Viewpoint: Should firms band together into Regional Group Practices?
Could a regional group practice work for ACCA firms? Julian Hamilton, director of Jobtel, the accountancy practice merger broker, certainly believes so.
Jobtel was involved with introducing firms for the Vantis floatation. But that format is only suitable for firms of more than £10m fees, so can something be learned from that consolidation for adaptation to a smaller format? Is it time to look at a structural change for smaller practices too? Can such changes improve the sustainability, efficiency and profitability of smaller practices?
Such firms handle around 80 per cent of businesses in the UK. Improving the services to these businesses would be hugely important in establishing new enterprises and improving their profitability.
But the average sole practitioner struggles to supply wide-ranging services to an increasingly sophisticated client base - complex tax questions, forensic tax , new accounts format, company formation, company secretarial, payroll & P11D returns, VAT and NI, managing staff, book-keeping service, cash flows for business loans, tax saving opportunities, business advice, and those money laundering rules. There might be audit work or staff training. All while juggling with the demands of 200 to 300 clients.
25 per cent of Jobtels clients are ill when they come to sell, a further 25 per cent sell before their time.
Jobtel set up a working party using local firms to consider a group practice. The independent profit centre/firms would group together so that each used the skills of the others, one carrying out the audit work, another staff training role, others doing marketing, one having Sage staff and doing IT installations and training, another concentrating on payroll work, some expertise was expected to emerge in business sectors like medical and legal to be leveraged across all firms. It would allow firms to sell out and newcomers to buy in, provide holiday and illness cover, using a brand name, grouped on a regional basis but then linked together with other regions with shares quoted on the junior market Plus to allow of outside investors - but essentially owned by its members.
Jobtel believes such a structure would work to the benefit of all.
Julian Hamilton, FCA, MBA, BA
this was published in the acca magazine for april 2010