Title: Institute of Chartered Accountants C'P'D Practice Management
1Institute of Chartered Accountants
C.P.DPractice Management
- By J.L Grant
- M.Sc. F.C.C.A. A.C.I.S
20/09/00
2Introduction
- When we think of practice management systems, our
thoughts turn to the major functional areas of
- Management reporting
- Performance review
- Accounts Preparation
- Taxation
- Automated Billing
- Time recording
- Costing
- Resource Management and scheduling of resources
- Client Administration
- Contact and Marketing
- Work in Progress Budgeting/Tracking (project
management) and Compliance
3Introduction Continued
- Apart from the fact that no current practice
management systems contain this utopian ideal,
the main problem is that every firm has its own
way of doing things. - In many cases each part of the firm will have its
own procedures and way of operating
4Introduction Continued
For many practices the only way of dealing with
this diversity has been to write software
in-house, this may be affordable for big 5
firms, but it is both impracticable and cost
prohibitive for small and medium sized practices
5Introduction Continued
- Many small practices have created their own
computerised practice control systems, these tend
to be - Dependent on one or two key individuals
- Difficult to control
- Expensive to maintain
- Not really comprehensive enough
- They are usually quite ineffective at managing
the practice - Result duplication of effort and gaps in critical
information.
6Introduction Continued
- In response to the above the practice management
systems providers (in the UK the number of which
is growing smaller), produce systems which are
very large, complicated, option and parameter
driven packages with links to best of breed 3rd
party software or their own brand software for
particular functional areas. - Even with such complex and flexible systems they
never seem to quite cope with all the nuances,
peculiarities and preferences of how accounting
practitioners operate their business. In many
cases the full functionality is not understood or
used to its full potential.
7Introduction Continued
- The result for many small and medium sized
practitioners is that their systems, working
practices and procedures usually have to be
conformed to the systems and procedures dictated
by the practice management software which
promised to meet - their requirements.
8Introduction Continued
- The responsibility often lies in part with the
practice, failing to map our its procedural,
reporting, workflow and functional requirements
in a clear and comprehensive manner. Rather
assuming or hoping that the software will
incorporate these things, others use it, it must
therefore be OK for our practice needs (after all
we are just the same as everyone else).
9Performance Reporting
Performance Reporting
- An area of great concern when advising clients
and adding value to our professional services, is
one area which many small and medium practices
fail to define, relying on the practice
management software to solve this complex and
difficult area. Our faith in software provider
is touching if a little naive.
10Billing
Billing Continued
- Billing is perhaps one of the most obvious areas
for automation, experience shows that in a large
proportion of practices reduce this task to a
manual task. The use of word processing is common
and the time honoured method of printing the Work
in Progress ledger, scribbling and amending this
(reinventing the missing bits) still lives on. By
the time bill leaves the practice up to 3-4
people will have been involved in its production.
11Billing Continued
- Maybe we need to ask some hard question about
this area, most of our clients seem to cope with
billing without the same fuss, it may never be a
simple task but it could be simpler.
12Billing Continued
- Billing systems seem to be poor in areas such as
- Fixed cost assignments
- Billing based on Events
- Percentage billing against WIP
- Multiple charge-out rates
- Cost rates and discounted rates.
13Time Recording
- Intimately associated with billing,
effectiveness, efficiency, performance reporting
and management. The process is usually
computerised, most systems offering a great deal
of flexibility in mode of entry On line, off
line, manual, batch etc. - Very few systems offer the ideal of automatic
entry as the work is being done.
14Time Recording Continued
- When we contrast accountancy practice management
systems with legal systems, they seldom show any
real concern for costing a service, charge-out
rates yes, but cost of labour and expenses? - Determining the cost and profitability of work
billed is for many practices still hit or miss,
an informed guess.
15Managing and scheduling of resources
- How many people, at what level, and when, is a
vital area often ignored by the current crop of
practice management systems. - Why is it that something do obvious, so central
to what we do is given such a low priority and
minimal functionality in most of the practice
management systems? - Is project management only for engineers and
builders? Does the adage, do as I say, not as I
do apply?
16Client Contact and Marketing
- Although these do exist in most practice
management systems, they tend to be basic and
would be less than satisfactory to professional
marketing managers. This seems at odds with a
commercial environment, which lays such emphasis
on the power of marketing. Even the legal
profession now advertises. - Part of the explanation for the above lies in the
attitude of many accounting professionals who
fail even at this late stage to realise that the
most important issues for small to medium sized
practices are people and management related
rather than technical ones.
172. Designing functional systems
- Practice management systems due for a major shake
up, if not complete change. - This is largely because they start with an
accounting focus and attempt to work towards a
business focus. -
- They should rather start with workflow and
business processes, looking at what we are doing,
how we do it or are going to do it and what if
anything we need to change.
182. Designing functional systems Continued
- We provide a series of professional services,
these have cost and revenue implications, and
increasingly compliance issues. -
- There is nothing intrinsically difficult about
these parts, the problems surround the softer
areas in practice, the management of workflow
management, client contact, added value services,
marketing, and management reporting on
performance etc.
