| Home · Online Publications · Journal of Accountancy · Online Issues · March 1998 · The Small Practitioner | |
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| The Small Practitioner |
| By Anita Dennis |
ANITA DENNIS is a Journal contributing editor.
| EXECUTIVE SUMMARY |
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W hat can a firm do in the face of increasing competition for traditional services clients? Sotomayor & Co., a 14-person firm in Southern California, transformed its practice to take advantage of the opportunities available to CPAs who understand the growing market for CPA services in Latin America. Economies in the region are flourishing, which means that businesses and CPA firms in Latin American countries are eager for help in bringing their accounting and management practices up to the highest international standards.
There is a commercial street here called Ventura Boulevard that passes through about seven cities. On the length of that street, there must be 3,000 or 4,000 CPAs and the same number of attorneys. I decided I didnt want to be chasing the same business as every other CPA in the area, he says.
Problem: Increasing competition for traditional services clients from inside and outside the profession. Solution: Repositioning the firm into a specialized boutique concentrating on Latin American business. |
Sotomayor chose to make a drastic change in his firms business. Up until about three years ago, a large part of his practice was made up of trust tax work performed for banks, an outgrowth of his early experience managing a trust tax department for a large bank. Despite his extensive background and contacts in the field, he found the pressure to lower fees as competition intensified was an overwhelming reason to exit this niche.
To reposition his firm, Sotomayor resigned his unprofitable trust tax engagements. We lost a substantial amount of billings, but we believed it was necessary. He thought the business would be lost to the competition sooner or later and preferred to orchestrate his own transition rather than have it forced on him.
The firm reallocated resources and invested money and time in new areas. The change affected firm personnel as well. A partner in the trust area, as well as staff members, left to go to a large firm. They were replaced with people who had experience in either international business or in health care. Sotomayor had decided the firm would focus on the latter service both in the United States and in Latin America. His reasoning for choosing the two specialties was simple. In these areas, there was not that much competition and no reason for large companies outside the profession to try to compete.
For example, while a large financial services company might want to get involved in trust taxation work because of the related investment business opportunities, health care management is too complicated a discipline for a corporation not already specializing in that field. On the international side, Sotomayor believed a small firm would always be able to find a niche because personal relationships are so important in Latin American culture.
Firm Profile Name: Sotomayor & Co.Year opened: 1992. Location: Woodland Hills and West Covina, California. Total personnel: Fourteen. Number of partners: Three. Number of CPAs: Five. Areas of concentration: Health care; international business. Percentage of fees in Accounting: 25%.Types of clients: Small to midsize manufacturers and service businesses. Marketing programs: Memberships and participation in associations. Best thing we did in the last five years: Refocused practice away from traditional services into boutique services. Worst thing we did in the last five years: A merger that didnt work out. How the practice will change in the near future: Continued focus on specialized areas. |
To effect its transition, the firm hired a principal with 20 years experience in health care. Sotomayor also continued his membership in associations, such as the National CPA Healthcare Network, which offers seminars and conferences and the use of resources among the 34 U.S. member firms. We didnt have to reinvent the wheel, he notes. They provided us with all the information we needed about this field. Most of the firms U.S. engagements in that area involve helping doctors and hospitals with business management and adapting to new payment systems.
To broaden his international practice, he has made good use of joint ventures with other CPA firms or businesses. We are a small firm, so we dont have the staff to service every industry, he says. By sharing knowledge and experience with a local firm in the regionor with a U.S. business with specialized Latin American expertiseSotomayors firm has been able to lengthen its reach. For example, it has teamed with a firm that performs marketing research in Latin American countries to provide marketing consulting for clients.
Another part of this niche will involve helping hospitals and clinics to implement internal control systems to provide more reliable and worthwhile financial systems. Sotomayor notes that because fraud and corruption have been problems in some sectors of Latin American economies, there is now a push to introduce controls to prevent them from reemerging.
For More Information Here are some Web sites with information on Latin America and Inter-American trade. |
Although his firm doesnt offer this service, Sotomayor also notes that Latin American companies often seek systems consulting help from more experienced U.S. consultants because they are racing to bring their systems up to speed.
Noting the important differences in the economies, products and cultures among the 23 countries in the Americas, he says CPAs should make well-informed choices about the best practice development candidates. Once the field has been narrowed, the best route for practice development is to join a trade or professional organization that focuses on the chosen country or industry. Besides offering networking opportunities, Sotomayor says, associations are excellent vehicles for learning more about various cultures from natives or from Americans who have lived abroad. Organizations can give you an introduction to ways of doing business in different countries, their cultures and their sensitivities. Trade and professional organizations exist for all regions of the world, so this is good advice no matter what a firms international focus might be.
Sotomayor is involved in the IAA, the California Society of CPAs global opportunities committee and the Latin Business Association. Join an organization and make yourself visible, he advises. Especially in Latin America, you have to develop personal relationships. The people there find it very hard to do business only on the telephone, as opposed to how we work here. He estimates that he spends about 20% of his time traveling. He also keeps his visibility high by serving as a guest speaker on Latin American business for various associations that focus on Latin American business. Most people involved in these organizations are at the top of their profession in the various countries. Get to know them, get a feeling for how they do business. The members usually develop very close relationships, which Sotomayor attests is the first step into the flourishing Latin American business community.
