eleven ways to jump-start your covid comeback

because covid-19 punishes the complacent.

by marc rosenberg
the rosenberg practice management library

there are some products that are so iconic and popular that it doesn’t seem possible that their success could ever be in jeopardy. oreos. the new england patriots. microsoft office. it must be wonderful to own and manage businesses like these that seem to run themselves.

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cpa firms enjoy no such advantaged status. but with the covid-19 crisis, firms need to short-circuit the natural processes of maturity and stagnation and think about how to get re-set right now.

the 3 stages of a cpa firm’s evolution

first stage: the firm is newly formed and starts out in the survival mode. the owners work their butts off, working long hours, doing whatever it takes, not always having a formal strategy and usually not worrying much about allocating the paltry income they earn as they build a firm. this stage often lasts 5-10 years.

second stage: the firm has essentially “made it” after many years of hard work and sacrifice. their metrics, especially their income, is comparable to other successful firms their size in their market. the firm grows. the quality and size of the clients improve. sophisticated management practices are installed such as a managing partner, an executive committee, a firm administrator, performance-based partner compensation, a marketing plan, leadership development, state-of-the-art technology, and many others.

while this stage is enviable, danger lurks ahead in the form of complacency. this is where second stage firms diverge into two types.

the first type are those firms that are never satisfied and live and breathe this quote from the former coca-cola chair, roberto goizueta: “challenging the status quo when you have been successful is difficult. if you think you will be successful running your business in the next 10 years the way you did the last 10 years, you’re out of your mind. to succeed, we have to disturb the present.”

then there are those second stage firms that are at the far right of the “maturity/good times” axis on the graph at the beginning. they are moving dangerously close to becoming third stage firms – complacent firms. the partners love their work and their clients. they are earning way more money than they ever thought they would. revenue grows for most years with less and less effort. life is good.

but the partners aren’t as hungry as they used to be. it’s not like they wake up every morning and say, “i’m going to be complacent today.” it evolves very slowly and subconsciously. though they would like to make more money, they aren’t willing to work harder, push themselves, or change. they aren’t willing to change their routines or go outside their comfort zones. like the pull of gravity, they get drawn to the …

third stage: when too much status quo and complacency set in over a prolonged period of time, stagnation begins to rear its ugly head. the partners, in their 30s and 40s at startup, are now in their 50s and maybe a few are in their early 60s. revenues flatten out. turnover rises. the firm is short on partner-potentials. coming to work is no longer as much fun as it used to be. the firm has gone stale.

i once facilitated a partner retreat of a six-partner, fourth-generation firm. the firm was deep into the third stage. revenues were flat or declining for the past five years. i asked the partners to tell the group what they were doing to bring in business. one after the other said the same thing: “i’m not doing anything.” i told them that i think i figured out why their revenue was declining.

i worked with another similar firm where all the partners confessed to doing nothing to bring in business. when i asked one of the partners what he was doing to bring in business, his response was – bless his honesty – why should i if they don’t?

throughout my career, i’ve worked with many firms in all three stages of evolution. i’ve learned that movement from one stage to the next is hard to see, like the hands of a clock. i’ve learned that moving from the second stage to the third takes many years of almost invisible complacency. and i’ve learned that once a firm is in the third stage, it’s very difficult to return to the second stage. at a minimum, it takes at least five years to return to the second stage. the damage done by complacency is often irreversible.

what’s the best way to solve a problem – any problem?

don’t let it become a problem in the first place! from the time when a firm emerges into the second stage, it must be managed with eyes on the future, not the present.

what cpa firms in the 2nd stage need to do today to avoid the 3rd stage tomorrow

eleven examples:

  1. have a vision of where you want to be and establish partner accountability for getting there.
  2. embrace the belief that your people are just as important as your clients … and truly act on it.
  3. proactive marketing.
  4. invest in leadership development, especially staff mentoring.
  5. establish a definable culture and live and breathe it.
  6. develop new services, especially consulting.
  7. specialization.
  8. use technology to drive your firm.
  9. invest a healthy share of today’s profits to build the firm of tomorrow.
  10. performance-based partner compensation.
  11. and finally, invest in strong management and leadership because this is what drives all the others.

anyone reading this has seen these before. you know what you need to do. the challenge is to take these words on a piece of paper and make them come alive and dedicate your firm to proactively executing them.

never be satisfied

of course, oreos, the new england patriots, and microsoft office don’t run by themselves. the makers of oreos constantly come up with new baking methods, finding new and better sources of raw materials, replacing disappearing distribution channels with new and better ones. the new england patriots keep scouting and drafting new talent, devising new plays while discarding ineffective ones, replacing coaches as people move on. and microsoft office – although they have had a virtual monopoly for their software for 20 years or more – constantly pushes their software development team to finds ways to improve the products by exploiting technology innovations.

best of luck to your firms in remaining second stage firms!