
CPA Internet Portal Gears Up
for Launch
With
financial and technological backing from
strategic partners, the AICPA and the state
societies are about to enter the information
highways express lane through a Web site
that will bring CPAs and their clients closer to
each other and the world of e-commerce.
The site, cpa2biz.com, is the product of an
independently incorporated joint venture between
the AICPA and state societies. It currently
offers online CPE and other features useful to
members. But soon it will expand, making
available a broader array of traditional and new
products, services, communities and capabilities
so CPAs can better serve their clients and
employers.
Because it functions as a gateway to various
professional and commercial online resources (see
sidebar, Tools of the Trade),
cpa2biz is considered a Web portal.
It is expected to be open for business by the end
of this quarter, capitalizing on CPAs
reputation as the financial advisers that small
business owners consider most trustworthy.
Building this site isnt
easy, cpa2biz CEO Brett L. Prageran
entrepreneur with a decades worth of
success in the online professional services
markettold the JofA in an
interview, but thats why CPAs and
those who rely on them need it so badly.
The profession is a very broad
constituency and we want to do a great job for
every member. But initially that may be hard to
achieve, he conceded, so were
starting by doing a few important things well and
building on that foundation.
The team passed its first project milestone in
the fall of 2000 by establishing CPAWeb.org, a
transitional Web site that laid the
foundation of the portals technological
infrastructure, including a national membership
database for the Institute and the state
societies. Focused on members needs only,
CPAWeb offers online CPE courses and catalogs,
CPE transcripts, professional literature,
practice management aids and association links to
member services.
And thats just the beginning, Prager
said. Our goal is to provide an integrated
suite of applications CPAs can offer their small
business clients to relieve them, for example, of
having to key payroll data twiceonce into a
payroll application and again into their general
ledger. Integrating payroll and other business
data not only cuts costs by reducing keystrokes,
it also boosts profitability by making it easier
to understand and improve a businesss
operations.
State society members serving on the cpa2biz
advisory board play a central role in guiding the
development of the portal. Members include Brent
C. Johnson of the Florida Institute of CPAs,
Grady Hazel of the Society of Louisiana CPAs, J.
Thomas Hood III of the Maryland Association of
CPAs, J. Clarke Price of the Ohio Society of
CPAs, Albert E. Trexler of the Pennsylvania
Institute of CPAs and Jeannie Patton of the Utah
Association of CPAs.
On
the Launch Pad
Not quite a year agoin May 2000the
AICPA council approved the Institutes plan
to develop the resources necessary to make
cpa2biz a reality. Earlier, AICPA President and
CEO Barry C. Melancons ongoing efforts to
implement the CPA Vision had brought him in
contact with Prager.
With support from council, Melancon and Prager
became cpa2bizs chairman and CEO,
respectively and they began to assemble a team of
accounting, customer service, Internet and
publishing specialists, and secure adequate
capital and technological resources for their
plan.
Two more stages will follow CPAWeb in the
portals sequential rollout
strategy. In its second phase, cpa2biz gradually
will introduce online capabilities that will
continue its focus on meeting CPAs
immediate needs. For example, online automation
of payroll, 401(k) and other administrative
services will enable practitioners to better
manage their firms, and Web site support will
assist them in the use of e-commerce and related
services to build up their clients and
employers businesses. Implementation of
this stage, tentatively scheduled for May,
requires councils approval.
CPAWeb will then shut down, and cpa2biz will
seamlessly absorb its operations and functions
without interruption. Meanwhile, development of
the portals infrastructure will continue.
In the rollouts third stage,
cpa2bizs business-to-business (B2B)
features will become available to help CPAs
e-enable their clients and employers
so that they can conveniently and economically
buy and sell products and services online. This
last stage is scheduled for the end of this
quarter.
A
Special Advantage
When developers were first planning the
portal, they were confident the market for online
CPA services was big enough to justify their
entry into it. With the expansion of the global
economy and the growth in e-commerce, they saw an
opportunity for CPAs to establish closer
relationships with clients and promote their
services to a wider audience.
