| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
MORE THAN 50% OF PARTNERS AT
CPA FIRMS are over 50 years old,
and a significant number of firms now are
run by baby boomers who will seek
retirement during the next five to 10
years. There is a shortage of partnership
candidates to take the reins. GROWING A FIRM AND RETAINING
CLIENTS requires drive and
rainmaking skills in addition to
attributes such as loyalty,
dependability, technical competency and
devotion to quality. Potential
partnership candidates should be able to
inspire and manage people, bring in new
clients, serve a vital role on client
advisory teams and be motivated to be
highly successful.
SMALL AND MIDSIZE CPA FIRMS (the
ones that most need new partners) have
not provided a floodgate of
opportunities. Instead of investing in
creating a successor generation, many
havent hired the entry-level people
they would have in the past.
OWNERS OFTEN SEEK AND HIRE people
who are productive in delivering high
chargeable hours but dont give them
comprehensive leadership training or
career counseling. As a result the best
people dont get the opportunity to
develop their potential.
FIRMS MUST TAKE THE
INITIATIVE TO FIND, attract and
nurture the best people from a relatively
small pool of possible candidates. A firm
should designate one of the local
colleges or universities as a farm
club for new recruits.
THE KEY TO A SUCCESSFUL
RECRUITING effort is to make it
a top priority and invest the money to do
it thoroughly. Firms should designate one
or two partners to focus on it and reward
them for achieving the desired results.
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| STEPHEN WEINSTEIN, CPA, is a
Branford, Connecticut, consultant who
helps CPA firms and other professional
companies deal with critical practice
matters including the development and
resolution of buy-in and
buyout/retirement issues. His e-mail
address is swadvisor@comcast.net. |
he dreaded alert Weve got a
problem applies in more realms than NASA
command control. For the CPA profession it
pertains to a looming predicament: finding and
developing strong entrepreneurial young partners
so established firms can continue to thrive after
their founders bow out. Many owners say the
successor drought has been growing over the past
several years and likely will worsen in the
future. Forward-thinking firms are taking steps
today to address the challenge with a mixture of
short- and long-term programs designed to keep
the leadership pipelines flowing. This article
will describe some causes of the future-partner
scarcity and offer CPAs specific approaches to
use to get the best people as well as motivate
current staff.
WHY
DO WE HAVE THIS PROBLEM?
The reason for the
shortage of successors in public accounting firms
is a complex matter that no one explanation
covers, but understanding the contributing
factors may point owners toward a solution. This
is what partners say:
Over the past 10 to 15
years, fields such as finance, technology and law
have captured the imagination of many of the
brightest and best business-oriented students.
Meanwhile, although the nature of public
accounting has evolved, many young people in our
society remain unaware of those changes and the
possibilities an accounting career offers.
Small and midsize CPA firms
(those most in need of new partners) have not
provided a floodgate of opportunities. Instead of
investing in developing a successor generation,
many firms havent hired the entry-level
people they would have in the past, largely
because technology has increased productivity and
let them use fewer people to perform the work.
That means fewer CPAs enter the firms
college-graduate-to-partner pipelinewhich
the five-year program in accounting schools has
further slowed.
The number of women
entering the accounting profession has jumped to
56% in 2002 from 45% in 1982. Once rare, women
CPAs now represent more than 50% of the workforce
of local and regional firms, but a mere 14% hold
the position of firm partner, shareholder or
owner. Many old guard male partners
who have seen the workplace change say
womens aptitude is undeniable, but the
votes not in on whether they will strive in
greater numbers to become owners.
Partners focus so
exclusively on client matters, new business
development and churning out the
product that they dont nurture the
talented people who enter their firms. While
owners often seek and hire people who can deliver
high chargeable hours with low write-downs, they
dont give those same employees
comprehensive leadership training or career
counseling. As a result their best people
dont get the opportunity to develop their
full potential. After a while many leave (see
Case
Study: Career Counseling Vs. the Annual Review).