192. Designing functional systems Continued
- Practice management systems should emulate
workflow management systems, keeping a record of
how documents are built, for which client, with
time recording and achievable tasks etc produced
as by-products of core activities, rather than as
separate administrative tasks. - Time recording is often viewed as a waste of
time, which is why people forget, the longer they
forget, the more Walter Middy like their records
become.
202. Designing functional systems Continued
- Up to this point most of the practice management
systems have failed. - This has usually been due to functionality, some
of the best-of-breed solutions coming from
several vendors have significantly increased the
problems due to integration issues.
212. Designing functional systems Continued
- A workable solution will probably consist of a
modular system, each module in turn representing
the preferences of the functional area of the
practice, the best solution for each particular
task, working together in an environment which
recognises the need for diversity and harmony in
the working practices of the accounting firm. - All the systems talking to each other.
222. Designing functional systems Continued
It is precisely at this point that our utopian
ideal begins to crumble. Software-to-software
communication is a complex and difficult area,
some help is usually required (therapy can help).
- Practice management systems must be seen as a
dynamic process, constantly changing and adapting
to new requirements and responding to take
advantage of new business opportunities. We must
be constantly on the lookout for things we can
add to assist with various tasks.
232. Designing functional systems Continued
- It is usually the specific implementation of the
above concepts that sets good practice management
systems apart from the poor ones.
243. What is Practice Management?
253.1 - Planning
- To have good practice management, we must have
good planning. -
- To have manageable plans there must be measurable
results, including interim stages. - A simple tax return may have a small number of
stages while a complex audit may have many
stages.
263.1 - Planning Continued
- The measurable results against the stages of a
project represent opportunities to take
corrective action, - there is therefore a clear correlation between
the number of stages and number of opportunities
to apply remedial action. (FDS calls these
milestones)
273.1 - Planning Continued
- There is a fundamental difference between project
management as used by engineers and accountants
Engineers generally do a relatively small number
of larger jobs Accountants usually tackle
thousands of relatively small jobs.
283.1 - Planning Continued
- The milestone concept of FDS, is a useful one and
would allow (in theory) the automatic updating of
all data, prompting for new stages, prompting for
overruns and delay, missing information and
billing. Capturing time, cost, WIP transparently
without conscious effort or manual intervention. - (This already happens to some extent with FDS in
New Zealand) the difficulties seem to centre on
compatibility of software and identification of
these trigger events (milestones)
293.1 - Planning Continued
- Identifying these milestones is a complex and
demanding process, it is non the less critical if
we are to fully automate our practice management
and derive the benefits which otherwise remain as
merely potential.
303.1 - Planning Continued
- The concept of a PC (or laptop) at every desk
- Taken to a new level,
- Every member of the team has access to all the
detailed - Confidentiality is critical, it creates a tension
in the development of comprehensive practice
management models. - The culture and style of most accountancy firms
is diametrically opposed to this philosophy - And this more than anything else leads to failure
in the type of systems which I am suggesting, - It must to be effective and efficient touch every
aspect of our working practices and empower all
employees to use it.
313.1 - Planning Continued
- This detailed planning, leads to
- accountability, targets, to-do lists with target
dates, maybe even a resource scheduler. - These will probably need to be manipulated to
allow for acceptable work loads, available hours,
knock on effects etc, but it should be a good
start.
323.2 - Resource planning and performance review.
- Provided planning is sufficiently comprehensive,
the rolling up of these budgets, comparing with
actual and the review of performance will be
straightforward. Whether we are looking at
individual pieces of work, client profitability,
compliance or reviewing staff should present
little difficulty. - The plan, if properly maintained, can drive all
the work processes, in every aspect of the firms
endeavour.
333.3 - Management reporting and executive
information
- No practice is the same as any other, their needs
vary greatly in this area. - Many small and not so small practitioners have
only the vaguest inkling of what they require,
this has often been conditioned by their
experiences of what other software vendors have
provided, considering this to be in the words of
Jack Nicholson as good as it gets. - This perception is due principally to two main
historical factors
343.3 - Management reporting and executive
information Continued
- 1. Major suppliers to the profession have
implemented systems using proprietary
programming and database systems, due mainly to
productivity gains in software houses and
efficient software for the profession. The
downside is the fact that in this arena virtually
every piece of every module has to be programmed
from scratch. To save some effort many have
created general purpose report writing, these
tools are by nature general rather than specific
and fail to provide the flexibility which is now
expected. Developers have been slow to open their
databases to third-party tools such as ODBC,
usually this is to protect their investment. The
claim is that it is to protect end users from
corruption to data (I have my doubts).
353.3 - Management reporting and executive
information Continued
- 2. Accountants have only recently started
embracing marketing techniques such as
stratifying their client base, measuring the
proportion of work in areas such as compliance
v- value added. Historically what was important
was productivity of staff, this is still
important, but in todays competitive environment
progressive firms need to adopt a more strategic
approach. This drives the need for a practice
reporting system which accurately and efficiently
measures the processes and their results. Giving
facility for corrective action at the earliest
possible stage.
363.3 - Management reporting and executive
information Continued
- Practices should not effect fundamental change in
direction whilst they are effectively flying by
the seat of their pants hence the need for
responsive executive information systems to guide
and inform effective practice management.
