How to Turn One-Time Tax Resolution Clients Into Year-Round Recurring Revenue

You close the case, the client shakes your hand, and you walk them straight to the door with nothing in your other hand.

Think about the last resolution you finished. You got the client into an installment agreement, or you closed the offer, or you knocked the penalties off and the account finally read zero. The client was thrilled. You did hard, skilled work that most preparers cannot do. And then what did you offer them for the next twelve months? Be honest. Most of the time the answer is nothing. You handed a client you already earned back to the wild, where the next preparer picks them up for free.

Come on. You know better.

The resolution pros making real money do not do that. They keep the client on a leash they can both live with, and they get paid every month to do it. The centerpiece of that is account monitoring, and it is the most natural recurring service a resolution practice will ever sell. This is exactly the kind of practice-building we drill inside Tax Resolution Academy®. In this post I am going to show you how account monitoring works, why it belongs in your practice, how to price it, and how to stack tax return prep, bookkeeping, and payroll services on top of it so the relationship pays you all year instead of once.

Account Monitoring: The Recurring Service Built For Resolution

Here is what account monitoring actually is. After the case closes, you keep a Form 8821, Tax Information Authorization, on file for that client. That single form lets you pull the client’s IRS account transcripts on a schedule, month after month, without the client lifting a finger or signing anything new. You are not waiting for a problem to walk in your door. You are watching the account so you see the problem forming before the client does, and long before the IRS mails a letter about it.

Read that again. You get to see trouble coming. The client stays compliant, the resolution you fought for holds, and you get paid a monthly fee to be the one watching. That is a service, not a favor.

What are you actually watching for when you pull those transcripts? Real events that wreck a resolution client:

  • A new balance posting. A new assessment shows up on the account and you catch it the month it lands, not next spring when
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The Resolution Consultation That Turns a Scared Taxpayer Into a Signed Client

The person sitting across from you is not evaluating your expertise. They are deciding whether they can finally exhale.

Most tax pros walk into a resolution consultation believing the job is to prove how much they know. So they open the IRS transcript, start explaining collection statutes and Offer in Compromise math, and watch the prospect’s eyes glaze while their own mouth runs. The prospect leaves “to think about it,” signs with nobody, and the pro decides they are just bad at sales.

You are not bad at sales. You are running the consultation backwards. The scared taxpayer in front of you cannot hear your brilliant strategy until they feel understood, and they will not hand a stranger five figures until they trust the human, not just the credentials. In this post I am going to walk you through a consultation that signs the right client without a single high-pressure move. Discovery first, then framing the engagement, then presenting the fee without flinching, then handling the objections that actually show up. This is the same client-conversion work we teach inside Tax Resolution Academy®, and it is built to keep you on the right side of both your ethics and your licensing board.

The Consult Is a Rescue, Not an Exam

Here is the problem. You treat the consultation as a chance to demonstrate competence, when the prospect is treating it as a search for safety.

By the time someone books a resolution consult, they have usually spent months (if not years) in quiet panic. They have lost sleep. They have hidden the notices from their spouse. They have typed terrified questions into Google at midnight and gotten half-answers from boiler rooms promising the moon. They do not arrive wanting a lecture on Form 433-A. They arrive wanting one thing: to know that a calm, competent professional has seen worse than this and can make it stop.

Read that again, because it reorders the whole meeting. The first job is not to inform. The first job is to make them feel that they are finally in good hands. Get that right and the strategy talk lands later, on a prospect who is actually listening. Get it wrong and the smartest plan in the room dies on a person too anxious to absorb it.

Start With Discovery, Not Your Pitch

The fastest way to build trust is to stop talking and start asking. A resolution consultation should … Continue reading

Marketing a Tax Resolution Practice Without Feeling Like a Salesman

You already know the marketing you hate.

The radio spot with the panicked voice promising to wipe out any IRS debt for pennies on the dollar. The fear-soaked postcard that lands in a stranger’s mailbox the same week a lien hits the county records. The call center that buys those leads and churns through them like firewood.

You went and earned a license so you would never have to sound like that. So when somebody tells you to go market your resolution practice, your gut tightens, and you quietly decide you will just keep taking whatever walks in the door.

That instinct is costing you the exact clients you are best suited to help. The business owner three quarters behind on payroll taxes is going to hire somebody. Right now, too often, it is not you, because you stayed invisible on purpose. In this post I am going to show you how to bring in resolution clients without once sounding like the mill you despise. Positioning, a short list of channels that feel like service instead of selling, and a weekly rhythm you can actually keep. This is the same practice-building work we teach inside the Tax Resolution Academy®, and most of it costs you discipline, not dollars.

Why “Marketing” Feels Gross (and Why the Feeling Is Lying to You)

Here is the problem. You have quietly defined marketing as manipulation. Convincing somebody to want a thing they do not need, using volume, hype, and a little fear. Of course that turns your stomach. You spend your days being the careful one in a profession full of careful people.

But that is not what marketing a resolution practice actually is. For a licensed pro, marketing is two plain things: being findable by a person who already has the problem, and being trusted by the time they reach you. That is it. Nobody is talking a happy taxpayer into wanting a Revenue Officer. The desire already exists. The levy already happened. The 1058 already arrived. Your only job is to make sure that when the person finally goes looking for a professional, you are standing where they can see you, sounding like someone they can trust.

Read that again, because it changes everything about how this feels. You are not creating want. You are answering a need that is already on fire. The “sleazy” feeling comes from imagining you have to generate demand. You do not. … Continue reading