What Conversion Really Means for Partners

Businesswoman in wheelchair meeting with potential clientBONUS CHECKLISTS: 9 business development metrics you should be measuring, plus the 7 biggest errors when trying to win new fees.

By Martin Bissett
Passport to Partnership

Like it or not, the 21st century accountant is in the relationship-building business. When a qualified accountant learns the art of developing those relationships in such a way as they empower the practice to be able to forecast its new fee income each year, the accountant becomes a profit center and their value to the firm increases tenfold.

MORE ON THE PASSPORT TO PARTNERSHIP: Communication: Putting It All Together | The 4 Winning Communications Habits of Top Accountants | Gauge Firm Culture to Move Toward Partner | 12 Ways to Determine Your Competence | Passport to Partnership: New Research Shows Wide Gap between Partners and Partners-To-Be

Our fourth “C,” Conversion, has flirted with being the top answer from respondents in the Passport to Partnership study and has featured in over 80 percent of all firms interviewed as to what makes a senior manager stand out as a potential partner.