373.3 - Management reporting and executive
information Continued
- Quote, Gerard Mallaghan, Joint Managing partner,
KPMG Aukland - We have a clear vision of how we are going to
build on success and make the most of the
exciting opportunities we have identified for the
future. - To support that vision we require first rate
management information, effective working
practices, profitability and innovative marketing
383.3 - Management reporting and executive
information Continued
- Quote, David McIntyre, IT Manager, KPMG Aukland
- We have chosen an infrastructure that meets
partners need for instant access to information
today and supports our future plans
394. The starting point for practice management
must be an overview of component elements of a
Practice Management Model?
- See diagram (a) Practice Management Model
40(a) Practice Management Model
Workflow Project Control
Account Prep
Time recording
Taxation
Management Reporting and Performance Level
Knowledge base common pool of client/practice
data
Resource Planning Schedule
Audit
Linkages to Client accounting packages
Client Admin
Compliance
Practice Accounts
Marketing
Cashing
Billing
The model should be based on a number of
principals
415. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- 1. Modelled on the workflow practices of your
firm (we must clearly understand these) - 2. Data should be captured once, shared through
the practice, if possible this should be
automatic. - 3. Allow for maximum flexibility of working
practices in the firm - 4. Handle the main functional areas of the
practice in a straight forward manner - 5. Take a holistic view of practice requirements
- 6. Deal with resource scheduling and planning
- 7. Address client contact and marketing
- 8. Assist with attaining profitability,
efficiency and compliance - 9. Modular systems, with options for using best
of breed from other vendors and connectivity with
3rd party packages - 10. Systems should be networkable, facilitate
offsite working and be internet enabled - 11. Security and client confidentiality are
critical - 12. Management reporting should be comprehensive,
simple to use and flexible - 13. User friendly and intuitive
42Dealing with these principles one at a time
5. Principles for a Practice Management Model
435.1 - Modelled on the workflow practices of your
firm
- The practice management system must adapt to and
facilitate the working practices of the firm.
This will require the management of the practice
to understand and document these practices in the
first place. - Some difficulties will often be presented by the
fact that different departments within the
practice will have their own procedures and
practices, often these will be dictated by their
particular working constraints and reporting
environments. - For example the taxation department working to SA
deadlines, multiple taxation areas with their own
rules and compliance will have quite different
expectation and requirements from the Audit
department, working to keep the JMU happy (a
slight contradiction in terms), complying with
various audit requirements and compliance issues.
445. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- No matter how complex and diverse the working
practices and requirements are, practice
management systems will simply not work unless
the workflow practices of the whole practice are
modelled as one unit. - Diagram (b) on functional areas within the firm
45Modelled on the Workflow practices of the firm
5. Principles for a Practice Management Model
WE DO IT OUR WAY O.K.
Tax Dept.
Accounts Prep.
Audit.
465.2 - Data should be captured once, shared
through the practice, if possible this should be
automatic.
- Data should be reviewed as a common resource, it
should not be viewed as the domain of the
Taxation department, Audit department, Accounts
preparation or Management. - All data should be maintained centrally, and
used, updated and referred to and used by
functional areas as they have need of it. - Data should be captured in the most
straightforward manner and should be added to and
amended within the functional area most logically
associated with that function.
475. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- Care should be taken to clearly identify the most
efficient time and place for these updates, to
ensure accuracy and reliability of all data
stored. - Care should be taken to ensure that data input is
not duplicated, that data is monitored as it is
transferred to and from all functional areas,
this will require flagging information as to its
status (i.e. working, complete, etc) - Diagram of data capture (c)
48(C) Data Capture
Taxation Data
Permanent
Working
Accounts prep. data
Basic client information
Knowledge base common pool of client/practice
data
Permanent
Audit Data
Time fees
Working
Scheduling
Staffing cost
495.3 - Allow for maximum flexibility of working
practices in the firm
5. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- PM Software should allow for some measure of
flexibility, without compromising the overall
requirements of the firm. The preferences of
individual departments and partners in the firm
should be facilitated. - There will often be the need to produce
individual work-bench, layouts, reports, screen
layouts to meet preference. - There may for some be the need to signoff at lots
of different stages for others a small number of
stages in a project or job. - Some flexibility is desirable for staff at
different levels having regard to the type and
level of work in which they engage.
505. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- Time recording is a good example of this
flexibility, allowing for some an automatic time
capture, if a lot of their work is Network PC
based, for others it may be batch entry daily,
remote time entry would be useful for audit staff
on assignment, maybe through the internet or
dial-up access. - Systems should facilitate onscreen work or
printout with manual entry, this may be useful
for audit schedule production.
515.4 - Handle the main functional areas of the
practice in a straightforward manner
5. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- One of the advantages of the best of breed
approach is the facility to select the package,
which provides the closest fit to required
functionality with an operation that is both
straightforward and closely aligned to the
working practices of the firm. Each department
can select the system, which best suits, its own
needs. - As we move towards integrated practice management
systems the straightforwardness of the
component elements is often diminished and lost
in the complexity of the integration.
525. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- For example, because the accounts preparation,
taxation, budgeting and automatic time recording
are linked. We cannot commence accounts
preparation because the client is not yet setup
with a budget, the type of work we are engaged in
is new to the firm, the staff member is not
scheduled for that job and anyway we need the
clients UTR to complete the taxation linkage. - The functionality and the integration of the PM
system should be carefully considered together
with the existing practices and procedures, so
that each individual functional area is simple
and straightforward within itself and as it is
integrated to the whole system. - The fact that information is missing or
incomplete should form the basis for some form of
exception process without over-complicating
individual processes.
535.5 - Take a holistic view of practice
requirements
- Specialisation within accounting practices is
necessary if we are to be competitive, able to
deliver a high quality service and avoid
negligence claims. The difficulty is that, these
models of practice give rise to insular and
narrow perspective, in some extreme cases a lack
of co-operation, suspicion and even open
opposition. - For PM Systems to work successfully the practice
needs must be considered as a whole, some
compromise and a very high level of co-operation
must be evident to achieve the very real
potential benefits offered. - Individual departments within the firm must see
very clearly the processes feeding into and out
of their domain.
545. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- The accuracy and completeness of data
requirements flowing from each department must be
recognised and gives priority, even if that data
is of no immediate benefit to the originating
department. - A good example of this might be the entry of
information relating to directors, this may be of
no real benefit at the accounts preparation
stage, but will certainly be of interest to the
Audit compliance and taxation departments. - Information from the payroll section may seem to
have little impact on other departments, until we
consider personal taxation services, which we may
be carrying out for directors (P11D). - Each department should be looking out for the
needs of other departments, the PM System should
prompt for and encourage this cross departmental
co-operation.
555.6 - Deal with resource scheduling and planning
- Our PM Software should simplify the tasks of
scheduling and planning by integrating at least
the following
Up to date database of staff resources,
availability (taking into account holidays,
training, sickness), capabilities and levels of
staff to carry out particular work. A List of all
possible tasks and their outcomes for easy
selection and inclusion on any job A List of all
Jobs to be done by the firm, including at least
WIP, Future Jobs and Completed Jobs. Track start
dates, completion dates, budget and performance
on all jobs. Schedule work on jobs and allocate
staff to these projects, this will of course
require some manual intervention, but should at
least present a proposal of the best staff for
consideration.
565. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- Project potential bottlenecks and impending
difficulties for re-scheduling - Automatically compare actual performance with
budget and highlight jobs which seem to be
running over budget in terms of either time to
complete or cost. - Group reports on resource and scheduling
information as flexibly as possible so that we
can review this as it relates to - Individual Jobs
- Individual Staff members
- All the jobs for one client
- All the work for one department
- All the work for one team of staff
- Allow a much flexibility in reporting on this
area to meet the needs of different managers and
staff. -
The aim will be to assist with the process of
allocating staff to jobs or projects, in a manner
that maximises the potential of each resource and
ensures the completion of each job within the
constraints of time and cost.
575.7 - Address client contact and marketing
- Managing the client relationship is one of
those areas of practice management about which we
seem to hear a lot these days. - For some it means a 30 minute meeting once a
year to sign off on accounts, at best a brief
chat, a brief glance at the key ratios in the
accounts together with any concerns (usually
working from a list provide by the staff member
who did all the work. - For others it means a game of golf, lunch or even
a long walk holding hands.
585. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- To be really effective, the contact we have
with our clients must - Be affordable and understandable by clients
- Be good quality advice based on information from
all aspects of our work for the client - Draw on expertise from all specialist areas of
the practice - Be provided from within the existing resource of
the practice - Be perceived by the client as useful and not just
information to file away - Lead to added value services and more fee income
for the firm - PM systems should comprise a mixture of
automatically generated advice such as
pre-warning the directors of company cars about
the impending changes to the calculation of scale
charges on company cars.
595. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- General advice, for example compliance issues,
retirement planning for tax and legislative
changes which may effect individual clients. - Issues raised during our work for the client, tax
planning, financial statistics, control
difficulties etc. - In order to target our advice the PM Software
must allow the analysis of clients into
categories, and the automatic collection of
advice and comment at various stages in the
process of the clients affairs through our firm.
- These additional data entries should then be
formatted into a sensible report, which may
encourage the client to see us more in an
advisory and support role. - The categorisation of clients into various groups
will allow us to engage in a proactive manner
with them, indicating areas of potential service
and assistance. - Clients perceive value in a process that speaks
their own language and is seen to improve their
bottom line
605.8 - Assist with attaining profitability,
efficiency and compliance
- PM Software should never become an end in itself,
it is merely a means to an end (or ends). The
systems we adopt should assist with achieving
profitability, efficiency and compliance. - The systems should enhance profitability by in
the first instance being affordable and cost
effective, the systems should minimise waste of
resource which often arises when data is
duplicated, incomplete, or inaccurate. - Careful control of budget and actual time and
cost on every job should be automatic, PM systems
should ensure that all time and cost is
ultimately accounted for and charged to client
jobs, either directly or indirectly through
overhead recovery included in charge-out rates. -
615. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- Systems must encourage efficient use of all
resources, so that jobs may be completed within
committed time frames and staff will not find
themselves in feast or famine situation. - Compliance should be automatic, having for each
client schedules of key dates, legislative
compliance checklists within audit, taxation and
accounts preparation applications. Producing
action list and reminders for both departmental
staff at various levels in the firm and clients. - Efficiency should be encouraged throughout the PM
System, this will involve speed of data entry and
extraction, guidance on errors, correction of
errors, missing information, simple formatting
and controlled flexibility.
