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Archives for March 2025

Proactive Cash Flow Solutions for Small Business Clients

Earmark Team · March 7, 2025 ·

Millions of small business owners start every morning the same way—logging into their bank account to see their balance. While 95% of business owners perform this daily check, a recent Cash Flow Compass report from Relay reveals a startling insight: 91% of small businesses face ongoing cash flow challenges. Despite their vigilance, most owners still lack the structures and systems to plan effectively, leaving them vulnerable to late payments, insufficient reserves, and high stress.

Based on a recent webinar featuring Blake Oliver, CPA, and Relay’s own Deanna Zubrickas, this article explores how accountants and financial advisors can move beyond balance-check advising and guide clients toward proactive, data-driven cash flow strategies. By leveraging multiple bank accounts, automated transfers, and regular check-ins, accountants can deliver both financial clarity and much-needed peace of mind to overworked owners.

Let’s dive into some of the key points from the webinar and, more importantly, what you can learn from them. 


1. The Universal Challenge: 91% Face Cash Flow Struggles

In Relay’s Cash Flow Compass survey of over 750 small businesses:

  • 91% of respondents reported dealing with cash flow issues.
  • Common causes include rising labor costs, seasonal fluctuations, and late client payments.

With so many business owners feeling the pinch, accountants have an opportunity to provide high-value advisory services that go far beyond routine compliance work.


2. Overconfidence vs. Reality: The 42% Confidence Gap

One surprising finding is that many owners believe they have a solid handle on their finances—but the numbers tell a different story. On average, business owners are 42% more confident in their cash flow management than is justified by their actual data. This gap creates real risks. 

Blake remarks, “Coming off of a busy season, business owners see a big bank balance and feel invincible. The challenge is helping them realize that money might need to stretch through slower months or seasonal dips.”

This mismatch between perception and reality underscores the need for deliberate systems that track not just daily balances but future obligations.


3. Missing Payments, Personal Stress, and Burnout

Cash flow struggles affect both the business and its people:

  • 31% of respondents missed or were late on major payments, including rent and payroll.
  • 71% reported experiencing significant stress or anxiety due to cash flow woes.
  • 62% said they suffered negative outcomes like delayed projects or losing clients.

For many, delayed payments jeopardize vital relationships with landlords, suppliers, and staff. Even worse, it erodes personal well-being. As Blake noted in the webinar, accountants are uniquely positioned to help clients break this cycle, offering regular check-ins and proactive planning that reduce the risk of crisis—and the accompanying burnout.


4. The Single-Account Trap: Why 24% Use Multiple Accounts

Despite recognizing their vulnerabilities, most small businesses still rely on one operating account for everything. According to the survey:

  • 95% check their balance daily,
  • but only 24% maintain multiple accounts to track and separate funds.

Without additional accounts, it’s easy to mix up funds earmarked for payroll, taxes, or profit distributions. That single lump-sum balance can create a false sense of security. This is where modern tools and advisory play a crucial role.


5. Structuring for Success: Multiple Accounts and Automated Transfers

Relay, the official banking partner of Profit First, offers a clear solution:

  1. Create Multiple Accounts: At a minimum, split finances into an operating account, payroll account, and savings or tax account.
  2. Automate Transfers: Relay lets you set rules so each payment received is split into designated buckets—e.g., 10% for taxes, 15% for profit, and the rest for operations.
  3. Project-Based Accounts: For agencies or firms handling multiple projects, separate accounts for each project can clarify available budgets without waiting for monthly reconciliations.
  4. Receipt Capture & Sync: Relay’s new receipt capture feature (in beta) automatically syncs to QuickBooks or Xero, streamlining bookkeeping and reducing administrative overhead.

By making these processes nearly automatic, business owners start building reserves without having to remember monthly or quarterly transfers. Even small percentage allocations can add up, bolstering that emergency fund. Meanwhile, accountants can monitor activity in real-time rather than sifting through backlogged statements.


6. Advisory in Action: Weekly 15-Minute Check-Ins

A critical element of success is consistent communication. Rather than waiting for quarterly reviews—or worse, an emergency—weekly 15-minute video calls can transform client relationships:

  • Forecast: Quickly update spreadsheets or dashboards, listing upcoming bills, expected deposits, and payroll cycles.
  • Allocate: Ensure auto-transfers are working as intended and address any shortfalls immediately.
  • Plan: Discuss hiring decisions or new projects that might affect cash flow in coming weeks.

