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Archives for December 2024

How Top Accounting Firms Build Adaptable, High-Performing Teams

Earmark Team · December 5, 2024 ·

Are you successfully attracting the best accounting talent, or is your hiring process making it difficult? Many accountants find it hard to bring in and keep skilled professionals in their teams.

In a recent webinar, Giles Pearson, Co-Founder and CEO at Accountests, discussed how making bad hiring choices can be very costly for businesses. These mistakes can lower team spirit and hurt the quality of service provided to clients. He also highlighted that the influence and approach to hiring have changed a lot recently. As Giles notes, “This is not an equal playing field anymore. The power is with the candidate.”

To succeed, accounting firms need to change how they hire new employees. Instead of just filling vacancies, they should focus on a well-rounded strategy that includes careful planning, creative ways to find talent, thoughtful evaluation of candidates, and strong support for new hires. 

Keep reading to learn how your firm can transform its hiring process from a burden into a valuable strength.

Align Hiring with Firm Goals

Making a bad choice when hiring can be expensive, not just in money but also in other ways that can affect the entire team. Giles emphasizes, “It’s the effect on team morale and personal well-being. The stress of hiring someone who doesn’t work out is significant.”

Craft Candidate-Centric Job Ads

Your job advertisements should focus on what your firm offers candidates, not just a list of tasks. Giles shared an example of a CFO position ad that missed the mark: “There was a long list of required tasks… It was all just ‘blah’ to me.” Instead, keep requirements broad and emphasize the benefits to the candidate.

Leverage Employee Referrals

Make use of the people you already know by asking your employees to recommend potential new hires. Giles advocates, “Get your staff involved. Have a formal system for them to bring new people into your business.” Your employees probably know great people they would like to work alongside.

Use Data-Driven Assessments

Using data to evaluate your choices helps you make better decisions. If you only look at resumes and conduct informal interviews, you’re unlikely to find the best fit for your needs.

Use Skills Testing for Objective Insights

Skills tests are a great way to gather clear information about a candidate’s abilities. Giles’s company offers specialized tests for different accounting jobs, allowing employers to assess potential hires quickly—usually just taking 40 minutes to complete. This streamlined process offers straightforward insights into what candidates can actually do, making it easier to find the right fit for the role.

Use Personality Profiles to Focus Interviews

Personality profiles help you tailor your interview questions. Giles explains, “If the profile indicates a candidate might struggle with time management, you can probe deeper during the interview.” This approach allows us to identify problems sooner so they don’t turn into larger issues later on.

Run Structured Interviews for Consistency

Structured interviews make the hiring process more organized and fair. They ensure that all candidates are asked similar questions, which helps businesses compare applicants more easily and consistently. Giles suggests, “Include someone trained in interviewing on your panel. Use competency-based questions to assess ethics, leadership, problem-solving, and interpersonal skills.”

Make Objective Hiring Decisions

Use a scoring system that gives different importance to various assessment results to help us make better decisions, based on data. This method helps minimize personal biases and encourages a more diverse selection process. “Hire the person who can do the job,” Giles emphasizes. “That’s what we’re trying to achieve.”

Extending the Approach to Onboarding and Development

The hiring process shouldn’t stop just when a candidate says yes to the job offer. Instead, use the information you collected during the hiring to help new employees succeed right from their first day on the job.

Tailoring Onboarding Plans

If assessments reveal any skill gaps, create a focused training program. Pair up team members with experienced mentors and outline how their performance will be evaluated. For instance, if a new hire struggles with a particular aspect of tax law, make sure to include specialized training as part of their introduction to the job.

Leveraging Personality Profiles

Understanding personality types can help not just with the initial training of individuals but also with their growth and development over time.

Ongoing Development and Review

Take time to review the test results a few months later to see how accurate they are in predicting outcomes  to help make improvements to our plans for development. Also use the results  as part of ongoing personal development planning.

Conclusion

When hiring, having a well-rounded strategy, aligning your hiring practices with your firm’s goals, using data to aid your decisions, and ensuring that onboarding and employee development are part of the process, you can turn hiring into a significant competitive advantage.

Are you ready to transform how your firm recruits? Check out our on-demand webinar, “Enhancing Your Firm’s Hiring Process,” where you’ll find valuable insights and practical tools. You can apply these strategies immediately to attract, hire, and nurture the talented team your firm needs to succeed.

Remember, in the search for accounting talent, those who have the best hiring strategies come out on top. By adopting a comprehensive approach, you’re not just filling jobs—you’re laying the groundwork for your firm’s future success.

Breaking Free From the Tax Return Trap: Building an Advisory-First Accounting Practice

Earmark Team · December 5, 2024 ·

Tax revenue can be addictive. Each $1,000 return during tax season feels like security, building a predictable revenue stream that’s hard to walk away from. But what if there was a way to transform those same clients into relationships worth $15,000 per month?

In a recent episode of the Who’s Really the BOSS? podcast, hosts Rachel and Marcus Dillon shared how their firm broke free from the trap of transactional relationships. While many accounting firms remain caught in the cycle of seasonal tax work and basic compliance services, their story shows there is a different path forward.