LONG-TERM SURVIVAL
The shortage of young people who are partner
material has become a crisis. Upwards of 50% of
partners are more than 50 years old, and a
significant number of firms now are run by baby
boomers who will seek retirement during the next
five to 10 years, sources say. Many senior owners
arent confident their staff CPAs are strong
enough to guarantee the viability of their firms
and the solid retirement buyout packages they
want future partners to deliver.
Growing a firm and retaining
clients require more than the conspicuous virtues
of loyalty, dependability, reliability, technical
competency, devotion to quality, moral character,
a productive nature, a strong work ethic and an
agreeable personality, firms say. Owners who
dont want to lose people with just those
qualities sometimes promote them even when
theyre not truly partner material. So
whats the missing ingredient to make a
successful principal? An individual must be able
to grow the pie through a unique
combination of characteristics including
Leadership
skills. Partners must have the
ability to inspire and manage people. That
requires the vision, skills and personality to
motivate employees and obtain strong support from
every member of the firm.
Rainmaking
potential. Partners should be able
to bring in clients from existing-client
referrals and from contacts and organizational
activities. Strong candidates will have shown
interest in doing this early in their careers;
they are people with engaging personalities, who
are out and about with others and
already starting to build a track record of
bringing in new business.
Entrepreneurial
skills. A true business adviser is
someone clients look to when they are going to
make a major financial decision. CPAs with
genuine business acumen generate client loyalty
not just because they work on the account (and do
the accounting, audit or tax work) but because
the client experiences them as a vital part of
his or her team.
Ambition and
drive. A strong desire to become an
owner is essential. This usually is combined with
a willingness to do whatever it takes to
make it. Such people drive
themselves, and often those around them, in their
quest for partnership status. Many people work
hard, but few really are motivated to be highly
successful, owners say.
Other key
attributes. Occasionally, a person
without the above characteristics may have a
specific talent that can add significant business
in the future. For example, he or she may have
become a known expert in a technical
specialty the firm can market to achieve
substantial financial benefits.
CASE
STUDY
Career Counseling
Vs. the Annual Review
John, one of ABC &
Co.s better staff members, had just
completed his fifth year with the firm.
He had joined ABC on graduation from
college. Each June he had had counseling
sessions with a partner. These meetings
were fairly routine; the partner would
review Johns performance for the
past 12 months and commend him on his
high chargeable hours, his staying within
budget and his positive client and staff
relationships. The partner then would
tell him his salary increase for the
coming year. In their most recent
meeting, the partner said John was doing
well at the firm and was pleased with his
assignments and salary increase. Three
months later, John submitted his
resignation. He said he had always loved
technology, and since ABC & Co. did
not have a technology department or
niche, he had decided to join another
firm that was building that specialty.
The partner who had counseled John had
had no idea he wanted to pursue this
career track. The partners were quite
upset because John was one of the few
staff members who had partnership
potential. Furthermore, they would
have been interested in building a
technology niche and were upset to lose a
talented individual to a competitor.
This is a classic example of what
firms do wrong. Accountants generally are
not well-trained in staff development,
either in college or through subsequent
CPE or training, and their expertise and
level of comfort in dealing with these
matters may be limited. Too often, they
focus on performance reviews and salary
adjustments instead of on what employees
want to achieve in their own careers (see
Career Counseling
Guide).
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FIND, ATTRACT AND NURTURE
The situation is unlikely to change rapidly, so
for the next few years CPA firms must take the
initiative to find, attract and nurture the best
possible candidates. Taking long-term actions
today to develop quality contenders over the next
several years, and short-term actions to solve
your immediate needs, can keep the pipeline of
potential leaders full. Recognizing the crisis,
the AICPA is investing $25 million in an
ambitious student recruitment campaign, now in
its fourth year. The Web site www.StartHereGoPlaces.com is the hub of the campaign.
On a long-term basis, consider
one of the local colleges or universities as a
farm club for new recruits. This is
especially useful for local or regional firms
that are large enough to project the image of
being an alternative to the Big Four. Start an
internship program (see Road
to the Future, JofA,
Jul.04, page 41). Institute a program that
combines campus activity such as speaking in
accounting classrooms a few times a semester;
create a working relationship with one or two key
professors; get involved in other activities to
make the firms name familiar to the
business schools students and faculty.
