Why the smartest thing you can do this quarter is stop doing half of what you’re currently doing.
Let me ask you something, and I need you to be painfully honest with yourself.
What did you do yesterday?
Not what you planned to do. Not what your calendar said. What did you actually spend your hours on between the time you walked into your office and the time you finally dragged yourself home?
If you’re like most of the tax professionals I coach, your answer includes some combination of the following: preparing a handful of returns, answering client emails, chasing down missing documents, troubleshooting a software glitch, reconciling your bank account, scheduling appointments, formatting engagement letters, scanning paperwork, and maybe — if the stars aligned — doing 45-90 minutes of actual high-level advisory work that only someone with your license, experience, and expertise could do.
Here’s the problem. You billed eight, ten, maybe twelve hours yesterday. But how many of those hours required you? Not a competent staff member. Not a $49-per-month software subscription. You, specifically, with your credentials, your years of experience, and your hard-earned expertise.
I’m going to guess the answer is somewhere between two and four hours.
Which means you spent the rest of your day being the most expensive administrative assistant your firm has ever employed. Read that again. That should hurt you deep. You earned (or saved) $15-50/hr for that time but LOST $150-300/hr. Sound like a fair trade?
The Math That Should Keep You Up Tonight
Let’s do the quick arithmetic behind my last statement, and I promise this won’t feel good.
Say your target effective hourly rate — the rate you need to earn on productive hours to hit your annual income goals after overhead — is $250 per hour. That’s a reasonable number for an experienced tax professional running their own practice. Some of you should be higher. We’ll keep it simple.
Now let’s say you spent three hours yesterday doing tasks that a trained staff member paid at $25 per hour could have handled. Document chasing. Data entry. Scheduling. Filing. Formatting. Basic bookkeeping for your own firm.
You didn’t save $75 by doing it yourself. You lost $750 in potential revenue. Three hours at $250 per hour that you could have spent on work that actually requires your license and your brain, gone forever. You can’t get those hours back. They’re not sitting in a … Continue reading
