break the burnout cycle in accounting | arc
“a firm’s culture during busy season reveals its true colors.”

accounting arc
with liz mason, byron patrick, and donny shimamoto.
center for accounting transformation
“a firm’s culture during busy season reveals its true colors.”

accounting arc
with liz mason, byron patrick, and donny shimamoto.
center for accounting transformation

sure it’s good for business, but it’s also considerate to clients.
by ed mendlowitz
tax season opportunity guide
accounting is a business and businesses need to be paid.
it’s harder to justify prices when providing services rather than products. products are usually priced before delivery while many times services are priced after delivery, i.e., performance.
many accountants price tax returns before they are worked on, usually basing the fee on last year, or a rate schedule. sending a bill with the return establishes the relationship that you should be paid promptly for the work done.
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three steps to setting your monthly fee.
by jody padar
radical pricing – by the radical cpa
packages are the first step toward productizing your services. your packages define your services as discrete offerings with defined parameters around what they include and what’s excluded.
the secret sauce to creating a fixed price package with a value add consists of combining several variables:
deliverables + client persona = well-priced packages
client-specific price point + market price point = well-priced packages
efficiency meets innovation when you turbocharge audits with ai.

quick tech talk
with steve yoss
cpe today

my secret? humor, sarcasm and a bit of shame.
by frank stitely
the relentless cpa
there are easy ways to get clients to do what we need them to do. in our office, we call the process “training” clients. one of our biggest headaches is the late delivery of tax materials. so, we train our clients to bring their tax documents in early.
we accomplish this through a series of e-blasts explaining our deadlines. the e-blasts start in december, and we call them “countdown to tax season.” they cover much more than our deadlines for clients to provide business and personal income tax returns documents.
we use the blasts to train clients in other areas – such as minimizing the use of staples when they give us their documents. we also discourage people from putting their documents in three-ring binders. as i’m certain you already know, staples and binders drive your admin staff crazy when they’re trying to scan documents.
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