The column explores five top strategies to help you better manage your firm’s capacity issues.
Strategic planning
United we thrive, divided we fail
If you want your firm to thrive well into the future, make enhancing overall partner unity your No. 1 priority in the coming year.
Get a head start on preparing for tax season
The AICPA Private Companies Practice Section team shares best practices on preparing for busy season.
Don’t let scope creep lead you out of bounds
In the sports world, it is pretty easy to determine whether you are in or out of bounds. It’s not so simple in the accounting world.
Succeeding with a narrow focus
Specializing and focusing on a narrow range of services can help CPAs and audit firms reduce training costs and risks.
Roadblocks to avoid in accounting firm M&A
Looking to buy or sell a practice? Either way, a number of obstacles need to be cleared before you get the deal done.
Models of success?
An accounting firm experiment hypothesizes that “there will be multiple successful business models for accounting firms of the future.” Explore the experiment’s results and different visions for public accounting’s future—and examples of that future already becoming reality.
How firms can use social media more effectively
Many CPA firms post sparingly and need better training and policies around social media, a new survey shows.
Succession challenges for U.S. CPA firms to tackle
U.S. public accounting firms must tackle five challenges in their succession planning to fill the gaps left by Baby Boomer partners who have begun to retire, according to results from a Global Accounting Alliance survey.
CPAs have opportunities in financial planning and forecasting
Many accountants may have opportunities to expand their service offerings to small business clients by providing financial planning and forecasting, according to a new survey. Just one in three accountants offers financial planning or forecast services as part of clients’ business planning process, according to a survey of 150 accountants
High-functioning firms
High-functioning firms have leadership teams that assess situations, develop strategies, and make and execute decisions with relative ease, speed, and success. Others, however, function with a drag that pulls against their momentum, causing the business of leading, managing, and executing to take longer and produce less-than-stellar results. High-functioning firms seem
The Brazilian way
Brazil, which hosts the World Cup in men’s soccer this summer and the Olympic Games in 2016, remains a top destination for foreign direct investments despite slowed economic growth. Businesses that expand into Brazil quickly learn the Latin American country has many faces.
Managing change successfully
Leaders can foster success and overcome resistance with a well-thought-out strategy for implementing any transition and for communicating their plans.
Six trends that are reshaping business
Accountants excel at analyzing numbers and developing strategies based off them. The way University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professor James Johnson, Ph.D., sees it, the numbers describing the demographics of the United States leave accountants little choice today but to embrace diversity and new business practices. Johnson spoke
Women’s initiatives: A strategic advantage
The recent AICPA supply and demand survey found that women constituted 44% of accounting employees at CPA firms but only 19% of the partners. The partnership percentage was a step back for women in public accounting. The percentage of female leaders in firms had risen from 1% (partners and principals)
Mergers emerge as dominant trend
Powerful forces are transforming the accounting profession in the United States. The Baby Boomers are heading into their retirement years. Baby Boomer CPAs are in charge of most U.S. accounting firms. And most U.S. accounting firms don’t have a signed succession or practice-continuation plan in place. These realities are rewriting
Preparing for disaster
One CPA firm is still recovering from a “superstorm” that damaged nine of its 14 offices. Another has constructed a safe room in its new office, which was built after a tornado destroyed its previous office. A third firm is adjusting to the “new normal” in a city forever changed
Succession planning: The challenge of what’s next
CPA firm owners say succession planning is important, and a growing number of firms have formal plans in place. Still, many firms and sole proprietors have a great deal of succession planning work ahead of them. Among the challenging statistics that emerged from a recent AICPA survey on the topic:
Revitalize Your Firm’s Marketing Strategy
If you think there is room for improvement in your accounting firm’s marketing and sales effort, you’re in good company. A recent study by Broderick & Co., consisting of in-depth interviews with leaders representing 130 well-known professional services firms in accounting, law, executive search, management consulting, architecture, financial services and
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SPONSORED REPORT
Preparing clients for new provisions next tax season
As the 2025 filing season approaches, H.R. 1 introduces significant tax reforms that CPAs must be prepared to navigate. These legislative changes represent some of the most comprehensive tax updates in recent years, affecting both individual and corporate taxpayers. This report provides in-depth analysis and guidance on H.R. 1.
