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Research
Center >> July 2009
Journal
of Accountancy Publishes ‘The Paperless Age’
Top industry executives speak out on tech trends for accountants.
by Rick Telberg/For the CPA Channel Marketer
AICPA Custom Media Solutions
In this month’s
edition of the Journal of Accountancy, seven of the industry’s
top executives share their perspectives and predictions on paperless
technology trends in the tax and accounting profession.
Each of them
makes compelling arguments for CPAs to invest and re-invest in technology
as a key factor in growth and profitability. The Journal of
Accountancy provided them the forum in a Q&A format to
share their views in a special advertising supplement.
The deadline is fast approaching for the next special
supplement, this one on payroll and HR solutions, to be published
in the September issue. Meanwhile, here are a few excerpts from
July’s Special Industry Report, “The Paperless Age.”
Roger Mongeon, VP, Doc.It:
What do CPAs sometimes overlook in going paperless?
In the rush to go paperless, many firms fail to consider the liabilities
and ramifications for not addressing how electronic files are published
and archived. Some may prematurely stop printing or publishing their
final files on paper or in a PDF. At best, some firms do still publish
tax returns or financial statements to a PDF, but these don’t
make up the entire accountant or client file.
Continued
Michael Alter, CEO, SurePayroll:
When SurePayroll started the first full-service online payroll service
in 2000, it was a fairly radical concept, wasn’t it?
To us, making payroll paperless is a natural, first step toward
a paper-free office. Our strategy was to buck tradition and create
a 100 percent online Software as a Service (SaaS) payroll alternative
offering a robust service level and tax management without the need
for customer service reps. With online payroll entry, making changes
online, paperless reporting, electronic paystubs and online W2s
and 1099s, there’s no need for our customers to print, fax
or store any paper.
Continued
Mark Albrecht, founder, XCM:
Why now? What are the economic and business drivers causing CPAs
to consider “paperless” solutions today?
I’d flip that question around to ask CPAs why not now? Everything
points to why CPAs should adopt paperless practices and the current
economic climate and business environment simply heighten the need
to adapt more quickly. Pressing reasons CPAs should consider paperless
solutions, in addition to cost and time-savings, are:
- the increased
push toward oversight, accountability and transparency;
- greater
control and adaptability to changing economic conditions and market
forces;
- ease-of-doing-business,
since clients expect digital communications;
- more flexibility
in when, where and how we work;
- empowering
the individual to have more control; and
- the environmental
reasons to move away from paper-based processes.
Continued
Scott Francis, VP, Fujitsu:
How much money can going “paperless” make or save for
an accounting firm?
To really understand the need and not to mention value, of going
paperless organizations should start with quantifying their business
operation and production process. Only then will they understand
the costly labor of production — the time wasted by organizing
and searching for documents, the costs associated with faxing, shipping
and storage of paper files. Furthermore, they should determine if
there have been customer service issues due to lost or illegible
documents, which can undoubtedly incur additional costs and time.
Continued
Mike Braun, CEO, Intacct:
What are the economic and business drivers causing CPAs to consider
“paperless” solutions today?
The business drivers for firms adopting cloud computing and Intacct
are their desire to improve productivity, increase profitability
and provide better, higher value services to their clients. As to
why now, it is only in the last few years that cloud accounting
has become a viable solution — this required broadband Internet
access to become ubiquitous, firms and clients to get used to the
idea of transacting on the Internet and the applications themselves
to mature to the point they are as good as or better than the old
on-premises software alternatives. Both firm and client can now
work on the same, shared, up-to-the-minute financial information.
And, not only is there no paper, there is also no software or hardware
to deploy or maintain and you only pay for what you actually use.
Continued
Rene Lacerte, CEO/Founder, Bill.com:
Why are some many CPAs going “paperless?”
The profession is always evolving and firms are now realizing that
they cannot rely on write-up and tax work alone. They need to become
a value-added resource during all day-to-day operations. Exchanging
bills and contracts in a shoebox and printing and exchanging checks
with clients is inefficient, non-scalable and risky. The only solution
is to go paperless and do it in such a way that the client can take
much of the burden and not just transfer the paper madness to the
firm.
Continued
Mike Sabbatis, President, CCH:
How much money can going “paperless” make or save for
an accounting firm?
This is an important question and requires firm leadership to take
an active role. The technology exists today in the CCH and ProSystem
suite of products and many firms are already experiencing levels
of productivity unheard of earlier this decade. Savings come from
across the firm. There are administrative staff savings, since they
no longer have to photocopy client-source files, manually sort them,
file the documents or search for them when they’re inevitably
misplaced. Files don’t have to be moved from one level of
storage to another and then be eventually destroyed.
Continued
More
for CPA Channel Marketers by Rick Telberg:
RICK
TELBERG
is president of Bay
Street Group LLC, which provides research and marketing and
communications services to CPA firms and the vendors who serve them.
He is the founding editor of the Insider newsletters and serves
as AICPA Editor at Large and Director of Online Content. In his
two decades in media and marketing for the finance, tax and accounting
industries, Telberg has played pivotal roles in the development
and operation of the leading media and e-commerce outlets in the
business, including Accounting Today, The Practical Accountant,
Accounting Technology, WebCPA.com, SmartPros.com, and CPA2Biz.com.
Contact Rick at rtelberg@baystreetgroup.com
or (914) 674-4531. He blogs at cpatrendlines.com.
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Trendlines on Twitter.
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