For as long as this website has existed — 16 years next month, to be precise — and, frankly, going back many more decades before that, the public accounting model has functioned like an insatiable sausage grinder, demanding to be fed large quantities of fresh meat (accounting graduates) without caring too much about whether every bit of meat is superior in quality and taste. Unless we’re talking artisan sausages which we aren’t because we’re talking about public accounting.
Actually, it’s more like a hot dog factory. You can make some decent hot dogs out of meat scraps that would be horrifying to see on your plate by themselves. According to National Hot Dog & Sausage Council — surely a trustworthy source on hot dogs that couldn’t possibly have any bias — hot dogs consist of “specially selected meat trimmings of beef and/or pork” unless they are explicitly labeled as having “variety meats,” the example of variety meats being hearts according to them. OK but chicken hearts are kind of good ngl. Point being, hot dogs aren’t made of the premium stuff and it takes a lot of trimmings to make them.
Getting off track here. In the early years of public accounting hiring, it’s all about numbers. Sure, firms want to get their hands on high performers but given the nature of early grunt work they don’t necessarily need a bunch of them because at that point in one’s career it’s mainly about following directions and learning the ropes. Except now the grunt work is disappearing, handed off to automation and overseas staff who work for a third of the cost and half the complaining. We’ve been asking for a while now what will happen to new hires going forward, how they’re supposed to learn now that the tasks they used to learn on have been taken from their plates and I think we have our answer: It doesn’t matter.
Indiana CPA Society recently released a paper called “Transforming Your Firm’s Business Model: Workforce Transformation and Talent Management Strategies.” [PDF] You’d think it’s about culture or some such practice management buzzword and you’d sort of be right except the report calls out the drastic change underway at accounting firms in a way that tells us things are moving quickly. Let’s check out the executive summary:
Talent, technology, and other massive forces are affecting every professional services firm. The impact is upending business models and providing just as much opportunity as challenge. While no one has a crystal ball to predict the future of accounting, this research can help CPAs and accounting professionals make more informed and confident decisions about the future of their firms.
We surveyed hundreds of accounting professionals representing firms of all sizes from 31 states. From their responses and feedback, four key points stood out for firm leadership to consider.
Most respondents expect their firms to shrink in headcount by 20% or more in the next five years. How will accounting firms continue to see growth and profitability with smaller teams? This prediction alone seems to be enough to consider restructuring accounting firms now to prepare for the future.
This dramatic reduction, driven by technological advances and a talent crunch, will upend the pyramid practice structure that accounting firms have successfully leveraged for a century to sustain growth and profitability. An important driver to success in the future will be retaining the best performers within accounting firms. The pyramid practice structure was not designed for talent retention. In fact, it functions in an opposite way: filtering talent out. What other options are presenting themselves to firms that are willing to change?
To be successful in the future, accounting firms will need a new practice structure that accommodates and focuses on the “6 Ps” of Business Model Transformation: Precision hiring, Proactive retention, Practical technology implementation, Pricing expertise, Practice area expansion or focus, People acceleration
Other industries have success stories to tell. Companies in manufacturing, health care, technology, and other industries have all faced similar workforce challenges and have been able to reshape their professions. The key has been recruiting, retaining, reskilling, or upskilling parts of their staff as specialists through technology-based training and innovative and personalized professional development. These companies saw improvements in productivity, company growth, talent retention, employee engagement, client/customer satisfaction, and more.
They lose points for framing all of this through the lens of the profession’s self-induced talent shortage that firms and the thought leaders firms listen to are using as cover for salary stagnation, layoffs, and offshoring but we’ll give them a pass this time. A little further down the report says:
75% of accounting professionals believe their firms will need the same amount or more staff to meet client demand in the future. Simultaneously, more than half expect that their firms will be at least 20% smaller in the next five years. The math just doesn’t add up.
Doesn’t it though? Just make people work more. Hey I’m no mathlete, maybe that equation is beyond my underdeveloped left brain.
Let’s see this section and its accompanying Figure 2 to make the point I’m trying to make:
With an anticipated future focus on specialization, many of tomorrow’s staffing requirements shift from expansion to efficiency and specialty. In fact, 60% of our survey respondents anticipate reductions due to automation, with entry-level roles being most at risk (Figure 2). Accounting firms need to start looking at talent acquisition, talent retention, and workforce transformation in terms of “What kind of skills do we really need?” instead of “How many people do we need?” Firms expect to need more senior- to partner-level professionals, especially in tax and advisory. These staffing shift changes from traditional skills to specialized skills and from expansion to efficiency are why accounting firms need to rethink how they are structured.
