The 4 Winning Communications Habits of Top Accountants

Value your clients – and yourself.

Component parts of how the other person perceives your in-person communication
Component parts of how the other person perceives your in-person communication

By Martin Bissett
Passport to Partnership

I’ve had the benefit of meeting, speaking and observing hundreds of very successful and unsuccessful partners over the last two decades and there is indeed a set of differentiating factors that set a partner apart from the chasing pack.

MORE PASSPORT TO PARTNERSHIP: What Communication Really Means for Partners | How to Read Your Firm’s Cultural Blueprint | Gauge Firm Culture to Move Toward Partner | What Culture Really Means for Partners | Firm Culture Is Inevitable; Make It Work for You | 12 Ways to Determine Your Competence | What Competence Really Means for Partners | Sailing Through the Seven C’s to Partnership | Passport to Partnership: New Research Shows Wide Gap between Partners and Partners-To-Be

Here are the four “best-selling behaviors” that I’ve observed: