| Accountant Programs Get Fresh Looks |
| Written by Bob Scott |
| Wednesday, 27 October 2010 02:53 |
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The standard wisdom has been that professional accountants are crucial in influencing clients to investigate and buy many technology products. And while vendor programs that enlist accountants are not new, there is a renewed interest in the genre and a lot of updating to existing programs. For example, NetSuite, which markets Internet-based applications, has introduced an accountant program in the last two months while Paychex, which has been a veteran of such offerings, gave its program a new look and name nine months ago with the introduction of its Explore program."We have traditionally gotten about one third of our business from accounting firms, says Neil Rohrer, vice president of the Eastern sales region for the payroll company. With Explore, Paychex is offering a program that's more a consultative approach, designed to find out how accountants and their clients want to handle payroll. But the big kid of the accountant program block is Intuit, which has about 55,000 QuickBooks ProAdvisors, with about 19,500 of those having become Certified QuickBooks ProAdvisors or having Advanced Certification. And certification makes a difference with clients, according to Samir Khosla, group project manager responsible for Intuit's accountant segment. "With our certification program, we offer training as well as a certification exam," says Khosla. That certification gives ProAdvisors greater credibility with potential clients. They also get listings on Intuit's "Find a ProAdvisor" site and "That is a pretty significant driver of new business for our members," he continues. Among new program elements, all ProAdvisors now get automatic updates of Intuit software through SlipStream, instead of waiting for the new version QuickBooks each year. Members also get free subscriptions for the Accountants Copy File Service, which enables accountants and clients to exchange files via Intuit servers and to QuickBooks Connect, which provides QuickBooks access on mobile devices and on the Internet. Accountants can become ProAdvisors for $499 per year or for $674 annually if they also want the payroll portion of the program. Sage has also gotten into the certification game, starting in September. But that company has a lot more substantial changes looming, according to Jennifer Warawa, senior director of partner programs for Sage North America, who manages the Sage Accountant's Network."We are simplifying our portfolio as far as our accountant's program goes," she says. With a far broader range of financial software than Intuit offers, Sage found it needs to steer members to applications they are most interested in. While the bundles to be offered haven't been selected, one will most likely be for mid-market accounting packages, including Accpac, MAS and X3. That is also part of an effort to enlist larger accounting firms that would be interested for software that is higher powered than Peachtree. Sage also plans to do more with the vertical markets. Warawa said there might be a construction/real estate software bundle, for example. She intends to look at ways the SAN program can work with Sage's employer solutions and healthcare offerings, something completely new for the program. Warawa also wants to reinvigorate the Business Alliance Program that helps accounting firms work with VARs. The program has been available, but Sage hasn't had a person dedicated to helping those alliances develop. SAN will move beyond providing information about software. The company had its first accountants' track at its Insights reseller conference this year and plans to increase the offering at the next year's combined Summit channel and user conference. Sage is studying how it could help accounting firms with retirement and succession planning. To join, new members pay either $449 or $599, depending on the product they are interested in. They receive the software and also a variety of services, including marketing and training. The certification program is very new, 25 members had achieved that status in the first month. Warawa says advisors who seek certification, "want to be able to validate their knowledge and expertise." And while Sage has had Certified Consultants for years, that program was geared towards selling software. The new certification effort gives members the opportunity "to be certified without having to sell," she says. NetSuite, which introduced its NetSuite Accountant Program in August provides single-seat access for accountants to end-user companies that use NetSuite's SaaS applications. There are also training and tools, along with discounts on training classes. In addition, NetSuite offers firms the opportunity to receive a 10- percent commission on the first-year's license fees for referrals that become NetSuite customers. For San Jose, Calif.-based Intacct, which markets Web-based accounting applications, the relationship with accountants is more complex since it is signing firms up to use its software to deliver outsourced accounting services to companies and also to sell the product."The majority of CPA firms using Intacct are using it to provide outsourced controllership services," says Taylor Macdonald, Intacct's VP of channels. Intacct believes that providing outsourced business services is a more natural fit for CPAs, who Macdonald says were outhustled in the reselling business by entrepreneurs. But understanding business workflow and processes is in their bailiwick. Intacct has sought an edge with the accounting community through its relationship with CPA2Biz, the for-profit arm of the American Institute of CPAs, which is the exclusive distributor of the Intacct Accountant Edition. The parties pitch the major advantage of this edition as what they term a CPA-focused dashboard for seeing client data. Accountants can pick from three elements: the Client Accounting Services, Accountant Referral or Business Solutions Provider program. Among these, the referrers can receive special pricing on Intacct products. |
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 October 2010 04:47 |
| What Flavor CRM Do You Want? |
| Written by Bob Scott | |
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| REVIEW: Online Payroll Software |
| Written by Dave McClure | |
A dozen years after the first SaaS versions of payroll software were introduced, it is no longer a question of why you would use them, but rather why any accounting practice would not. Hey: Fast, scalable and designed to meet the needs of accounting professionals and their clients in a mobile world, online payroll has four primary advantages over desktop versions of the same software system:
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| LexisNexis Tool Used to Fight Georgia Tax Fraud |
| Written by The Progressive Accountant | |
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| Technology Adds More to Your Life |
| Written by Richard Oppenheim CPA | |
You are all involved with technology and likely track new products and services on a regular basis. Consequently, my focus is to discuss new technology products can provide benefits for our advancing 24 hour Work-Life wheel. How you choose to draw boundaries between work and life is a conversation that you should have with many. Here are a few products that can be effectively used for what you do and where you do it. | |
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| Thomson Intros New Workpaper Product |
| Written by The Progressive Accountant | |
Thomson Reuters has introduced a new workpaper product, Workpaper CS. And while the company will continue to maintain its Engagement CS product, that product will not get much further development. | |
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| Video Interview: Thomson Reuters MyPay Solutions |
| Written by Bob Scott | |
The Progressive Accountant talks with Jack LaRue, SVP Thomson Reuters, about their payroll processing services available to tax and public accountants.