OK but how do you get experienced professionals? No one pops out of college ready to do partner-level work. Up until recently, the above mentioned busy work trained the good meat for the upper levels and the “variety meats” went off to go be government hot dogs or something once they’d put their requisite couple years in public in. This analogy is falling apart, I really should let it go.
A Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants (PICPA) report released in February had similar data, so much so that we skipped the overly verbose Oniony headline we’d usually use and went with RIP Associate Work when we wrote about it. A screenshot from that report:
And now? Have we formulated a plan for what the next few years will look like? Did we think offshoring all the way through and prepare an alternative training ground for young talent? Or is the profession just flying by the seat of its Dockers and hoping this will all work out?
Either firms are being uncharacteristically reckless or they just aren’t worried about it because they’ve figured out some plan to eliminate most associates altogether and still get the upper levels of the ladder staffed.
Welcome back from the turkey coma, kids, I had to take an extra day just to shake it off but all is well now and we’re totally ready for action, at least until I take half a week off for my birthday in two weeks. Ah, life is good.
Anyway, a desperate plea for advice we received over the weekend got me thinking – I figure it’s about time we set some ground rules for writing us for advice. Why we’ve waited two years to do this is beyond me but I don’t run the show so let’s forget that part.
Caleb was concerned by publishing said letter, I might come off as a judgmental, xenophobic prick (isn’t that the brand I’ve worked so hard to craft? Oh well) so I will refrain from publishing it to maintain some sense of decency and openness to all types and cultures don’t really have an issue with foreigners with poor English comprehension, lost little sheep or clueless accounting students; if I did, I would’ve quit this gig to write a racy sex blog a long time ago. I do, however, have an issue with lazy ass people who expect to be hand-fed the answers by us as if we don’t have anything better to do.
NOW, since you probably think I’m a dick at this point, I need to be clear when I say that I LOVE the advice component of this site. It has turned into an unexpected bright point among the lame Hans Hoogervorst jokes and Caleb’s Grover Norquist obsession, and I’m constantly both delighted and disturbed by the reactions in our comment section. You guys have proven yourselves to be mostly useful, sometimes funny and generally helpful to your fellow capital market servants seeking wisdom, and that part is great. So great that I don’t mind so much that so many of the questions we get tend to be very similar.
Keeping in mind, of course, that though we were all told how special we were when we were little, there are really a limited number of scenarios a young accountant might need help navigating. Low GPA, no Big 4 offers. A couple of offers to consider, no idea which to take. High GPA, low social skills, you get it.
But here’s a tip. We’ve been doing this so long that chances are, we’ve covered a scenario similar to yours. So your first best friend is the search bar. You will find this on the upper right-hand corner of the website just under whatever ad we’re running at that time. Type in whatever you are looking for, “compensation,” “opportunities,” “Caleb’s embarrassing affinity for wearing Brazilian women’s underwear,” whatever. If we’ve written about it, you’ll find it. If we haven’t, you won’t. Try to be vague, so instead of searching for “Caleb’s embarrassing affinity for wearing Brazilian women’s underwear,” try “Brazilian underwear” and you might have better luck.
Your second BFF is our comprehensive, all-encompassing tagging system. You may have noticed by now that both Caleb and I enjoy employing useless, often one-time-use tags just for the sake of continuing whatever joke we cracked ourselves up over when we wrote the post but we do also use tags for easy organization of information. Let’s say you’re interested in KPMG and PwC, guess what? We have a whole tag JUST for KPMG v PwC! Amazing, isn’t it?
Now, you’ve searched the site and gotten a good idea of what others are asking and are ready to write us an email. Awesome! We love emails! But please, let’s go over what is appropriate for an advice email and what isn’t.
Remember, we are NOT professionals, we are writers. In fact, some might call us degenerates. So while we know the game well enough to gently shove your confused ass in the right direction, we cannot evaluate your transcripts, refer you to credentialed programs, take the CPA exam for you, decipher your foreign credits, pretend to be you in a job interview or any matter of issues such as these. We don’t sponsor H-1B Visas, we don’t validate parking and we don’t hold hands unless you’re really, really scared.