Through strategic patience and value-focused communication, Dillon Business Advisors evolved from processing tax returns to providing comprehensive advisory services. This transformation wasn’t just about offering new services – it required fundamentally changing how they engaged with clients and demonstrated value.

Setting the Stage for Transformation

“In the early years, we were just taking numbers and plugging them into a program to get people compliant,” Marcus admits. “That’s what a tax return does.” This transactional approach defines many accounting firms’ early stages, but technology and changing client needs have opened the door to something more valuable: true advisory relationships.

This evolution requires a shift in the mindset around client relationships. Rather than trying to retain every client and any revenue, successful firms learn to approach client conversations with clear outcomes in mind: either clients opt into expanded services, or they’re referred elsewhere. This takes both confidence and a strategic vision.

“Go into the conversation assuming they’re no longer going to be a client,” Marcus advises. “Just assume they’re going to tell you no, and you’re going to have to refer them out.” This means having referral options ready before crucial conversations. It might seem counterintuitive, but this mindset builds stronger client relationships.

Many firms fall into the trap of accepting less than ideal arrangements that stretch into years of suboptimal relationships. “You kind of give in and it’s like any revenue is good revenue,” Marcus reflects. ” Yeah, we’ll keep doing your return for one more year, but that turns into two more years and three more years.” Instead, the Dillons recommend focusing time and energy on clients who demonstrate they value advisory relationships while confidently referring others to firms that better match their needs.

This selective approach sets the stage for transforming transactional relationships into something more valuable.

From Annual Tax Client to Monthly Advisory: A Case Study

To demonstrate how value-focused communication can transform client relationships, the Dillons shared a client story. Initially, this client, a large family group, paid the firm roughly $60,000 per year to prepare multiple tax returns. Today, that client is a $15,000 monthly advisory engagement – but this didn’t happen through aggressive selling or rushing the relationship.

As part of a client acquisition years ago, this client demonstrated they valued the firm’s expertise long before expanding services. Throughout the year, they would seek opinions and book additional consultations, showing they viewed the firm as more than just tax preparers. When business changes created new needs – including the departure of key team members – DBA laid the groundwork for expansion through years of trust-building.

The transition succeeded through what Rachel Dillon calls “reverse selling.” Rather than pushing services, they explained their standard processes and let the client discover how these services could address their needs. “By communicating what we do for other people, he found the ways it could work in his business,” Rachel explains. “We didn’t have to convince him.”

Clear communication about service structure proved crucial. When discussing delivery timelines, they were upfront about monthly financials being ready by the 15th rather than the 5th – a change from the client’s internal team. This transparency about service parameters allowed the client to make informed decisions about the transition.

The client even readily accepted onboarding fees, noting he didn’t have a problem paying for onboarding because he knew any conversion would have a cost with it.” This willingness stemmed from understanding the value proposition and having experienced the firm’s advisory capabilities over time.

While this transformation showcases what’s possible, many firm owners wonder how to begin their own evolution. The key is taking practical steps toward change.

Practical Steps Toward Transformation

For firm owners feeling overwhelmed by the prospect of transformation, Marcus suggests starting with a simple question: “If I were to invest $10 million in your business today, what would we do differently?” This thought experiment helps identify priorities and possibilities without the immediate pressure of financial constraints.

Often, the changes needed don’t require millions – they require strategic thinking and incremental steps. For example, rather than transforming 5,000 tax clients into advisory relationships at once, consider transitioning just 150 clients to create initial capacity. This selective approach aligns with the strategic patience needed for successful transformation.

“Your business does not look the way it does because you had a crappy tax season,” Marcus explains. “It is all the days of every year. That’s why your business looks like it does. And so to change that, you just have to take action.” This perspective helps overcome what Marcus calls the “addiction” to tax revenue – the comfort of seeing those annual returns stack up.

The key is breaking down barriers into manageable steps. Major costs, like hiring key team members, can be spread over time rather than needed upfront. A $150,000 annual salary becomes manageable when viewed as a monthly investment in growth. This same principle applies to transforming client relationships – progress happens through consistent, strategic actions rather than overnight change.

Moving Forward with Confidence

The journey from transactional relationships to trusted advisors isn’t just about changing service offerings – it’s about transforming how you engage with clients and demonstrate value. As the Dillons’ experience shows, success requires strategy, clear communication, and the confidence to pursue ideal client relationships.

The potential financial impact of transforming annual tax clients into monthly advisory relationships is significant. But equally important is the shift from seasonal stress to sustainable, year-round client partnerships that deliver value for both sides.

Listen to the full episode of the Who’s Really the BOSS? podcast to learn more about pricing structures, service delivery models, and specific client communication approaches that lead to successful transitions. Your evolution from tax preparer to trusted advisor awaits.


Rachel and Marcus Dillon, CPA, own a Texas-based, remote client accounting and advisory services firm, Dillon Business Advisors, with a team of 15 professionals. Their latest organization, Collective by DBA, supports and guides accounting firm owners and leaders with firm resources, education, and operational strategy through community, groups, and one-on-one advisory.

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