This shift from reactive to proactive engagement positions accountants as strategic partners. As clients see their cash flow stabilize, trust builds, and deeper advisory conversations become routine.


7. The Bigger Picture: Reducing Stress and Enabling Growth

When small businesses move beyond bank-balance management, they gain more than just better books—they reduce anxiety, avoid late fees, and seize growth opportunities. With 43% of surveyed businesses having less than a month of reserves, even moderate savings can soften sudden revenue dips or unexpected expenses.

Most importantly, owners get back to focusing on what they do best—running and growing their companies—rather than obsessing over daily balances. It’s a win-win for both the client and the accountant.


Conclusion: Empower Your Clients to Thrive

For many entrepreneurs, the line between personal and business stress is razor-thin. By advocating structured cash flow management—multiple accounts, automated transfers, and regular advisory sessions—accountants can deliver peace of mind while ensuring clients have the resources to grow sustainably.

Ready to see these strategies in action? Watch the full webinar for in-depth conversations, real-world examples, and detailed demonstrations on how to implement a modern cash flow system. Equip your clients to move beyond the daily balance check and lay the groundwork for lasting success.

The Fun CPA Shares How to Work No More Than 40 Hours In Tax Season

Earmark Team · March 3, 2025 ·

For many accountants, working just 40 hours a week during tax season sounds like a fantasy.Tax pros often work 60+ hours for months straight, wearing those long hours as a “badge of honor” in a profession that glorifies the grind.

Yuri Kapilovich, known as “The Fun CPA,” has rejected that model entirely. He’s built a practice where he works just 40 hours during tax season and just 10-15 hours per week the rest of the year. His firm generates roughly $225,000–$250,000 annually, giving him time for family, fitness, and hosting memorable networking events.

Earn CPE for this episode: You can earn Continuing Professional Education credit by listening to the podcast and then taking a brief quiz in the Earmark app.

Escaping the Public Accounting Treadmill

After 12 years and seven different firms, Yuri kept encountering the same frustrating culture: pressure to bill more hours, looking busy for appearance’s sake, and efficiency being punished.

“I would look at these partners who are in the office more than I am. I’m leaving and they’re still there,” he recalls. “They have a boss, just like I have a boss. If I can make $800,000 and work 10 to 2, I would have stayed. But you can’t.”

Yuri decided to break free by purchasing a small block of clients from a friend. That deal unexpectedly fell apart, but he decided to move forward anyway. He contracted part-time with two CPA firms, working two or three days a week while gradually building his client base. This bridge approach kept his income steady and let him say “no” to prospective clients who weren’t a good fit.

The Economics of Premium Pricing

The foundation of Yuri’s business model is simple but powerful: charge more, serve fewer clients, and provide exceptional value. He started with a minimum fee of $800 and now won’t take on any tax-only client for less than $2,000.

Yuri emphasizes that working fewer hours doesn’t mean delivering less value. It’s about charging enough to serve clients well without drowning in low-fee work. He explains the difference between accepting hundreds of returns at $300–$500 each—earning decent revenue but shouldering an avalanche of busywork—and serving fewer clients at a much higher minimum fee.

Here’s how the math works when comparing traditional high-volume practices to his approach:

Traditional Model:

  • 300 clients at $500 per return = $150,000 revenue
  • At least 1 hour per client (realistically more with admin, communication, etc.)
  • 300 hours over just 8 weeks (Feb 15 – Apr 15) = 37.5 hours weekly at a minimum
  • Reality: Information arrives late, questions pile up, schedule compresses
  • Result: 60+ hour weeks, constant administrative chaos

Yuri’s Model:

  • 100 clients at $2,000+ per return = $200,000+ revenue
  • Higher-value clients with more complex needs
  • Work spread more evenly, better boundaries
  • Result: 40-hour weeks max, even during tax season

That doesn’t simply triple his revenue per client—it dramatically changes his day-to-day life. He feels in control of his workload, and his clients benefit from more personalized attention.

The most surprising discovery? Yuri says, “As the price went up and as you’re dealing with somebody who’s seeing your value, you know what goes down? The number of questions, the number of bothers.”