625.9 - Modular systems, with options for using
best of breed from other vendors and connectivity
with 3rd party packages.
- Modular configuration is beneficial in many
ways, allowing for the specialised developments
and changes for different functional areas to be
incorporated without unnecessarily effecting
other areas. There should also be scope for some
choice in the selection of packaged solutions
from other vendors (this can cause some
implementation difficulties). - A high degree of openness is very desirable and
standards of open database connectivity must be
adopted.
635. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- The PM Software should facilitate the integration
of there 3rd party systems and preferences within
the firm. - OLE, Dynamic Linking and import/export options
must be standard within the PM System, allowing
linkage to industry standard spreadsheet,
word-processing and database tools. - Connectivity with client accounting software is
increasingly critical, especially since all but
the smallest clients now operate some form of
computerised accounting. This connectivity will
enhance our accounts preparation and audit
functions.
645.10 - Systems should be networkable, facilitate
offsite working and be internet enabled
- The mode of operation for our PM System should
allow for networked environments (these are the
norm in most small and growing practices), it
should also facilitate standalone operations
using PCs or Laptops. - The facility to work offsite, on client premises
or at home, should be facilitated. This can raise
some issues regarding updating of information in
the PM System, especially at the point when the
offsite date is reintegrated into the main
system. - Some form of synchronisation of systems is
critical if we are to maintain the integrity and
accuracy of information. - PM Systems must be capable of handling multiple
locations (many firms operate from more than one
office), the systems must allow for access by
means of dial-up networking an increasingly
Internet access and the use of Virtual Private
Networks (VPNs).
655.11 - Security and client confidentiality are
critical
- As we open the data pool in our firms too much
wider groupings and individuals, concerns over
issues of security and confidentiality come to
the fore. - It must be possible to limit access to data, by
means of
Passwords Access levels Group / Client settings
Control over edit, deletion of data,
clients Control over key events, for example
finalisation of a years accounts, tax return
etc Control over office administration,
charge-out rates, billing, scheduling etc
Backup and restore facilities for all data should
be an automatic function, which is monitored and
checked on a regular cycle. Virus scanning and
limits to outside access to networks should be
controlled by firewalls and up to date virus
scanning utilities.
665.12 - Management reporting should be
comprehensive, simple to use and flexible
- Reporting should provide for both the standard
and the peculiar, reporting should be flexible
and intuitive and systems should allow the use of
their own and 3rd party reporting software (such
as Crystal, Forests and trees, Brio etc) - Reporting should be comprehensive, providing
specific reporting for the particular
requirements of different functional areas in the
firm, the reports required by the taxation
department will be quite different from those
demanded by the audit department.
675. Principles for a Practice Management Model
- Management reporting and Executive information
are in the users domain. The practice should be
free to define their requirements without
constraint. Any data maintained by any component
in the system must be accessible, in a form
suited to our needs. - This flexibility should exist to view and select
data in any form we choose, of course a great
deal of effort is required to think through the
reports we really need, this effort is justified
in terms of the potential gains resulting.
685.13 - User friendly and intuitive
- In all aspects of a good PM System, there must be
attention to the user, screen layouts, data
entry, errors and missing information, operations
and functions must all focus on what the user
needs they must be easy to use, obvious,
intuitive. - It must be possible to adapt the PM system to
meet the needs of individuals and groups within
the firm, either including or excluding from view
functions and information as required. - Macros wizards and checklists for key tasks,
context sensitive help facilities and good
quality examples to illustrate questions should
be standard throughout. - Clear workflow patterns throughout, defining from
whence and to where data flows, defining the
logical next step.
69So what should we look for in Practice Management
Software?
- The components of a Practice Management System
will vary, depending on the precise nature of the
work and expertise of the accounting firm. A
number of functions will be standard throughout,
while others will depend on particular
specialisms. - We ought to look for a PM System which integrates
the main functional components of our practice,
into a cohesive whole and allows for the addition
of new functional areas as required.
70As an absolute minimum we will require
So what should we look for in Practice Management
Software?
A Hub or Navigator Accounts preparation Taxation
Time recording Project control and Work in
progress Billing Practice Accounts, payroll,
purchase ledge etc
71Other functions may be added, for example
So what should we look for in Practice Management
Software?
- Audit
- Workflow
- Management reporting and performance review
- Costing
- Resource Budgeting Scheduling, planning
- Client Administration
72We will look briefly at the key elements of each
of these
- 1. A Hub or Navigator
- In many respects this is, the PM System, it is
the centralised repository for firm-wide
information, and should be the centre around
which all the functional modules operate. - In the case of CSM this central module The
Accountants Desktop provides the integration
and linkages necessary to provide an overview of
the complete data processing, navigation and
access to all data. - While the CSM Accountants desktop not perfect,
it non the less illustrates the kind of PM Model
we are talking about.
73So what should we look for in Practice Management
Software?
