{"id":113418,"date":"2023-07-14t11:55:34","date_gmt":"2023-07-14t15:55:34","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.g005e.com\/?p=113418"},"modified":"2024-09-01t14:48:45","modified_gmt":"2024-09-01t18:48:45","slug":"accountants-vs-lawyers-who-wins-the-marketing-battle","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.g005e.com\/2023\/07\/14\/accountants-vs-lawyers-who-wins-the-marketing-battle\/","title":{"rendered":"accountants vs. lawyers: who wins the marketing battle?"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>does one size fit all? a slate of experts weighs in.<\/strong><\/p>\n by bruce marcus<\/i> editor\u2019s note: 卡塔尔世界杯常规比赛时间 was privileged to have a long relationship with bruce w. marcus, who was ahead of his time in his thinking and practice in marketing for accounting. we are publishing some of the late expert\u2019s evergreen work, which retains wisdom for the present.<\/i><\/p>\n it\u2019s not a race, nor are there prizes for the winner. but it has been suggested that the lawyers are light years ahead of the accounting profession in marketing.<\/p>\n more: <\/b>the risk in not understanding risk<\/a> | how to build a marketing culture<\/a> | have you planned how to service your new revenue?<\/a> | why is change so hard for firms?<\/a> | why value pricing works<\/a> | why competition matters most<\/a> it\u2019s nonsense, of course. is one profession indeed better at marketing than the other? well, no. each profession is different, and to try to make the comparison would be an apples and oranges game. but silly as the idea may be, it opens a vast and intriguing question. are there significant differences between the professions that affect marketing? indeed there are. do the differences really matter? well, yes. while the professional services marketing tools are the same for both professions, the application of each of the tools in each of the professions is different. and certainly not in the same way in each profession, nor even for any two firms in the same profession. these differences may be subtle, but they had best be observed if marketing programs are to be successful.<\/p>\n as competition becomes more intense, the distinctive nature of each firm in each profession, small and incremental though they may be, should be examined. in competing, every little advantage counts.<\/p>\n generalizations, such as the marketing superiority of one firm over another, not only belie reality, they mask those particulars that matter. marcus\u2019s third law is that the broader the generalization, the greater the disparity in details. and generalities don\u2019t solve problems \u2013 particularly marketing problems. understanding the details do address problems usefully.<\/p>\n seeing the murkiness of the generalization that one profession markets better than the other, or even that the same marketing techniques worked in the same way for all professions, we asked a number of leading marketers and consultants for their views. the proposition generally struck them as ludicrous. but in a fascinating twist, triggered by a notion that seemed simple and obvious, many of those discussing the idea came up with different views of the same conclusion. their answers provide some valuable insights. internationally renowned consultant david maister<\/strong> says, \u201cpersonally i find the proposition a surprise \u2013 i don\u2019t find the law firms ahead in anything at all and have no idea where the hypothesis comes from. it would be an exercise in futility to try to explain a fact that was incorrect.\u201d<\/p>\n while the differences in the professions rarely reside in old bromides about the differences in personalities, kenneth wright<\/strong>, the former head of marketing for ernst & young, notes an interesting exception. he says, \u201cseems to me that the tax lawyers\/cpas are very similar (they believe that clients should come to them for their good work) versus the litigators\/cpa consultants (who realize that they have to go get clients and show them how good they are). the first group really doesn\u2019t want to market at all \u2013 it is beneath them \u2013 and the second group doesn\u2019t need professional marketers because they know how to market better anyway.\u201d<\/p>\n at the same time, richard levick<\/strong>, of levick strategic communications llc, believes that, \u201cthere are simply too many variables, and too many anecdotes pointing in all directions, to support any conclusion about one profession being more adept at marketing or intrinsically more marketing-oriented. however, a few likely truths emerge when we compare the professions.<\/p>\n \u201cno law firm can touch the big four\u2019s marketing and, in fact, it was fear of the multi-discipline practice (in which aspects of the law are practiced by accounting firms, and vice versa) that powered some of the best marketing we\u2019ve seen from law firms in the last decade. now that the mdps have been sideswiped, it will be interesting to see if law firms relapse into marketing insensibility. i doubt any kind of study can determine that, but it\u2019s something to bear in mind when we observe marketing among the amlaw 200.\u201d<\/p>\n on the other hand, says levick, \u201cthat said, the state of marketing among midsize and small accounting firms is dismal compared to law firms. that has a lot to do with their getting trapped in their own numbers games. unlike the big four, their services are not so diversified or sexy. the nature of their own businesses discourages them from thinking they even have a right to be creative about marketing. also, to be frank, their margins are usually too low to encourage investment in business development. lawyers don\u2019t have that problem as much, so they\u2019re less disinclined to at least think about marketing venues where they can stick their money.\u201d<\/p>\n looking at the question from a different point of view, the international consultant patrick mckenna<\/strong> said, \u201cif you\u2019re trying to determine which of the two professions (lawyers or accountants) are the more advanced in their marketing prowess, i\u2019m sorry but i think the very question is ludicrous. be it accountant, consultants, architects or lawyers, it really doesn\u2019t matter. my experience confirms for me that when you think of marketing prowess you can divide any of the individuals or firms, in any of those professions (not by profession but by mindset) \u2026 into three categories: hawks, doves and ostriches.\u201d<\/p>\n silvia coulter<\/strong>, head of the legal sales and service organization, and a pioneer in selling legal services, agrees with mckenna. \u201cthat having been said, if you seek an answer on one side or the other with the assumption of patrick\u2019s response, then i will say accountants, in general, are more in touch with reality \u2013 because of the numbers. therefore, whether they choose sexier marketing approaches than lawyers may not matter. it\u2019s who knows the client best and who can best retain and grow client share. lawyers have all the answers in front of them and yet still after all this time, spend countless dollars on marketing people who know little about marketing, ignore those clients who make up 80 percent of their firms\u2019 revenues only to chase new business, which we all know is far costlier to acquire.<\/p>\n \u201chaving the ability to spend significant dollars on advertising, sponsorships, training, etc., does not make a savvy marketer. visiting your clients a few times a year (which costs quite little in comparison) seems to warrant hours of meetings with one another in a law firm to discuss whether or not they should visit clients, ridiculous discussions about what to talk about with clients, arguments (in many, many firms) about compensation and whose client it is, etc. etc.\u201d<\/p>\n larry smith<\/strong>, director of strategy of levick strategic communications, adds, \u201ci have always affirmed that the core of all marketing is value for the client. if that is the case, then it shouldn\u2019t matter that an accountant\u2019s work is drab or a lawyer\u2019s work high-profile. professionals must, in a sense, see beyond the specifics of their practices and focus on what can turn out to be absolutely riveting results for the buyer.\u201d<\/p>\n citing further differences, lloyd points out that, \u201csome cpas, the auditors, are supposed to act on behalf of the investing public and not be advocates for their clients. this is particularly true now after the latest round in the accounting scandals and the new rules under sarbanes-oxley. tax cpas on the other hand often start to resemble lawyers as advocates.\u201d<\/p>\n
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\nthe differences, obviously, derive from the unique professional skills and services offered by each profession, by the different issues and needs of the clientele, and by the way each service is performed. within each profession, there are differences in specialties, in firm size, in firm philosophies and in the different target markets served by different firms in the same profession. many of the differences are subtle, many are profound. but differences there are, and they seriously affect the thrust of a sound marketing program. moreover, as veteran consultant terry lloyd<\/strong>, a cpa and financial analyst, points out, \u201ceven though the lines continue to blur between the services, there are still differences in the way cpas and lawyers are perceived.\u201d<\/p>\n