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Starting and Building Your Own Accounting Business, Third Edition
Starting and Building Your Own Accounting Business, Third Edition
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Author: Jack Fox
Publisher: Wiley
Category: Book

List Price: $44.95
Buy New: $24.64
You Save: $20.31 (45%)
Buy New/Used from $5.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars(9 reviews)
Sales Rank: 372048

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Paperback
Edition: 3nd
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 397
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.8 x 1.1

ISBN: 0471351601
Dewey Decimal Number: 657.0684
EAN: 9780471351603
ASIN: 0471351601

Publication Date: January 15, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Let expert advisor and author Jack Fox show you how to do it-how he did it-with a minimum amount of anxiety and cost Part blueprint, rule book, and game plan, Starting and Building Your Own Accounting Business offers hands-on, no-nonsense guidance from a leading expert on the actual day-to-day specifics of creating and marketing your own accounting business--while building a foundation for ongoing success. The book offers clear advice on designing a workable business plan, leasing and furnishing an office, as well as tips on prospecting for clients (where to find and rate them) and developing a fee structure (with advice on collecting fees). This bestselling guide, now in its Third Edition, cues you in on what to realistically expect and lets you shrink light-years of trial and error and keep several paces ahead of the competition. The new edition includes other valuable advice on successfully jump-starting your new accounting business:
* Selling techniques for the nonsalesperson
* Product and service presentations and techniques, with scripts
* How to assess the leading commercial computer hardware and software--with advice on selecting just the right equipment
* Structuring a formal Prospective Accounting Client Evaluation (PACE)
* Tips on using the Internet as well as innovative business software

The book also provides such success essentials as action plans critical for the first year of a new business or for expanding a business and useful fingertip resources such as directories of suppliers (with Web site addresses). For the accountant interested in striking out on his own or the entrepreneur interested in expanding her business and garnering greater profits, Starting and Building Your Own Accounting Business is the first step to making it happen.



Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars some information   October 14, 2006
  1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Like most books you do get some information. Pricing was good, but his web-site is unavailable, so who knows


1 out of 5 stars Save your Money!!!   February 4, 2004
  27 out of 27 found this review helpful

This book is awful. I have read the entire thing, and it says nothing that is useful. I have been in public accounting for 10 years, and i am now ready to start my own firm. I wasted my money on buying this book. I know it is tempting to buy, since the title is exactly what i was looking for, but trust me, choose another book. The accounting Guild website that the author constantly refers to is no longer in existence.


1 out of 5 stars Accounting Not! Save your money   June 13, 2003
  63 out of 63 found this review helpful

This book is nothing more than a template or a compilation of numerous other books that deal with marketing, prospecting, and selling. In fact the title is disingenuous. The book should be renamed to "Building, Marketing and Selling Your Business." The fact that the word Accounting appears in the title is misleading as this book could and does discuss the things necessary to starting and building any business.

The book also includes a glossary of accounting terms which is insulting. If you are an accountant purchasing this book you should already know them hands down or seek a refund from the institution of higher learning that gave you your education in accounting or ask your state accountancy board to revoke your CPA certificate.

This book is full of checklists and numerous discussions of what to do but rarely gets to "How" as the outside of the back cover states. While the information is useful it is again generic to any business and not specific to accounting.

The author bets to death the value of using Microsoft products (to the exclusion of others) and goes though a litany of the things that Microsoft uses/provides. I am certified by Microsoft in almost all the things that the author mentions in the beginning of his book and I found the authors marketing plug for Microsoft quite humorous but also very wrong. The author almost gave the impression that he is "in bed" with Microsoft and may even be a Microsoft Certified Solution Provider himself but never really states his relationship to Microsoft. This diatribe should have been in an appendix and not part of the main body of the book.

Another grating plug is the constant mention of the Accounting Guild that the author is involved with. It would have been far more professional to discuss this at length in an appendix rather than constantly marketing it to his readers by repetitive mention of it in the text. One more grate was his constant mention of the Goldmine software for tracking clients without explaining why he thinks it is the best and what is his involvement with it and more importantly why he mentions no other PIM software when he goes though a many page discussion of the various software packages available. It makes me very suspicious.

Also unless you are a firm with at least two or more accountants, two or more marketing people, two or more sales people and the accompanying support staff you are reading the wrong book. You will also have no life.

The author implicating states that unless you are dealing with businesses that are $500,000 to $10,000,000 you are not dealing with a small to medium sized business nor are you one yourself. What a grave insult to small business in general.

I am not attempting to slam the author at a personal level in my review but having read the third edition I am left with the begging question as to what was so wrong with the first two that there is in fact a third edition. After all I was the one that paid for it and I feel that I was stung and strongly so.

This book is basically a written seminar on how to build, market and sell your (any) business accompanied with numerous plugs for the authors products (at least it smells like it). The author did not follow his own advice....be honest with your clients.

I also found his web site for the Accounting Guild inactive and email is not there.

If you are looking for a book to help you build your accounting business this is not it unless you have $$$$$$ capital and staff to do so. The book is definitely not intended for the true small business person.

Save your money.


3 out of 5 stars Buyer Beware!   June 4, 2003
  20 out of 20 found this review helpful

This book is an excellent source for starting an accounting practice. It is very heavy on the aspects of technology and working that into your business to grow clients and business partners.

The caveat here is this. Mr. Fox discusses Arthur Anderson a great deal in this book when referring to ways consulting is performed and how to sell clients. In addition, he refers to his own "Accounting Guild." Unfortunately, the web site for this guild no longer exists, his Yahoo message board is inactive and he does not answer email requesting information on solvency of his own business. Although I am reading this book 3 years after it was published I find it disturbing that the book is still in print yet very out of date and no longer factually correct. i.e Offering services in the Accounting Guild.

It would be nice to at least get an explanation or have the book removed as a valid and complete source, which it no longer is.


5 out of 5 stars Just what I've been looking for...   August 8, 2001
  9 out of 10 found this review helpful

Having been recently laid off, I am now looking into starting my own accounting practice. I am a CPA, but have no public accounting experience. I bought this book as part of a CPE course and was truly amazed at the wealth of information it contains, especially on marketing. It gave me some great ideas on areas to pursue and I know I will refer back to it many times over the next few months and even beyond.


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