Long known for our inability to communicate effectively either orally or verbally (yes there is a difference) as accountants we’ve found new facades to hide behind. Our communication with our clients is typically limited to brief general conversations, and written communications mandated by professional standards, such as engagement letters. The email / text message / voice mail have supplemented the traditional letter facilitating the anonymity so many in our profession seem to prefer, with the frequent result being misunderstanding or no understanding at all. Read more…
Last week we were informed we had been selected by Accounting Today as one of the top accounting firms to work for in the United States. I understand there will be an article published in January, 2009. How did we go from being a firm that had the universal difficulty of other accounting firms – attracting and retaining top talent – to being named to such a prestigious club in four years?: We changed our business philosophy, and consequently our overall approach to providing service, after following the traditional accepted approach for 25 years. Read more…
If not, then why do you think you can do your own marketing effectively? If your firm is like most firms, you periodically find yourself in need of legal representation, investment advice, insurance analysis, etc. In most cases, you will retain a professional to help guide you. We’ve had great counsel from many sources over the years, yet for many years when it came to one of the most fundamentally important functions critical to our healthy growth – marketing – we did it ourselves. And not particularly well.
Simplistically there are three aspects to a successful growth plan from a marketing perspective Read more…
“Twas brillig and the slithey toves did gyre and gimble in the wabe, all mimsy were the borogoves, and the mome raths outgrabe.”
Written by Lewis Carroll, his poem “Jabberwocky’ in “Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There” is considered the most famous nonsensical poem in the English language. It was certainly one of my favorites during my alcoholiclly impaired college years in the 1960′s. It re-occurred to me today as I read a post by Ric Payne on the Principa blog titled Time Based Billing is Unethical – What Rubbish. Read more…
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