In the same vein, we cannot draw out your entire future for you. So writing us asking for advice on how to get started in public accounting and realize your dreams of CPAhood will go unanswered. We’re not freshman career counselors. We’re also not mind readers, so know what you want answered before you write some vague email asking how to live your life when you’re old enough to have figured that out by now. To me, asking such broad questions shows that you’re a drive-by who just stumbled across the site and I’m sorry but I work for pageviews, which means I’m far more likely to coddle someone who proves they spend 5 billable hours a day here over someone who Googled “accounting” and didn’t bother to read any previous posts we’ve written. I have given up week-long benders to crank out this content, it’s offensive to get the sense someone hasn’t taken the time to read any of it before writing us. So don’t do that.
Are we clear? With that said, please keep ’em coming. I love you. Each and every one of you, even the trolls. Fuck, especially the trolls.
I received the following question last week from a GC reader:
Daniel,
I don’t know if this is up your professional line of expertise, but could you touch up questions that auditors should expect to get in an interview?
Happy Moanday,
Jeremy
Expert I am not, but I’ll do my best to help you all out.
Interview questions you should be ready for:
1. Why are you looking to leave your current situation?
DWB: Whatever you say, never speak poorly about your current situation. Many people make the transition from public to private; harp on the positives (great people/ great client exposure) but explain that you’re looking to transition into a good private situation.
2. Tell Me About Yourself
DWB: This is not an opportunity to rant and rave; no one cares that you were on the club water polo team in college. Provide a short, organized statement of your education; professional achievements and goals- describe your qualifications for the job and contributions you could make to the organization.
3. Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
DWB: With questions like this, you need to be careful not to threaten your interviewer, as it is likely that they will be your immediate superior and the natural promotion for you in a few years. It’s in your best interest to speak about long term growth with the company. i.e. – “I’d like to position myself in a firm like (Name) where I can learn, grow and be challenged – If I work hard and do my part, then I’ll grow with the firm and my future will take care of itself.”
Your goal should be to make it clear you’re thinking about the company in a long term sense, but not so much that you’re a threat to your soon-to-be boss.
4. What are your strengths?
DWB: Similar to the previous question, this is an opportunity to self yourself to the company. No one wants to hires someone that plans to come in and shake things up (unless it’s part of the job description). Focus on your natural, daily tasks – Team Player, Quick Learner, Efficient, Organized. Convince your interviewer by providing a real world example.
5. What are your weaknesses?
DWB: Do you sleep in on Fridays? Do you smoke 14 times a day? Whatever your real weaknesses are, avoid sharing them at all costs. Focus on the more HR-friendly ones – Trouble Delegating Work- Take too much on for yourself, etc. I suggest providing an example of how you recognize the weakness and what youre currently doing to make the best of the situation.
2 thoughts on “The Era of the Mediocre Hire Is Coming to an End As Firms Look to Slash Headcounts”
“OK but how do you get experienced professionals? No one pops out of college ready to do partner-level work.”
This is the central question around AI for the accounting profession, and no one has a real answer. When someone tries to give you an answer, it sounds stupid and half-baked. If an accounting firm partner were to honestly answer the question from their perspective, it would be “I don’t give a shit. It’s not my problem. I hope to retire before the accounting profession collapses.”
And there is the problem with AI. Everyone is rushing to implement it and maximize it to reduce headcount and costs, and NO ONE is thinking about the consequences for our workforce and society. That’s someone else’s problem.
5
“Mediocre” is an interesting word to use, it feels like the big4 has been filled up with salesmen/saleswomen instead of experts, in my humble opinion.
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“OK but how do you get experienced professionals? No one pops out of college ready to do partner-level work.”
This is the central question around AI for the accounting profession, and no one has a real answer. When someone tries to give you an answer, it sounds stupid and half-baked. If an accounting firm partner were to honestly answer the question from their perspective, it would be “I don’t give a shit. It’s not my problem. I hope to retire before the accounting profession collapses.”
And there is the problem with AI. Everyone is rushing to implement it and maximize it to reduce headcount and costs, and NO ONE is thinking about the consequences for our workforce and society. That’s someone else’s problem.
“Mediocre” is an interesting word to use, it feels like the big4 has been filled up with salesmen/saleswomen instead of experts, in my humble opinion.