Encourage partners and managers to raise the
firms visibility through writing, public
speaking, advertising, public relations and
volunteer work, all of which contribute to strong
image development.
Small firms can attract
ambitious college graduates by
Putting up an eye-catching job
opportunity notice in a local schools
career counseling/placement office.
Becoming active with the state
society committee on colleges.
Speaking at a college career night
for accounting graduates.
On a short-term basis, to get
the word out to the most promising candidates,
initiate a series of basic steps such as running
advertisements, using placement agencies and
executive search firms and networking
aggressively. The key is to be willing to invest
the money to find and attract the best talent.
Many local and regional firms consider
advertising ineffective and shy away from paying
potentially expensive fees to agencies, but that
attitude may be counterproductive. Spend the
money to develop really unique ads, place them in
a wide variety of print media and on Web sites
and offer attractive compensation packages.
Bringing in a talented prospective principal in
the current tight recruiting environment may
require significant compensation and incentives.
If you need to pay partner-track people a lot
more than existing staff, do it.
Another, more radical approach
is to widen the search outside the realm of
accounting. Dynamic people who werent
accounting majors in college but who have been
working in specialized (niche-oriented) fields
such as finance, technology, law, real estate or
law enforcement may be good candidates,
especially for firms with industry or
service-niche practices.
The key to a successful search
and recruiting effort is to make it a top
priority. Designate one or two partners to focus
on it and reward them for achieving the desired
results. A recruiting partners
responsibilities should include developing and
placing ads (and/or establishing an arrangement
with headhunters), quickly responding to all
leads, overseeing the interview schedule and
process and promptly answering candidate
inquiries. Firms can measure their success by
evaluating the quality of the people they hire.
RESOURCES
CPA Career
Center,
www.cpa2biz.com/Career/default.htm
AICPA members can search job postings,
locate candidates for open positions,
assess personal strengths and development
needs and access other career-related
resources.
Competency
Self-Assessment Tool (CAT), www.cpa2biz.com/CAT
CAT provides guidance for staffing,
training-needs analysis and job redesign.
The tool is free to individuals who are
AICPA members.
For more information see www.aicpa.org
or www.cpa2biz.com
or call the Institute at 888-777-7077.
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DEVELOP EXISTING STAFF
Because firms push employees to be
production-oriented (that is, to deliver high
billable hours and get work done on time and
within budget), they do not typically devote
adequate time and resources to bringing out staff
members leadership, human resources or
marketing skills. Most firms merely pay lip
service to those areas by talking up certain
practice-development activities.
Instead, use a step-by-step,
long-term approach to developing the future
partners in your firm:
Write out a list of
personality characteristics and other attributes
that you and your partners see as necessary for
future owners. Start with the attributes listed
on above and add qualities important to your
organization. This is your qualifications wish
list, against which your firm will gauge
potential candidates.
Perform an in-depth
review/assessment of each member of your staff.
Your goal is to recognize who in the organization
may have the potential to become a principal.
Initiate career counseling
with each staff member who shows any promise.
Many partners do not understand how to perform an
effective career counseling session. Partners can
ask questions such as those found in the
Career Counseling Guide. The
counselors primary objective is to really
understand the interviewee, to learn his or her
long-range goals and plans and then to develop
specific short-term (one-year) and long-term
(three- to 10-year) goals.
Monitor, at least
quarterly, the goals and progress of all future
partners. To expand their capabilities, partners
need to be willing to send these potential
successors to a wide range of educational and
training courses in marketing, human behavior,
leadership and management. Some of the best
programs may be offered outside of the accounting
world and can be quite expensive. Recognize that
money spent on partner development is an
investment.
Establish a mentor program.
An existing owner responsible for the development
and nurturing of specific prospects should hold
monthly, one-on-one breakfasts or lunches with
them. The partners role is to get
inside the candidates heads to know
about (and care about) their personal and
business lives.
