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By Gale Crosley, CPA
Reprinted with permission from Accounting Today
The world is shrinking and the surge of international business is a contributing factor. According to the
Small Business Administration, four out of ten small businesses are engaged in some degree of
international commerce. Is your firm exploring this lucrative market, or merely responding to clients’ needs? There is a world of difference in these approaches. The firms who are sending out expeditions today
will be the big international market winners.
Check Your Map
I turned to Bob Bunting for answers. Bob chairs the Moss Adams International Service Group, which
serves some 1,300 clients. He is immediate past president of the International Federation of Accountants
(IFAC) and is past chairman of the board of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. A
well respected thought leader in this space, Bob’s views are widely sought.
Asked how firms can drive success in the international arena, Bob suggests starting with geography. He
counsels firms to assess which nationalities populate their areas as a way of identifying potential targets.
For example, Alabama has an abundance of Korean auto manufacturing and Indiana has become home to a
number of German-based industries. For Moss Adams, the firm’s San Francisco location as a gateway to
Asia provided a natural starting point for international expansion.
Think “Buyer Group”
Approach your international practice (or any niche for that matter) by thinking not just in terms of services
offered, but in terms of buyer groups and their particular needs.
This permits you, for example, to go beyond offering international tax services and offer a broader
portfolio that includes mergers and acquisitions, business planning, and preparing financial reports under
IFRS.
IFRS conversions will become increasingly important, even to firms who do not work for publicly traded
entities. Current estimates point to 75,000 subsidiaries of U.S. parents doing business somewhere in the
world. These represent $9 trillion in assets. What’s more, there are 63,000 subsidiaries of foreign parent
companies doing business in the U.S. These are generating some $2.6 trillion in assets, and many are
located in countries using IFRS. The bottom line? If you’re moving in an international direction, you’ll
need IFRS capacity.
Joining Is Not Enough
A proactive approach to international growth requires more than a map of the world and membership in an
international accounting association. Certainly, these organizations are an excellent source of technical
expertise and business development. But membership per se will not win you clients.
Bob recommends conducting an inventory of your existing client base to identify companies involved in,
or set to embark on international transactions. Find out how they go about buying products from foreign
companies. Determine what types of expertise are required in terms of their business activities and
requirements. Remember, too, that existing clients may have global interests that you may not be aware of.
Find out if they have distributors or manufacturing representatives selling for them in other countries.
Check income statements for indications of revenue from Canada or other countries. Your client may need
to be filing Canadian taxes and may require export/import licenses.
You also need to determine which might need your help with licensing, IP, tax issues and other areas.
Learn what services are currently being provided by others, such as lawyers, customs experts or specialists
in transfer pricing. According to Bob, many accounting firms make the mistake of handing off such duties
to other firms or specialists. Instead, quarterback the relationship so that you become the trusted advisor
and problem-solver.
It’s the same way you would operate stateside. If a Kansas client had income or employees in Colorado,
the Kansas firm would not refer the client to a Colorado firm, but would research and provide the answers.
It’s a matter of establishing your strength and credibility as a financial problem-solver, wherever that
problem exists.
Springboard to Success
Once you’ve identified an international client or opportunity, leverage that relationship to find others. Ask
your contact at a French manufacturing firm about other companies planning to establish European
operations. Seek names of relevant attorneys and regulatory agencies. Learn all you can about the
industry. Find your most powerful channels of distribution – those people and firms that work with foreign
entities.
Bob counsels to also mine a particular geography or national group to see what industries emerge from it.
As Moss Adams began to research Japanese opportunities, the timber and fishing industries arose naturally
from those inquiries.
I couldn’t agree more. Identifying particular industries and geographies will enable you to focus like a laser
beam growing specific markets. Whatever your approach, avoid the temptation to be all things to all
international clients. Back in the day, when you were building a domestic practice, you probably hung out
a shingle for all comers. Our world is far more sophisticated today, and your approach needs to match it.
Patience Required
Growing an international practice takes patience. Be prepared to become small again as you start to build
relationships and prove your value in unchartered territory.
There’s a world of opportunity out there. Go out and find it!
Copyright ® 2011 by Crosley+Company
Gale Crosley, CPA, was selected one of the Most Recommended Consultants in the Inside Public Accounting
BEST OF THE BEST Annual Survey of Firms for eight consecutive years, and one of the Top 100 Most Influential
People in Accounting by AccountingToday for five consecutive years. She is an honors accounting graduate from
the University of Akron, Ohio, winner of the Simonetti Distinguished Business Alumni Award, and an Editorial
Advisor for the Journal of Accountancy. Gale is founder and principal of Crosley+Company, providing revenue
growth consulting and coaching to CPA firms. She brings more than 30 years of experience, featuring a unique
combination as a practicing CPA in two national accounting firms, along with significant experience in business
development in the cutting edge technology environment with such firms as IBM and MCI. For more information,
visit the website at www.crosleycompany.com or contact her at gcrosley@crosleycompany.com. |