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Thomson Intros New Workpaper Product![]() Thomson Reuters has introduced a new workpaper product, Workpaper CS. And while the company will continue to maintain its Engagement CS product, that product will not get much further development. News | The Progressive Accountant | Tuesday, 22 May 2012 |
Intuit's Smith: Good Tax Season; But..![]() Intuit had an 11 percent increase in consumer tax revenue and the first growth in units sold to tax preparation professionals in three years for its third quarter ended April 30. But CEO Brad Smith thought the company should have done better in both areas in what he called a solid performance.. News | Bob Scott | Friday, 18 May 2012 |
Wave Accounting Gets $12 Million![]() Wave Accounting has secured $12 million in funding for its efforts to develop the market for its online accounting applications. Based in Toronto, Wave said the funding round was led by The Social+Capital Partnership with participation from existing investors Charles River Ventures and OMERS Venture. News | The Progressive Accountant | Thursday, 17 May 2012 |
NetSuite Signs GT, Deloitte, Frank RimermanNetSuite is making strong inroads into the accounting community. At its SuiteWorld conference, underway this week in San Francisco, it announced three accounting firms and Sage's largest reseller as new additions to its channel. News | Bob Scott | Tuesday, 15 May 2012 |
A Cloudy Year for Accounting SoftwareThe technology press likes to declare something a "Year of ..." whatever the hottest trend is. But evidence is building that 2012 is going to be a big year for the sale of accounting applications that run on the web. Now, as is usually the case, there are usually a few big years once a new technology catches on. News | The Progressive Accountant | Tuesday, 15 May 2012 |
SmartPros Results Flat![]() Continuing education provider Smart Pros turned in results for its first quarter ended March 31 that showed both revenue and its net loss virtually unchanged from results in 2011. The company said lingering results from the recession and competitive factors kept a lid of its business. News | The Progressive Accountant | Tuesday, 15 May 2012 |
TaxAct Revs Up 9 Percent![]() TaxAct, the tax preparation software company purchased by InfoSpace, had pro forma revenue of $61.9 million a 9-percent increase from $56.8 million for the first quarter ended March 31. TaxAct, purchased on January 31 contributed only two months of actual results to its Bellevue, Wash.-based parent. News | The Progressive Accountant | Thursday, 10 May 2012 |
Sage and Avalara Ally for Accountants Network![]() Sales-and-use tax vendor Avalara is joining with Sage North America to provide resources to members of the Sage Accountants Network. Avalara's Accountants Resource Center provides tools and educational resources for helping them increase their sales tax knowledge. News | The Progressive Accountant | Tuesday, 8 May 2012 |
CliftonLarsonAllen to Resell Avectra![]() CliftonLarsonAllen has agreed to resell Avectra's Social CRM to associations and nonprofit organizations.The accounting firm will offer the Avectra product in combination with Intacct's online accounting software. It is the latest move in the expansion of McLean, Va.-based Avectra's reseller program. News | The Progressive Accountant | Thursday, 3 May 2012 |
ADP Revenue and Net Up 7 Percent for 2012![]() Automatic Data Processing rolled sevens for its fiscal 2012 as net income, and revenue for employer services and total revenue all increased by 7 percent over 2011. And the company's metrics were strong in almost all areas for the year just ended. News | The Progressive Accountant | Thursday, 3 May 2012 |
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About the Author: Brett Owens is CEO and Co-Founder of Chrometa, a Sacramento, Calif.-based provider of software that records activity in real time. Previously marketed to the legal community, Chrometa is branching out to accounting prospects; gains include the ability to discover previously undocumented billable time, save time on billing reconciliation and improve personal productivity. Brett is also blogger and founder at CommodityBullMarket.com and ContraryInvesting.com, as well as a regular contributor to two leading financial media sites, SeekingAlpha.com and BeforeItsNews.com. |
Talking to others its the same thing, they have theirfavorite but haven't found one they are 100% happy with. It's the hardest piece of software I've ever had to find.