Regularly take staff to
client, practice-development and proposal
meetings. Its also important to acclimate
younger workers to handling significant client
issues. Ask for their opinions on how to deal
with challenging situations. For example, if a
client is exploring an opportunity to acquire
another company and is faced with a difficult
financial feasibility analysis, ask a candidate
to draft this analysis prior to the meeting,
present it to the partner, be involved in its
conversion into a final document and attend the
meeting with the partner and client.
Provide information to
candidates regarding the financial and other
benefits of being an owner. Very often, prospects
are unaware of the virtues of becoming an owner
in a CPA firm. This can be covered effectively
during the career counseling sessions. How much
information a firm is willing to share is totally
discretionary; it can be quite detailed or very
general. In addition, communicate with staff
about the firms goals and planned
activities. Have certain candidates attend part
of the partners retreat or hold semiannual
state of the firm staff meetings.
Be a great role model. Show
a positive and enthusiastic attitude; avoid
negative comments about other partners or staff;
be a team player. It is not uncommon for the
unhappy, negative behavior of existing partners
to destroy staff interest in firm ownership.
Being a cheerleader for the firm goes a long way
toward increasing candidates desire to
become partners.
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PRACTICAL
TIPS TO REMEMBER |
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Develop a
relationship with a local college
or university. Have existing
partners speak in accounting
classrooms a few times a
semester, create a working
relationship with one key
professor and pursue activities
to make the firms name
familiar to the business
schools students and
faculty.
Raise the
firms visibility through a
program of writing, public
speaking, advertising, public
relations and volunteer work.
Spend the
money to find and attract the
best talent. Develop unique ads
and place them in a wide variety
of print media and on Internet
sites.
Offer
attractive compensation packages.
If you need to pay partner-track
people significantly more than
existing staff, do it.
|
Make
partner recruiting a top
priority. Designate at least one
partner to focus on it.
Perform an
in-depth assessment of each
member of your staff. Your goal
is to recognize and develop
existing staff who may have the
potential to become an owner.
Establish a
mentor program. Acclimate younger
workers to handling significant
client issues.
Provide
more information to candidates
regarding the financial and other
benefits of being an owner. Be a
cheerleader for the firm to
increase candidates desire
to become partner.
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INCOME VS. EQUITY OWNERS
Many owners still have no idea how to admit
people into the upper levels of their firms.
There generally are three levels of promotion to
consider for existing managers: principal or
director (a nonowner title), income partner and
equity partner. Offering people a promotion to a
high-level nonowner position such as principal or
director is the first option to consider. Firms
usually reserve that position for people they
want very much to retain but who dont
possess the four key criteria listed earlier.
Make the position very attractive by implementing
a significant benefit package and conferring
prestige similar to that associated with becoming
an owner.
Another position, often
described as the income or nonequity partner, is
the next level to consider. Generally, income
partners share in the firms income,
although not necessarily as part of the equity
owners compensation system. They are
recognized as partners in the eyes of staff,
clients and the public (providing the status that
many people want). They generally have no stake
in the firm (although in some states they might
own a fraction of 1% of stock to satisfy legal
requirements for shareholder status). Such
partners may not participate in the same ways as
equity owners, for example, in the management of
the firm, the owners compensation system,
voting or having full access to all firm
information. Being a nonequity partner provides
an opportunity for all parties to operate
together at the partner level without making the
more complex commitment of an equity interest.
Theres no definitive
system for bringing in someone as an equity
owner. Many firms require a buy-in, while others
give people credit for their years of service or
the new business they have generated over the
years (see Add a
New Owner to Your Firm,
JofA, Aug.03, page 43, for more details
about how to add equity owners).
PEOPLE,
PEOPLE, PEOPLE!
Finding, developing and retaining the
bestespecially those who can lead and grow
the firm in the futureis the most important
issue many firms face. Stepping up the search for
potential successors and developing those
presently on a firms existing staff are
critical steps.
There are no overnight
solutions, but the future success of many firms
will depend on whether their owners take
immediate and comprehensive action. Those firms
that commit the time and money now will be in the
best position to outlast competitors and go on to
have a thriving future. 
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