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By Gale Crosley, CPA
Reprinted with permission from Accounting Today, 2009
Admit it. You’re good at what you do. Your clients trust your proven ability to help
improve their businesses. Perhaps it’s time to take the step of enlarging your vision of yourself
from accountant to consultant.
Most good CPAs intuitively move beyond tax returns and financial statements, offering
insight and counsel. Successfully formalizing the process can make the difference in growing
your practice, and in the satisfaction you get from your work.
What Is Consulting, Anyway?
It’s a familiar term, but what does it really mean? I view consulting as a value-added
service that helps clients improve the nature and quality of their decision-making. Accountingoriented
consulting gives clients the ability to respond to issues and opportunities in a strategic
way.
Consulting is fundamentally a proactive pursuit. As such, it differs from compliancerelated
duties that are based largely on assessing and responding to existing financial conditions.
Consulting is about influencing the future.
Think “Value,” not “Time”
One obstacle for many CPAs is how to charge for consultation. They know how to bill
hourly for the preparation of financial statements, audits and tax returns. But how do you bill for
creating strategies and improving business conditions? How do you charge for an idea that may
have come to you in a flash, but would never have come at all without years of experience?
Think about this: Your physician doesn’t charge less because he or she sees you for 10
minutes rather than 30, right? What matters is that the doctor solved your problem. The same
applies here. Consulting is about identifying and communicating opportunity; problem-solving
that may not fit easily into hourly billing.
I urge CPAs to package and price the advice they offer differently from how they charge
for other services, for example on a project or retainer basis. One advantage is that this lends the
work the significance it deserves, while moving you away from legal-style, minute-by-minute
billing that doesn’t reflect the nature of the work.
What’s important is to make sure your clients understand the value of your offering.
What may seem a relatively simple suggestion could significantly shortcut the amount of time a
client has to spend on a matter. The value of days or even weeks of time? The value of better
decision making? Considerable! The fact that you’ve seen many similar situations and can
reliably predict the outcome is what your client is buying.
Consider a CPA whom I’ve helped make the transition to consultant. He was asked by a
client to assist with succession planning. He responded as a consultant, not as an accountant,
clearly identifying the scope and pricing of the project, apart from compliance work. He planned
an engagement that included interviewing all affected individuals, developing a set of
recommendations and implementing a strategic plan. Pricing was based upon a combination of
value to the client and market conditions.
The result was a productive effort for which the consultant was well paid and the client
was well served. The CPA also enhanced his reputation with his client, who subsequently sought
him out for assistance with other kinds of business problems.
Move cautiously. Not every CPA can automatically transform into a business consultant,
but the skills can be learned. Examine your own experience and the niche you occupy. Read
more about consulting and talk with consultants you admire, creating methodologies, client value
and related pricing. One of the best books out there to help you is Alan Weiss’ Million Dollar
Consulting. You just might be ready to make the transition from an accountant who occasionally dispenses free advice, to a whole new level as a trusted business advisor.
Copyright ® 2009 by Crosley + Company
Gale Crosley, CPA, was selected one of the Most Recommended Consultants in the Inside
Public Accounting BEST OF THE BEST Annual Survey of Firms for four consecutive years,
and one of the Top 100 Most Influential People in Accounting by AccountingToday for two
consecutive years. She is founder and principal of Crosley + Company, providing revenue growth
consulting and coaching to CPA firms. She brings more than 30 years of experience, featuring a
unique combination as a practicing CPA in two national accounting firms, along with significant
experience in business development in the cutting edge technology environment with such firms
as IBM and MCI. For more information, visit the website at www.crosleycompany.com or
contact her at gcrosley@crosleycompany.com.
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