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07-22-05
Strong Training
Programs Draw and Keep Talented Staff
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HA&W News Archive
CPA
Practice Management Forum
Published Monthly by CCH Incorporated
June 2005
Ongoing
training is a must for any accounting firm, if only to meet
legal requirements. But firms that push beyond those requirements
find their training programs not only keep staff well-informed
and compliant, they help the firm serve clients better and
attract talent. They also find that the face of training
is changing somewhat, shaped by new ethics requirements,
evolving technology and the challenge to build leaders and
bring balance to professional lives.
Accounting
firms need a keen focus on training if they are going to
draw and retain quality staff eager to develop their careers,
notes Terri Herren, HR director at Elliott
Davis/Greenville, S.C. (200 staff, 31 shareholders;
six offices)
“We
see the development area as crucial and as a growing need,”
Herren says. “A primary reason there’s a lot
of turnover in our business is people feel they are not
being developed. Firms really need to focus on development
and look at what people need and what the firm needs.”
Staff
development boosts performance and client service. “It’s
not just the performance of the individual, but it’s
the total performance you need for the firm,” Herren
says, adding this is the reason Elliott Davis is beginning
a coaching program in July. “I think accounting firms
have been remiss. A lot of training directors don’t
have the opportunity to work with people on development.”
At
Argy Wiltse & Robinson/McLean, Va.
(110 staff, 14 partners; one office), training primarily
falls into the categories of tax, audit and general management
and is largely geared toward better serving clients.
“We
try to ascertain if clients have any special needs. It’s
more matter of keeping up with changing legislation, tax
bills or Sarbanes Oxley,” says Wally Owings,
training coordinator at AW&R. We do a lot of work with
government contractors, so we have to keep up with changing
regulations and our clients expect us to know what those
changes are.”
Gayle
Noakes, chief learning officer at LarsonAllen/Minneapolis,
Minn. (800 staff, 160 principals; eight offices, seven client-
service centers), agrees. “What we provide to our
clients is knowledge,” she says. “It’s
critical that in an organization where you’re providing
knowledge, you need to be well-trained and up-to- date.
We need to enhance our own behaviors and our own skills
and put those things together for our clients.”
Some
firms even invite clients to training sessions. This is
the case at Argy, Wiltse & Robinson and at Habif,
Arogeti & Wynne/Atlanta (180 staff, 25 partners;
one location). “Clients are welcome to come; they
sit right next to our staff,” says Linda Steele,
training director at HA&W.
Dedicated
trainers
Increasingly,
firms are dedicating staff positions to training. For example,
Owings’ position at Argy, Wiltse & Robinson is
new. “I’ve taken on the education coordination
role in the last six months or so,” he says. “That’s
been in response to the growth of our firm. We’ve
reached a size where we think we need to have someone focus
on training instead of handling it on an ad-hoc basis.”
Designating
a training director helps ensure staff meet their legal
requirements and the firm stays on track.
“From
a compliance standpoint, you need someone to spearhead that
and make sure we have the resources available for people
to meet the compliance requirements,” says Kim
Bayne, director of training at Elliott Davis.
With
more than 800 employees, LarsonAllen has seven people on
the learning staff. “I think the commitment started
when they decided they wanted a chief learning officer a
little over four years ago,” Noakes explains. “There
had been excellent learning going on. But they wanted to
raise the importance of learning within the organization
and how it is valued at LarsonAllen.”
Steele
says having dedicated training staff is a big plus when
recruiting. “One of the things young people want out
of a firm is continual training and learning,” she
notes. “One of the things we’ve found that attracts
them most is that we have an on-site trainer. That seems
to be a selling point.”
Focused
learning
Trainers
at many firms say time constraints hamper learning efforts.
But carefully selecting courses can ease the problem.
“The
thing that hinders learning is that everybody is very busy,”
Noakes says. “But I think one of the main things that
counters that, and what we’ve experienced over the
past couple years, is that we need to make sure the learning
fi ts what people really need, so we don’t put people
in the wrong level of learning. If people come to learning
and they get a lot from it, then they’re more open
to make it a priority.”
LarsonAllen,
for example, conducts focus groups, talking to new staff
about what they think they need to learn. In addition, training
staff talk to firm supervisors to find out what they want
new hires to know.
Subject
matter diversifying
Many
firms are opening up their field of courses, and not just
to management and leadership topics. Often, the changes
are driven by what employees want to learn as they develop
professional and personal skills.
Elliott
Davis uses many of its Lunch and Learn sessions to provide
technical training. But like many firms, Elliott Davis also
offers soft-skills training, particularly for less experienced
staff. First-year professionals attend dinners where they
learn dining and business etiquette. Less experienced staff
also receive training in networking and dressing professionally.
Bayne says second- year staff get an opportunity to ask
questions and seek advice from shareholders in annual shareholder
panel discussions, a learning session very popular with
young staff. For experienced employees, Elliott Davis offers
a career-training path, providing leadership and management
skills and, for senior managers, business advisory skills.
The
firm even hosts a leadership forum for college students,
offering courses in time management, presentation skills
and networking. “The young people need this because
they hit the ground running in their interaction with clients,”
says Herren. “We’re competing with national
firms. We have to give the same level of training they give
in management skills. We need to do this to be competitive.”
Phil
Moore, MP at Porter Keadle Moore/Atlanta
(52 staff, eight partners; one office), says his firm spends
a good deal of training time on topics such as time management
and managing multiple priorities. “They don’t
really teach you that in school,” he notes.
At
PKM, employee choice drives some subject matter.
“We
took a trek several years ago down the broker/dealer path,”
Moore says. “We had employees who wanted to get into
that group and get training in that area. They oftentimes
ask for help. Someone might say, ‘I want some SEC
training because I have SEC clients.’”
The
firm enlists the help of a corporate psychologist, Moore
says. “We sometimes use him for assertiveness training,
for somebody who’s too geared up who we need to teach
to tone it down a little or somebody who’s too meek
and mild and we need to teach them to be more assertive.”
At
LarsonAllen, training topics keep evolving, says Noakes.
“Newer staff are very hungry for the basics: how to
apply the things they learned in school. As they progress
in their career, they want to have a bigger business view,
know how to delegate, know how to manage multiple priorities.”
She adds, “We’re moving into paperless, so there’s
a lot more technology training. And there are ethics courses
that are required in some states.”
In
addition to courses in tax, audit, computer skills and business
writing, Habif, Arogeti & Wynne offers art classes,
Spanish lessons and CPR training.
“They
want everything,” Steele says of staff. “I do
email etiquette. I do presentation skills. Because we do
HUD audits, I have a speaker come in every year and talk
about updates.”
The
firm conducts three Lunch and Learn sessions each month:
one on tax, one on audit and one on something entirely unrelated
to the accounting industry, such as nutrition and weight
loss. “I had Macy’s come in and hold a fashion
show,” Steele says. “I had the cancer coalition
come in and talk about the rising percentages of cancer.”
She
attributes much of the training success to support from
the firm’s leadership.
“Dan
Simms, MP, said, ‘Let’s feed them at the
Lunch and Learns.’ Before that, I didn’t have
the budget to provide meals. I saw attendance for tax and
audit Lunch and Learns double.”
One
thing that seems certain: Neither the need for training
nor the list of topics is shrinking. Steele says when she
first began working in accounting firm training nine years
ago, she was told she’d eventually run out of topics.
“That’s
a myth,” she says. “Just when you think everyone knows what
you want them to know, there’s something new to teach.”
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HA&W News Archive
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