Small businesses often cannot afford the
advanced technology and expert advice needed to
participate fully in e-commerce. But, despite the
relatively diminutive size of many of these
companies, in sheer numbers they add up.
Businesses with annual revenue under $100 million
or fewer than 500 employees represent
approximately half the United States gross
domestic product, according to Prager.
These businesses place much trust and
confidence in their CPAsa fact borne out by
recent research. According to a March 2000 survey
by Peter D. Hart Research Associates, Inc., of
Washington, D.C., CPAs have the highest positive
influence rating of any advisers to small
businesses. To gain access to the full market
potential these small businesses represent, then,
CPAs need to connect even more closely with their
clients. It follows that any vehicle providing
that capability should attract interestnot
only from participants but from investors as
well.
Seeking ways to merit CPAs attention and
loyalty, the portals creators compared
their planned site with others in the field.
Every third party out there had technology
and resources similar to what we were
planning, Prager recalled. But they
lacked the most important ingredient: a close
relationship with CPAs and their clients. We,
however, have those connections through the AICPA
and the state societies.
If cpa2biz makes the most of those ties, they
could add up to a powerful competitive advantage.
Tools of
the TradeSome features
cpa2biz will provide to CPAs and their
clients include:
News feeds each
user can customize.
CPA
communities.
Online CPE.
Web-site
development and hosting.
Electronic
procurement tools to buy goods and
services online.
Electronic
recruitment tools to attract potential
employees online.
Links to a wider
variety of professional literature.
Advanced
professional research tools.
Online member
services.
Tools for
maintaining online product catalogs,
processing online sales transactions and
tracking customers.
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Whos Paying for All
This?
According to Prager, the AICPA currently holds
a 60% stake in cpa2biz, half of which the state
societies will get when the portal goes public.
The remaining 40% is held by Institute management
and external partners including Microsoft Corp.,
accounting and tax publisher The Thomson Corp.,
insurer Aon Corp., payroll services provider
Automated Data Processing, Inc., and e-commerce
consulting firm Metiom, Inc.
Together, Microsoft and Thomson have provided
$50 million in funding for cpa2biz. Prager said
he expects others to put up an additional $7.5
million in funding.
But he emphasized that venture capitals
suitability was more important than its quantity
or availability. Everyones money
comes with different strings, he said,
and we need to make sure we take the money
thats right for our business.
Since public offerings by technology start-ups
are currently out of favor in the equity markets,
a cpa2biz IPO will be on hold at least until
those conditions improve. Right now, even
the greatest company in the world might not get a
good reception, Prager said. Things
may be better a year from now, though.
When the right time comes, Prager expects the
Institute and the state societies will each take
a 20% share in the cpa2biz offering. He also
anticipates that strategic partners and
investorsboth institutional and
individualwill buy the balance of shares.
If we go public, Prager said,
our main motivation will be to put stock in
members hands. In its current form as
a closely held corporation with a limited number
of shares, cpa2bizs equity cannot be evenly
distributed among members.
In
the Short Term
Pragers immediate goal is to show
council that cpa2biz is off to a good start and
ready to launch its enhanced member services
segment in May.
Next on his list is getting CPAs to sign up.
Prager wants to enroll 25 firms in a pilot
program cpa2biz is assembling to ensure the
portals functions serve CPA firms as well
as intended. Over a hundred firms want to
get in, he said. But we cant
admit them all because our current resources are
limited. Right now, its important to serve
these firms well and not spread ourselves too
thin.
Success in getting the pilot program up would
bode well for the proposed June B2B launch
intended to fill out the portals initial
suite of products and services.
Robert Tie
Robert Tie is a Journal senior
editor. Mr. Tie is an employee of the American
Institute of CPAs and his views, as expressed in
this article, do not necessarily reflect the
views of the AICPA. Official positions are
determined through certain specific committee
procedures, due process and deliberation.
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