- These tools seem to offer some of the
functionality we require, they are however a long
way from offering the ideal, they do not score
very highly when it comes to workflow,
flexibility, marketing and productivity. They are
becoming stronger in the areas of integration,
capturing data only once, security and
confidentiality. - There is still a lot of development needed to
achieve a comprehensive PM solution, - Sage have indicated their intention to do this,
and their acquisitions of Hartley, CSM and seem
to indicate serious intent in this direction.
74Accounts preparation
- A standard requirement of every practice, large
and small, it is essential that this functional
area have at least the following minimum
functions - Easy creation of client data-sets (should be
possible here or in any functional area),
providing for all client types from simple
non-regulated to complex regulated entities.
Default charts of account should come as standard
allow modification as required t meet particular
needs. - Posting should allow for flexible data entry
organised into logical groupings by type, cheque,
cash, journal, Accruals, prepayments, VAT
Extraction, PL, SL etc. Allowing Summary and
detailed entry.
75Accounts preparation
- Efficiency of data entry, including auto
repeating, search and find, automatic balancing,
amendment facilities. - Working paper generation
- Bank Reconciliation
- Standard and customisable report pages, organised
into logical sets for management and final
accounts reporting. There must be a facility to
receive regular updates to legislative and
reporting requirements. Full cross referencing
and page numbering should be automatic and
require minimal manual intervention. - Facility to adopt house style suited to the
preferences of the firm and individual
departments - Full integration with the central data and other
modules within the PM System should be
transparent and simple
76Accounts preparation
- Report and Output options should include OLE,
Import and Export with spreadsheets, word
processors, 3rd party client accounting software
with mapping facilities for coding - Exception reporting for missing information,
compliance matters and items requiring decision
or clarification. - There should be no limit on the number of
transactions in any area. - Year End procedures should be controlled and
facilities should exist for reversal if required. - Audit trail should be clear transparent
There are many other functions and facilities
available, but the above is at least the minimum
set.
77Taxation
- This is also a standard requirement of every
practice, large and small, it is essential that
this functional area have at least the following
minimum functions - Easy creation of client data-sets (should be
possible here or in any functional area),
providing for all client taxation requirements - Integration with Accounts preparation, including
checking that accounts are actually complete - Are all returns, schedules and pages acceptable
to the Inland Revenue as facsimile copies - The system should include Personal tax and all
related schedules, supplementary pages such as
Lloyds, Foreign income and Capital gains - Business, partnership, trust, non-domiciled tax
including non-trading pages for partnership,
overlap relief, retirement, change of partnership - Does the system deal effectively with loss
utilisation?, roll forward year on year - Company tax returns and computations which are
clear and understandable
78Taxation
- P11D production
- ELS and administration with Inland Revenue,
including receipts - Proper validation of tax returns and schedules
- What if and planning functions and tax planning
- Facility to adopt house style suited to the
preferences this department - Full integration with the central data and other
modules within the PM System should be
transparent and simple - Report and Output options should include OLE,
Import and Export with spreadsheets, word
processors, 3rd software - Exception reporting for missing information,
compliance matters and items requiring decision
or clarification. This is particularly critical
in regards to filing and submission dates
79Time recording
- This is also a standard requirement of every
practice, large and small, it is essential that
this functional area have at least the following
minimum functions - Easy creation of data sets for each staff member,
including cost, multiple charge-out rate and
skill sets - Flexible, simple, speedy input facilities
including batch, online (as work is conducted in
other functional areas), remote. - Activity codes and sub-codes to standardise
activity across the firm, while allowing a set of
activities to be defined for each area in the
firm - Reporting which focuses on profitability,
productivity and utilisation, exception reporting
for missing time sheets and unaccounted time.
80Time recording
- Dealing with holidays, training, sick, as well as
comprehensive analysis of work types. - Close and transparent integration with work
scheduling, budgeting, work in progress reporting
and monitoring. - Narrative and description options for all time
recorded and facilities for review of activity. - Facilities to enter time in hours/minutes,
decimal, units reflecting the preferences and
work practices of different groups in the firm - Time adjustment facilities with reason codes,
carefully controlled by password
81Project control, Work in progress tracking
- Work in progress is one of those central
operational areas within the practice, tying
together all functional areas and forming the
basis for the billing systems, productivity, work
flow, control and many other areas. - The system should contain at lease the following
facilities and characteristics - Easy creation of client data-sets (should be
possible here or in any functional area), this
should include detailed budgets together with
stages and out-turns for each - A model set-up facility, to simplify job
creation, simple wizards and step by step guides. - Facility to base current job set-up on last years
actual performance
82Project control, Work in progress tracking
- Automatic input from all operational and
functional modules, allocating all use of
resource to particular jobs. This process should
be simple and not time consuming. - A reporting structure which allows the monitoring
of work and stages within each job, prompting
when jobs seem to be running over budget for time
and cost - To do lists and suggestions for corrective action
as part of the review process - Very clear links to billing and profit reporting
within the PM System - Clear links to resource scheduling and
operational areas of the PM System - Manual intervention should be facilitated, but
should not be required in all cases.
