Ep. 247: Adam Lean - Escaping the Accountants Trap
27 Minuten
Podcast
Podcaster
IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants) brings you the latest perspectives and learnings on all things affecting the accounting and finance world, as told by the experts working in the field and the thought leaders shaping the profession.
Beschreibung
vor 2 Jahren
Tune in to listen to Adam Larson as he hosts the Count Me In
Podcast, featuring a special conversation with Adam Lean, the CEO
and Co-Founder of TheCFOProject.com. Lean shares expert insights
on transforming the role of the traditional CFO, offering
practical advice and real-life success stories. Don't miss this
insider's look into the future of the accounting profession!
Full Episode Transcript:
< Intro >
Adam:
Greetings, accounting professionals. Adam Larson here, host of
Count Me In, and today we embark on a transformative journey with
Adam Lean, the visionary CEO of TheCFOProject.com.
Prepare to break free from the shackles of the accountants' trap.
A pervasive challenge that confines so many to a transactional
purgatory. In this conversation, Adam unveils a potent cocktail
of liberation, strategic transformation, technology-driven
empowerment, and high-value service mastery. So join us on this
first podcast of 2024, and together, let's rewrite the future of
accounting, one empowered professional at a time.
< Music >
Well, Adam, we're really excited to have you on the Count Me In
podcast. And you are the leader at The CFO Project, and you have
a podcast called the Accountants Trap, and you mention that a
lot. Maybe you can start by defining what is the accountants'
trap, and why is it a challenge for many firm owners today?
Adam Lean: Yes, that's a great
question. We have this saying here at The CFO Project, we want
accountants to escape what we call the accountants' trap. The
idea is that accountants, and when I say accountants I mean
accountants, CPAs, bookkeepers, enrolled agents. Traditionally,
accountants are trading time for money. In order to make more
money they either have to work more hours, which there's,
obviously, not many more hours you can work, or you have to take
on more clients.
Well, the thought of taking more clients on, in order to make
more money is depressing to a lot of accountants. Because most
clients are high-demanding, low-paying clients, and they give you
all their paperwork at the very last minute, and the idea of
taking on more clients is not appealing to most people. And it's
a trap because you can't raise your prices. You can't raise your
prices because there's always another accountant that's willing
to do it cheaper than you.
And if you think about it from the viewpoint of your client, and
we have to always think about it from the viewpoint of our
clients. On the laundry list of things that a business owner has
to think about, during the day, accounting falls towards the
bottom.
They think of accounting as a commodity, in a sense. It's like a
gas station; you're driving down the road and there are two gas
stations next to each other, one is $0.50 higher. Most people are
probably not going to go to that gas station because they view
fuel as a commodity, it's interchangeable. And the same thing
with accounting and bookkeeping services.
What you do, A, they really don't understand, and, B, they feel
that any accountant can do it. Any accountant could put the tax
return together. Any accountant can do the books. So why would
they pay you more, significantly more, than the average
accountant? They wouldn't.
And, so, this is the trap; to make more money you're forced to
work more hours for little pay, with high-demanding clients. And,
so, we suggest that there's a better way.
Adam: I
would hope so because, that would be really frustrating as time
goes on, and to have to get more clients. And if you're an
internal accountant, within a corporation, you have to help all
the different operations of the business to get everything
together, do the budget, and that can bring a different type of
accountants' trap challenge.
Adam Lean: Yes, absolutely, your
candle is burning at both ends, and there's no give.
Adam:
Yes, there's no give at all. So how important is it? Because,
like you said, a lot of times for owners, they don't understand
the importance of the accountant. How do you change that role for
the business owner, if you are the CFO, if you're the controller,
you're within the organization, and you're trying to say, "Hey,
this is an important part." How do you help change that view, at
the top of the organization?
Adam Lean: Yes, this is the
frustrating part because accountants are very valuable, they're
needed. But the people that use accountants; so the company you
work for or your client, if you have a business, and if you work
for clients, they don't view it that way. Which, again, goes to
what I was talking about with the accountants' trap. They don't
view what you do as important as they should. Having great books
is important, it's needed. And what you do to ensure that the
books are kept accurately and timely, and the taxes are filed, is
very important.
But until your client, whether it's your boss or whether it's
your actual clients, business owner clients, until they view you
and your work as highly valuable, they're not going to pay for
that. So the idea is to shift in your client's mind, in your
constituent's mind, your value.
So instead of being thought of as the person that just keeps the
books or that just does the taxes. Because you have to remember
that your client doesn't really understand what you do. You know
what you do, and so you know all the effort and time and energy
you pour into it, but they don't. So they're not going to place
the value on it as much.
But if they can wrap their mind around your value, then, they
will find you more valuable. Which means they'll pay you more and
you can escape the trap. So the idea is to be the financial
professional, in your client's life, that they actually want. And
what is it that most business owners want? They want someone that
they can trust, to tell them what to do to have a growing and
successful business.
So if you, as the accountant, can be that person that a client
trusts to tell them what to do. To give advice on something that
they really care about, which is their business, then, your stock
with them will go dramatically up.
They'll pay you as much as you command, as much as you want, and
they will not think of you as just the person that records the
books or just this commoditized, necessary evil that I've got to
pay. And they'll start to view you as somebody that's a trusted
confidant, an advisor, somebody they want to talk to every month.
Adam:
Yes, that advisor, the term that we use a lot is that business
partner. You want to be that business partner, not just the
number cruncher.
Adam Lean: That's right. You'll
still provide the same value, that in your mind they need, which
is accurate books, taxes. But you're going to shift the value in
your client's mind. Which, I mean, let's be honest, it's really
the only thing that matters is your client perception of you.
That's what's going to pay the bills. If you...
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