rampe: build a roadmap even when the road’s not there | the disruptors

only disciplined planning, accountability, and open communication will cut through the industry’s rapidly thickening fog.

this is a preview. the complete 1-hour video episode, with commentary and transcript, is first available exclusively to pro members | go pro here
sponsored by tax season readiness: practical steps for a smoother busy season, dec. 10, 2 p.m., 1.5 cpe  | see today’s special offer

subscribe to 卡塔尔世界杯常规比赛时间 podcasts anywhere: applegoogle/youtubespotifyiheartdeezer, amazon music, audibleplayer fmaudacy, rss
is your firm truly ready for tax season—or just hoping to survive it? join this 90-minute webinar featuring an accounting arc live panel with thought leaders who know what it takes to optimize performance under pressure

the disruptors
with liz farr

matt rampe sees the accounting industry as one “under a lot of pressure to change, and it’s changing very quickly.” the combination of a staffing crisis, retiring baby boomers, ai, private equity, and tax law is creating “the fog,” a period in which the path forward isn’t just unclear; it’s fundamentally unknowable. 

to address “the fog,” his new book, cpa firm strategic planning: your roadmap for long-term success, lays out a framework grounded in decades of consulting experience with rosenberg associates, combined with research on organizational change, leadership psychology, and what drives team performance. “strategic planning, in my mind, is the venue by which you analyze and think through those issues, put them up, not just out of reactivity,” rampe explains. it means “really stepping back and looking at the big picture of the industry and your firm and your situation, and then making choices that you’re aligned with.” 

more streaming: chang: killing saly, one agent at a time | vanover: 5-star firms don’t bill by the hourkless: profit is a result. flourishing is the purpose | whitman: build culture on ‘progress,’ not change | shein: no pe? no m&a? no problem | hood and weber: time to riseproctor: turn dumb ideas into brilliant solutionscarter-gray: how 1 poor review strengthened the firm | hartman: upwork to “40 under 40” in 3 years |

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

according to rampe’s research, strategic planning fails most often at the execution stage. nearly two-thirds of respondents reported that execution fails after the planning meeting.” firms gather, generate good ideas, identify priorities, and then get pulled into their day-to-day work, and nothing happens. or they put off strategic planning altogether until some imaginary day when they might have time.  

“one of the insights is you need to spend time working on the business, not just in the business, because the in the business is going to drown you,” rampe explains. the way you solve that is “not working harder in the business. it’s working, prioritizing, working on the business.