plus 4 questions as you shift from number cruncher to advisor.
by jody padar
the radical cpa
aside from creating a new way to do compensation and work, the “new firm” model brings upon a whole new level of transparency for both the customers you work with and your employees.
more on radicalism: 4 questions radical firms must face | being radical is all about your customer | being radical starts with being the change | why start being radical now? | going radical: the 4 tenets of a ‘new firm’ | why should cpas be radical? | the roots of ‘radical’ cpas | the first 3 questions i should have asked before starting my own practice
- data is changed in real time. no longer can you say that you never got that fax or email.
- more clarity in communication and expectations is required.
- what you communicate and how you deliver these communications will materially change, which calls for better monitoring of how team members communicate as well.
- communication tools will vary. are you using email, phone, videoconference, in-person, text or facebook?
- how will you feel about your employees having transparent communications with firm customers and, more important, how is all this communication shared internally?