Service Packages That Create Value for Both Sides

Beyond standalone tax returns, Yuri offers:

Quarterly Package: Starting at $1,500 per quarter ($6,000 annually)

  • Tax preparation for business and personal returns
  • Proactive tax strategy discussions
  • Quarterly planning meetings (approximately one hour each). Having this regular touchpoint helps avoid unpleasant surprises in April.

Monthly Package: The “full service” option

  • Everything in the quarterly package
  • Bookkeeping (outsourced locally in Brooklyn)
  • He still maintains a quarterly meeting schedule rather than monthly. This structure keeps everyone on track but prevents excessive demands on his time.

Life by Design: What Freedom Looks Like

In large firms, partners can earn very high incomes—sometimes $800,000 or more a year. But from Yuri’s perspective, those partners often trade away family time, mental health, and control of their schedules to hit those numbers. Many are still at their desks long after younger staff have gone home.

Yuri has optimized his practice to support his priorities: 

  • family time with his two young children (ages 2 and 6), 
  • fitness, and 
  • enjoying life.

His summer schedule is particularly enviable. “My friends make fun of me, and it’s partially true—I don’t really work. Especially in the summertime, it’s like 2 to 3 hours a day at most. And we can do it from anywhere.”

He’s accessible to clients (they can text him directly), but because he’s selective about who he works with, this accessibility doesn’t become overwhelming. He even occasionally takes client calls while at the gym.

Yuri also hosts creative networking events to bring business owners together. When asked what he gets from these events, he answers simply: “I have no goal. I literally am here to put these people together so they can interact and do business together.”

Breaking Free: Advice for Building Your Practice

If you’re considering a similar path, Yuri offers these tips:

  • Start with Contract Work
    “My advice to anybody looking to go out on their own—try to find a contracting gig. Those 2 to 3 days will keep the lights on while you build your firm the way you want to with the other 2 or 3 days.”
  • Start with Higher Fees Than You Think

“If you’ve already built a firm with a lot of volume but want to get to the value aspect, it is extremely difficult to just all of a sudden say, ‘By the way, I know I was charging you $500, it’s $1,000 now.’ Not only will you lose the client, but you’ll lose reputation and street cred.”

  • Be Ruthlessly Selective About Clients
    “Here’s how the conversation typically goes with a prospect looking for cheaper returns: ‘Hey, are you taking on clients like me?’ And I’ll say, ‘Are you a business owner?’ And they’ll say, ‘No, I have a W-2 only.’ I’m like, ‘I’m happy to work with you W-2 only. My minimum fee is $2,000.’ Then I stop talking.”
  • Create a Memorable Brand

Whether intentional or not, having something that makes you stand out helps attract the right clients and sets expectations about your approach to accounting.

Building the “Fun CPA” Brand

Establishing a personal brand was a key part of Yuri’s strategy. His Instagram handle and hashtag—#thefunCPA—emerged almost by accident. But it quickly set him apart in an industry that often feels stiff. He showed up at events with “Fun CPA” banners, printed T-shirts, and a big smile, which made people do a double take.

Yuri also hosts networking events that don’t feel anything like typical “mixers.” He might invite business owners on a boat outing or to a local hangar party where private jets are on display. His main purpose is to connect people and let them create business opportunities together. If they want to talk taxes or accounting, they’ll ask.

Rethinking Success in Accounting

The accounting profession often measures success by top-line revenue and billable hours—metrics Yuri calls “trash” and “imaginary.”

“I think as a profession we need to refocus. And especially if we want to fix this pipeline problem, the way we do that is by focusing on the people—your number one asset,” he says. “When you neglect that and just grind them for billable hours that mean absolutely nothing, it is of no surprise to me that people are leaving.”

Yuri’s model shows that building a profitable, sustainable practice that prioritizes accountant and client well-being is possible. By serving the right clients at the right price, you can transform accounting from a seasonal grind into a genuinely rewarding career—one with time for birthday celebrations, family dinners, and maybe even the occasional boat day.

Want more details? Listen to the full Earmark Podcast episode with Yuri Kapilovich, and don’t forget you can earn CPE credit by downloading the Earmark app and taking a quick quiz after you listen.

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