{"id":50686,"date":"2017-04-28t05:00:56","date_gmt":"2017-04-28t09:00:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/48e130086c.nxcli.net\/?p=50686"},"modified":"2017-08-09t14:45:09","modified_gmt":"2017-08-09t18:45:09","slug":"3-advisory-services-offer","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.g005e.com\/2017\/04\/28\/3-advisory-services-offer\/","title":{"rendered":"clients need advisory services more than they know"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>be aware of your clients’ fears.<\/strong><\/p>\n by sandi leyva and michelle long<\/i><\/p>\n <\/i>there\u2019s a lot that falls into the revenue and cash flow improvement area. this can be any services that help the client increase or manage revenue as well as cash.<\/p>\n more small firm growth strategies:<\/b> 5 fast, easy ways to turn annual clients into year-round clients<\/a> | six concrete ways to help business clients reach their full potential<\/a> | why businesses offer subscriptions<\/a> | your time has no inherent value<\/a> | four tools for a millionaire mindset<\/a> | reconnect with your why<\/a> | use payroll to grow client retention<\/a> | 3 ways to work less and earn more<\/a> | what to do when a client doesn\u2019t pay<\/a> | how to handle price sensitivity<\/a> any of the marketing metrics are going to fall into this category as well and, honestly, this is one of the most underutilized consulting opportunities there is because a lot of accountants are scared of the revenue side of business. please don\u2019t be. i want to tell you right now almost every single business could improve in this area. of 26 million small businesses, almost all of them need to look at their revenue better. you\u2019re the one who can help them change their chart of accounts and move it around for them.<\/p>\n another category of advisory services is profit and there\u2019s a lot in this category. this would be any service that would help the client understand how to increase profits. you can teach them what a profit margin is. how many clients do you have who don\u2019t know what a profit margin is? i think this has to be my favorite area because it\u2019s something i\u2019ve done my entire career and it\u2019s all about cost accounting.<\/p>\n so let\u2019s go back to our college courses and remember the lessons we had on cost accounting. remember how to do break-even analysis? how about the return on investment? you can actually help them with things like that: profit margin analysis, profit margin by class, profit margin by product.<\/p>\n one thing i want to get you thinking about is we focus too much on expenses. what really makes me crazy is the typical income statement has one or two lines for revenue and 30 lines for expenses. what\u2019s that about? we need 30 lines for revenue and one line for expenses. i know i\u2019m exaggerating but do you see what i mean?<\/p>\n we need to focus on having more analysis when it comes to the revenue and a lot less when it comes to expenses.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n risk management is another category: internal control improvements, compliance issues such as sales tax. one thing i think i\u2019ve discovered \u2013 having been laid off and been a totally reluctant entrepreneur \u2013 is entrepreneurs are a lot more risk takers than accountants in many cases, especially accounting employees. so we need to honor that to some degree.<\/p>\n i know there are ethics issues in some cases and i\u2019m not talking about that. i am talking about as an accountant we can present the financial numbers and then it is up to the owner to make the final decision on what they want to do. we just need to lay out the potential liabilities and we can do that easily as we\u2019re number crunchers.<\/p>\n what are your clients’ biggest mental blocks regarding their financial literacy? do they get overwhelmed? do they lack confidence? are they afraid of appearing stupid? are they afraid of not being able to afford it?<\/p>\n do you think it\u2019s because they don\u2019t see the value of it? we have to communicate the value. lack of time could be an “i don\u2019t know what i don\u2019t know,” and so it\u2019s up to us to educate on this. clients also could be too busy working in their own business or have a fear of numbers.<\/p>\n you want to let them know what a potential outcome might be in terms of communicating the value. i think it will be really important that you let them know what the payoff will be for their time spent. we need to educate them about what the payoff will be and maybe that\u2019s the part we\u2019re not communicating. think about that: what is the payoff to your client if they spent the time? they may just think you want to teach them an accounting lesson or may not realize that payoff is more profit and working less. we have to help them with that.<\/p>\n this one client i had had an employee vs. contractor issue and had an issue with the way revenue was being recorded, had an issue with an outdated system and so suddenly all at the same time we\u2019re trying to put him on a new payroll system, we\u2019re trying to move him to a new accounting system and we\u2019re trying to let him know whether they collected sales tax right or not. they will blow up. they will faint and walk away and say, “forget it, i\u2019m not dealing with this.”<\/p>\n i think some of the time we need to say, “you do have some compliance issues; let\u2019s figure out what we want to prioritize and in three months let\u2019s figure out what the next most important thing is because i don\u2019t want to overwhelm you, but i do want you to address these risks. let\u2019s address the biggest risk first.” you have to figure out the biggest one first and that way you can help the client. if you\u2019re hitting the client with all this at the same time, then they will get overwhelmed.<\/p>\n just moving the client to a new payroll system i will tell you is about a month\u2019s worth of overwhelm on some of these, especially if they\u2019re very right-brained and very afraid of financial stuff. so you have to go really easy with them and teach them over and over again and tell them to write it down.<\/p>\n okay, so there’s getting overwhelmed. the next one is fear of feeling stupid and look at all these fears, fear of not being able to afford it and then lack of confidence and then others.<\/p>\n let\u2019s talk about some of these blocks and how you can approach them. what is some of your best wording in terms of making sure a client doesn\u2019t feel stupid? how do you do this? no one wants to feel stupid, so how do you help them with this? maybe just introduce one figure at a time, one thing at a time, and just keep repeating it until they get it.<\/p>\n try a phrase like, “let me show you something that\u2019s very cool.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n tackle one area at a time: “let me show you how simple this is.” i never talk down to my clients. just tell them you\u2019re going to break it down into small pieces. i always explain that i wouldn\u2019t be able to do what they do. i explain that mistakes are the best teacher, it\u2019s my job to help you with this, we\u2019ll get through this and i\u2019m here to help you.<\/p>\n i think the main solution to overwhelm is to pace yourself and to make sure you\u2019re not throwing a whole bunch of stuff on them. people feel like they\u2019re not good enough for this financial stuff: “yeah, i run my own business but for some reason i\u2019m not good enough for the numbers part.” that\u2019s crazy, but that\u2019s the way some entrepreneurs think. so i think we have to be very sensitive and we have to be compassionate with ourselves as well because we may fall into this category as well.<\/p>\n this is something we need to work on. we need training sessions to help build our confidence, we need some successes under our belt, we need to ask for feedback and we need to hear feedback on a regular basis. so all of that will help us.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
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