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Seven Signs You Should Look For A New Accountant
Here's a very quick quiz. Does this sound like your
relationship with your current accountants ?
1) You call but your accountant isn't available, so
you leave a message.
2) Your accountant gets back to you - but they do so
a week and a half later.
3) Your company accounts are due, but your accountant
doesn't seem to have filed them.
4) Every time you talk to your accountant for even
half an hour, you get a bill in the post the next day.
However, strangely, when you ask them to do something
urgently for you, it seems to take far longer than it
should.
5) You are certain that there are other ways of reducing
your business tax burden and yet your accountant never
suggests any to you.
6) You occasionally read up about new legislation that
may affect the way you do business but only when you
actively chase up your accountants do they give you
any advice on these issues. Even though it's perfectly
clear that your accountant knew about the new legislation
and how it might effect you way before you happened
to chance upon the information.
7) You find yourself wondering whether you are really
getting good value for money. What exactly are you paying
all that money for every year? Surely, it can't take
that long to complete a tax return, can it ?
If any or, heaven forbid, all of these points sound
familiar to you, then it really is time for you to change
your accountants.
Thankfully, there are accountants out there who will
return your phone calls in a timely manner, who are
proactive in giving tax planning and business advice
and do - honestly - offer good value for money.
Luckily, changing accountants is not the arduous process
you might think it is.
Both the Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICAEW)
and the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants
(ACCA) have strict guidelines by which their members
must adhere.
Among other things, these guidelines cover how a IAECW
or ACCA accountant must behave if a client wishes to
change accountants.
Your current accountant must provide all the relevant
documentation and information to the new accountants
in a timely and efficient manner and may not charge
for supplying this information.
This should mean that, if you are fed up with your
current accountant and they are chartered by one of
these professional bodies, you can simply find a better
one and then contact your old accountants and ask them
to pass on all the accounting related information to
the new accountants.
Your new accountants will probably provide you with
a checklist of information that they need and some of
this information (ie: VAT returns and payroll details)
may come from you, but often the process can be almost
entirely hands-off.
Even if you are in dispute with your current accountants,
this should not prevent you from making a switch. The
Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICAEW) and the Association
of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA)guidelines
state that, and here I'm paraphrasing liberally, your
current accountants should not be able to hold you to
ransom.
So, don't feel that you must stick with an accountancy
firm who is not delivering the goods. Changing is not
that difficult and you will almost certainly reap the
benefits in the long run.
Author: Jim Haines
UK companies can compare leading accountancy services
and receive quotes from up to 4 accountants at Just
Accountants.co.uk. Visit http://www.justaccountants.co.uk/accounting.html
for details.
Keywords : accountants,accountancy,accounting,tax
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