at the right time.  Tools such as a CRM system that are maintained properly will provide this knowledge proactively instead of making you look for it when you need it.

We often do the same things we’ve always done (to our detriment) because we have not harnessed the innate knowledge deep within our companies.

Transforming Our Firms

So how do we actually make money focusing on the (1) relationships, (2) processes, and (3) knowledge that we are truly supposed to be delivering to our clients?  After all, it seems like we get a check from a client every time we deliver a compilation or an audit report or a tax return.  But I believe our clients want to pay for the understanding that comes from those deliverables, not the reports themselves.  They just don’t know how to tell us this.  And, truly, I don’t believe we know the difference either.  I believe we can transform our firms into practices that create new and productive services that drive heavy value to our clients.  But how?  We have to know what they need first (study their relationships, processes and knowledge).  Then we have to create a service to extract this information for our clients.  Then give that new service a name (and maybe a logo), and a price tag.  Then begin your “beta testing” with your clients.  Some new services will work, and others will not.  Document what you’ve learned and continue this innovation firm-wide.  Everyone should be involved, and every staff member should have a seat at the table of making your firm’s offerings better.

You will not always like what you discover about yourself or your firm.  But this stretching will make you a better firm owner and it will improve the transparency you have with your staff and your clients.  I believe you will ultimately learn that numbers tell stories, and that you can bring these stories to life for your firm and your clients!

Copyright, Jason M. Blumer, CPA. All Rights Reserved.

6 Responses to “Three Keys to Transforming Your Accounting Firm”

  1. Laura Hilsenbeck

    Jason, yes, we are in Lexington, KY.

  2. Jason M Blumer, CPA

    @Michael, thanks for reading!

    @Shane, yes, as we build dashboards for clients, I typically try to push financial and non-financial KPIs to put on the dashboards. Just depends on what the client wants and needs, but they typically look to us for guidance. We are currently using Excel to build these dashboards, but I’ve seen some other BI (business intelligence) tools using some Google spreadsheets (actually, I got these off of Joey Brannon’s blog: http://www.axiomcpa.com/)

    @Joey, thanks for your comments – I’m a big fan of yours as you implement the New Generation firm!

    @Laura, thanks for your comments too. Is DBK in Kentucky?

    To stay in touch with us, get our free report called “24 Stupid Things Business Owners Do!” by signing up at our blog: http://bit.ly/bBQOcV

    Love to hear the feedback! Thanks for that.

  3. Laura Hilsenbeck

    This is a great article, Jason. Thank you. Oh, and I love your firm’s tagline!

  4. Joey Brannon

    Really excellent stuff, Jason.

    If we start framing every product and service we provide in terms of it’s impact on the client’s relationships, processes and knowledge opportunities to add value increase exponentially. I think you are dead-on that the commoditized products we are providing clients (tax returns, financial statement compilations, etc.) are of little use to them unless we provide our clients with a deeper understanding which will lead to greater relevance for our services.

    This is a great framework for making that happen. Thank you.

  5. Shane Eloe

    Jason,

    Are you referring to extracting some additional non-financial data to give life to the financial data like some sort of KPI’s for the business? How are you helping the client extract this data?

    What types of processes do you use that improves transparency between you, your staff, and the client?

  6. Michael Hsu

    I couldn’t have communicated the message any better myself. Numbers DO tell stories Jason. Thanks for the share.