| CPAs as Aggregators |
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| Written by Ken Garen | |||
| Thursday, 04 March 2010 17:32 | |||
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The Oklahoma land rush the result of the opening of a choice portion of Native American territory in Oklahoma for settlement, which set off one of the most bizarre and chaotic episodes of town founding in history. The land rush started at high noon on April 22, with an estimated 50,000 people lined up to claim their piece of the available two million acres. By the end of the day, both Oklahoma City and Guthrie were cties of around 10,000 people in half a day. In Oklahoma City. Much like the Oklahoma land rush of 1889, accountants are now having a once-in-a- lifetime opportunity that is guaranteed to change the landscape of financial business forever. Divergent forces all coming together to create a unique business opportunity, which will give accountants the opportunity to become “The Aggregator” of financial information, a tremendous value add for the accountant who is in position to do this.The accountant can become a client’s primary go-to place for all financial information - the facilitator of the one-to-one business relationship between the business or consumer and the party from which they are attaining products or services. The big banks, insurance companies and brokerage firms see the importance of this and are trying to figure out how they can seize this once in a lifetime opportunity. This occurrence, like the Oklahoma land rush, will indeed be very hotly contested because there literally will only ever be one aggregating place. Become “The Aggregator” When standards are published, the floodgates will open and the Internet will be ready for the incredible amount of financial information being exchanged. The fourth generation Internet, known as “The Grid,” is ready and positioned to fuel this transformative period. The grid changes everything about the speed and volume of business being done via the Internet, bringing with it a true paradigm shift, an opportunity for the players to handle previously unimaginable volumes of transactions. In addition to the convenience of having clients’ financial information at ones; fingertips, there are many compelling reasons driving the aggregator model. Clients will experience tremendous labor savings and cost benefits by utilizing this approach. Additionally, clients will be able to eliminate on site networks by using this cloud-based process to run their businesses at a much lower cost. This will result in major dollar savings and promote a much more secure computing environment. Much like how the need for secretaries diminished after the 1950s and 60s, administrative data entry tasks will be effectively eliminated by technology. The re-keying of invoices, payments, and checks will become automatic electronic feeds. This will result in huge productivity increases similar to the one fueled by the financial boom of the 1990's. | |||
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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. |