The accounting professional has always been seen          as a business advisor - a trusted partner that          understands the conditions that impact business          performance. This advisor not only reports on          the business performance, but may make          recommendations or judgments on certain          situations or processes that are key to the          business model. Leveraging your direct          participation in your clients' financial systems          can be a very successful component of practice          building - mining out other opportunities that          may exist in current client engagements.
        In some cases, your clients will want to process their own bookkeeping in-house. Rather than taking a hands- off approach to these clients, engage them by providing training or consulting services to support their in-house bookkeeping.
If your firm provides real-time guidance and reviews, the quality of the financial information is far better and requires less work to adjust and report. Ultimately, saving your client time and money will reward your practice with more opportunity to engage the client in other efforts.




