Issued by the PCPS Management of an Accounting Practice Committee
Pricing your services and billing for them is one of the most important skills in the successful practice of accountancy. Unfortunately, formal education or training courses seldom discuss pricing or billing, and firms rarely discuss pricing in an organized manner. These are skills that one must learn.
David Cottle's new guide Bill What You're Worth takes you through pricing methods, pricing methodologies, and teaches you how to discuss pricing with clients, and how to motivate employees to bill what they're worth.
By following the advice in this 200-page book and you will be able to:
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Our Recommended Related Resources: Mastering the Art of Marketing Professional Services: A Step-by-Step Best Practices Guide |
Why Some Accountants Earn Much More Than Others
When it comes to economic opportunity, the accounting profession is the proverbial level playing field. All the players have about the same education; they possess well above-average intelligence; it only takes a few thousand dollars of capital to start a practice; and most accountants practice in similar marketplaces with similar economic conditions. In other words, the profession truly has equal opportunity.
Then why do some accountants make so much more money than others?
Then what does account for the wide differences in financial performance between accountants?
Key Point: In a competitive marketplace, the quality and performance of management determines the ultimate success of the practice. Actually, in the long run, the only competitive advantage an accounting firm can have is the quality of its management.
A few firms thrive in today's volatile environment, firms that grow in depressed markets, firms that far outstrip their competition, firms that enhance both the quality and the quantity of their services to clients, while they earn appropriate – even amazing
– profits.
You can do this, too. But you have to know what to do differently from what you have done in the past.
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