83Billing
- Billing should be tailored to the needs of the
accounting firm, and should take account of
particular practices and needs within the various
areas of the firm. - Billing should cater for multiple rates for
billing, based on the level of staff, nature of
the work and what has been agreed with the client - Facilities for fixed-cost assignments, success
fees, interim bills should be included
84Billing
- Event based billing should suggest bills based on
the occurrence of particular events, for example,
signing off on a set of accounts, ELSing a SA
Return, completion of a job. - Billing should integrate with SL functions within
the administration software of the practice - Clear and simple links should be evident with
WIP, profitability monitoring and productivity
monitoring for staff. - Formats and structure of invoices should reflect
the preferences of each area of the business.
85Practice Accounts, payroll, purchase ledge etc
- The firms own accounts are an area where
confidentiality if perhaps more critical that any
other single area in the practice. For this
reason many practices keep this area completely
stand-alone and outside of the PM System, this is
I believe a mistake and leads to inefficiency in
the operations of the firm.
86Practice Accounts, payroll, purchase ledge etc
- The practices own accounts should include the
following features - Accounts receivable, which interfaces directly
with the Billing and time recording functions.
Providing full debtor control and monitoring,
reminders to both senior staff and clients of
overdue amounts, flagging these for action on to
do lists and ensuring that all billable time and
disbursements are charged to the appropriate
client. - Accounts payable, should incorporate POP, for use
when appropriate. Schedules of suggested
payments, cheque or BACS facilities with
remittances. Links to staff expense recording and
WIP in order that all legitimate expenses may be
charged to clients or appropriate centre, to
monitor the true cost and profitability of doing
work for clients. In some cases links to
automatic telephone systems will allocate costs
to particular areas of the business to monitor
departmental profitability
87Practice Accounts, payroll, purchase ledge etc
- General ledgers, should be departmentalised and
facilitate profitability reporting against,
budgets, last year, etc. This ledger should of
course be fully integrated with the other
accounts based ledgers. - Bank entry and reconciliation
- Fixed Asset Register
- Payroll, linking directly to time recording and
reducing the necessity for re-entry of data.
Encompassing all the features normally associated
with payroll, including returns, P11Ds and
analysis. - In all the accounting ledgers it should be
possible to allow restricted access and in most
cases no access to particular staff and partners
in the firm. - Management reporting should be flexible and
reflect the need to manage and generate profit
within the various areas of the firm.
88Audit
- An important area and one which some level of
automation will greatly enhance productivity,
performance and compliance. Catering for the
complete audit cycle. - Planning, risk analysis and budgeting, automating
and guiding these tasks, linking to resource
scheduling. - Customisation of audit programs to the practices
of the firm and the characteristics of the
client, while providing as a starting point full
programs for all common regulated entities.
Allowing for links to PM System accounts
preparation or clients own accounts preparation
software (with account mapping) - Customisation of accounts disclosure checklists,
while providing generic list for all common
regulated entities. The facility to enter
specific comments relating to particular clients
is useful.
89Audit
- On-screen completion of audit programs and
checklists, either within the firm or off site.
To do list of questions outstanding, un-cleared
notes - On-screen working paper creation and filing
- Audit notes and outstanding task checklists for
each job, to facilitate working and review
practices - Audit journals and lead schedules
- On-screen review and sign-off
- Maintenance of permanent file information
- Links to central data, regarding all matters
pertinent to the audit client, information such
as Directors P11D and remuneration information,
other services for letter of engagement,
corporation tax etc.
90Audit
- While we are a long way from the paperless off
and even further from the paperless audit, the
ability to generate audit programs,
documentation, working papers, review and sign
off all on screen is probably as close as we are
ever going to get.
91Workflow
- Whichever PM solution we adopt, it should be
moving in the direction of work flow
management, that is ever set of tasks and
procedures should be seen as a series of
activities, leading to some result which can be
measured. Each activity should be seen in the
context of a job or collection of activities with
some form of logical sequencing. -
- The PM Solution must actively encourage this
approach, working with the and responding to the
current practices of the firm to achieve a
cohesiveness and productivity which to this point
has been little more than a pipe dream.
92Workflow
- Some of the significant features of a good work
flow system are -
- Definition of Activities, these will be coded and
reflect the working practices of the accounting
firm, for each of these Milestones or out-turns
or deliverables will be defined. These will be a
mixture of generic activities and specific
activities for particular jobs for clients - Activities will be sufficiently detailed to allow
corrective action at various critical stages in
the process of a complete job for a client - Each Activity will have preceding and succeeding
activities and will form a workflow, this
workflow will dictate the allocation of resource
and the scheduling of the same
93Workflow
- The workflow in various specialist areas of the
accounting firm, will be different, they will
however form a part of the whole workflow
associated with a body of work for a client. - There should be automatic updating of status
information on Jobs and WIP for all activities
defined for any client. - The systems should automatically generate
suggestions on the key activities and workflow
patterns for any job based on, last years
experience, typical models for that type of work,
and allow for modification to specific needs or
requests
94Management reporting and performance review
- This should be based around the model of an
Executive Information System (EIS), giving the
managers of the practice at least the following - Access to all data elements in all modules of the
PM system - Simple and easy to use report generating
software, allowing the user to access the data
using ODBC, OLE, Dynamic links to 3rd part
software. - Report generation wizards, to guide users through
the steps of generating simple and complex
reports. - Facilitate the generation of enquiries, drill
down, cross tabulations etc - Flexible output to spreadsheet, databases, word
processors - Saving of sets of reports to be used on a regular
basis within the accounting firm - Automatic generation of reports and emailing to
key management and staff (distribution lists) at
regular intervals. This is particularly useful
since useful exception reports, to do lists often
fail to be used to their maximum advantage
because no-one quire gets around to running and
distributing them.
95Costing
- All aspects of the accounting firm should be the
subjects of costing as the basis for monitoring
performance and profitability of staff,
activities and clients. In a PM System this
becomes a reality since all aspects of the
resource allocation and utilisation are
integrated and compared. -
- Costing needs to be facilitated in the following
aspects of the practice -
- Staff costs, taking account of training, sickness
and holiday, these costs should be automatically
monitored against the current payroll and absence
records for each staff member - Overheads should be recovered against client work
on a reasonable basis (often the assumption is
that this is just included in the charge-out,
this may be misleading), these overheads need to
be constantly updated and reviewed by reference
to the practice overheads, this process should
also be automatic. - All activities in the workflow of the firm
against individual jobs must have realistic cost
allocations, these should be monitored against
actual activity to ensure maximum productivity
and profitability.
96Resource Budgeting Scheduling, planning
- Probably based on some form of due date
monitoring, the facility to schedule in a job for
a client, identify the components or activities
and allow the system to schedule and make
recommendations regarding resource implications
is the logical next step for small and medium
practices. The cost of these facilities is
reducing to an affordable level. -
- As an absolute minimum these systems should
allow -
- Store information about the resources of the
firm, this will mainly be comprised of staff,
their levels of competence and activities in
which they can engage. - Availability of resource, taking account of
holidays, training, up to date information on
sickness and current commitments, expected
completions etc.
97Resource Budgeting Scheduling, planning
- Monitor the current performance of Work in
Progress and re-schedule future work as required,
squaring the circle by automatically informing
senior staff, staff and clients of these likely
changes. - Update activity and project start and completion
information as timesheet information is entered. - Provide advance notice to staff of their work
schedule and commitments, allowing facility to
modify these (within reason) to deal with real
world events. - Determine the best or preferred staff to carry
our assignments, taking into account previous
experience on particular jobs and issues such as
independence. - Produce reports which give overview and detailed
information for management in particular areas
and departments to help them cope with
bottlenecks and resource difficulties which will
occur from time to time
98Client Administration
- Client administration should be viewed as a
central task, taking into account the fact that
different departments in the firm may well be
communicating with and administering particular
areas of the clients affairs. -
- Our PM Solution must co-ordinate these diverse
activities so that each area of the accounting
firm is appraised of the current state of play in
other areas. -
- For example if the tax department is currently
engaged in resolving a section 12a review for a
client, it would probably not be a good time to
schedule the IT section to install a new
accounting system for them. -
99Client Administration
- It would be unwise to engage on this years
accounts preparation while the Accounts
Receivable section are experiencing difficulty
getting payment for the year before lasts
billing. -
- The systems must at least flag the fact that
various other matters are presently ongoing with
the client and appraise the staff of the fact
that they should make further enquiry or in
extreme situation exclude such clients from the
planning process until they are sorted.
100Brief review of the current crop of Practice
Management Systems
- The landscape of PM solutions has been changing
rapidly, I believe this is due to the
difficulties experienced by many software houses
in maintaining a comprehensive suite of practice
related software which if completely up to date,
fully compliant, easy to use, integrated and
affordable. -
- There are plenty of accounts preparation,
taxation, time and fee billing solutions around,
the problem seems to be combining these into
comprehensive solutions. As a result many
practices will use best of breed for each
functional area and tolerate the duplication of
data entry as one of those facts of life we all
have to learn to live with. -
- Unfortunately in the past 12 months the status
quo has been somewhat upset by Sage, purchasing
Hartley, CSM and recently Apex, they have
effectively signalled their intention to become a
major player in the PM Solutions market.
101Brief review of the current crop of Practice
Management Systems
- Sage Accountants Suite as they choose to call it
is at the moment only the Apex software with a
new badge sage, no changes have yet been made
to its functionality. -
- The fact that sage now owns the Hartley, and the
CSM Auditman etc range of products suggests that
the other players in this very specialised market
place need to watch out. -
- Sage is the biggest provider of accounting
software in the world, sage is a close as you can
get to a household name in this area. It has the
capability of developing the apex suite to
incorporate the best elements and features of the
Hartley and CMS products. It will probably add
some additional functionality, especially in
areas of Audit automation from its own Audit 2000
package, Forecasting, Hartley Consultant.
102Brief review of the current crop of Practice
Management Systems
- The acquisition provides a sustainable base in
the accounting profession and an incentive to
Sage to develop a fully integrated Practice
Management Solution at an affordable price (at
least affordable for the present) -
- We should not discount the other major players in
this area Solution 6, Iris (UK), CMS
(Omniledger), and for practice management on it
own, FDS Advance, Goldmine, Maximiser (UK) -
- These software houses are long established, their
major difficulty will be competing with a
financial giant like Sage, with the tremendous
resources and brand status to develop their
already strong position and product range.
103In Conclusion
- In conclusion, my opinion is that the future