

Journal of Accountancy Podcast
AICPA & CIMA
The Journal of Accountancy podcast discusses the key issues facing the accounting profession.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 13, 2023 • 16min
Prestige and value: A CPA career coach's view on education requirements
Nikki Winston, CPA, can recall a time when, for her, it might have been easy to give up on pursuing CPA licensure. Now, she receives messages from CPA candidates and advises them on how to continue to the journey. Winston, a career coach and CPA Exam strategist, shares in this episode the common questions she gets from students and why she believes that the 150-hour educational requirement for CPA licensure should not change. Resources: "Understanding the Top Challenges to Becoming a CPA"; A video on how mobility for CPAs would be hampered by changing educational requirements for licensure; and Advice for adding the hours required beyond those of a four-year college degree. What you'll learn from this episode: Winston's advice to approach educational requirements as if going through a buffet line. Why knowledge in areas such as securitization and tax can end up being valuable. The types of messages Winston often receives from accounting candidates seeking coaching or CPA Exam preparation. Why Winston said that the profession should be trying to reach students well before they enter high school. The personal example that applies to Winston's words: "Don't be intimidated by other people's exam experiences."

Apr 6, 2023 • 17min
'Status quo is the riskiest option': One leader's proven approach
It's obvious that change is happening rapidly these days, but is the accounting profession moving quickly enough to adapt to that change? It's a question Joey Havens, CPA, has pondered often in his career at the firm Horne LLP. Havens joined the Journal of Accountancy podcast to discuss the building of organizational culture, why the word "enduring" has been a strand running through his career, and why he likes to ask the question "Are we moving fast enough?" Havens is a speaker at AICPA & CIMA ENGAGE in June in Las Vegas.

Mar 30, 2023 • 18min
Of high interest: What rising rates mean for everyone
As consumers, the current environment of higher interest rates affects us in several ways. One of the obvious ways is for potential homebuyers, who are keenly aware of 30-year mortgage rates that are far higher now than several years ago. But how do higher rates affect accounting practitioners and their business clients? Bob Durak, CPA, CGMA, has a few answers in the latest episode of the Journal of Accountancy podcast. Durak, director–Audit and Accounting Technical Services at AICPA & CIMA, together as the Association of International Certified Professional Accountants, also explains the role that the Center for Plain English Accounting (CPEA) plays in assisting small to midsize firms with new or less obvious risks related to interest rates. Hear more about why fraud could rise along with interest rates, what high rates might have to do with revenue recognition, and more about a recent CPEA report that details the current rate environment.

Mar 23, 2023 • 16min
Managing vs. leading: Why that distinction matters in the modern workplace
Hamza Khan had just spoken at a TEDx event in 2016 when he got a message from his boss: See me in my office, first thing in the morning. Khan, an author and speaker who will deliver the May 10 keynote address at the AICPA & CIMA CFO Conference in Salt Lake City, recounts the initial reaction to his talk about management of people — it was not all positive. But the content was prescient, a pre-pandemic look at flexible work.

Mar 16, 2023 • 24min
Cultivating tech talent: A CPA firm leader's elementary approach
Avani Desai, CPA, doesn't trace her journey to becoming the CEO of a top firm to her youth — she goes back to before her birth, to the emphasis her grandparents put on education in the 1940s in India. In keeping with the "starting early" theme, Desai believes that, instead of talking to students about accounting in their third year of college, the profession needs to reach out to students in the third grade. And she lived that example recently, visiting her daughter's elementary school classroom.

Mar 9, 2023 • 9min
Inflation, talent, labor costs: 3 challenges amid slightly rising optimism
Overall, positivity about the U.S. economy remains muted, with just 23% of respondents to a recent survey saying they are optimistic about the domestic outlook for the next 12 months. That's an improvement from the fourth quarter, when just 12% expressed optimism. Also, 45% of respondents in the first-quarter Business and Industry Economic Outlook Survey are optimistic about their own businesses, up from 35% at the end of last year.

Mar 2, 2023 • 15min
Won't get fooled again: The who, what, and why of fraud
Kelly Richmond Pope, CPA, CGMA, is a professor at DePaul University and the author of a book scheduled to be published later this month on fraud. Fool Me Once: Scams, Stories, and Secrets From the Trillion-Dollar Fraud Industry is designed to help people "see themselves or see their businesses in the stories" so that they can improve their defenses against fraud. Pope details an interactive game related to the book that can help educate business owners about fraud and the motivations of fraudsters.

Feb 23, 2023 • 10min
Vroom, or doom and gloom? Thoughts on succeeding amidst uncertainty
Uncertainty isn't going away. And because of that, entrepreneur and consultant Pascal Finette says that organizations and leaders should think differently about how they view the current business environment. Finette, a keynote speaker at the Future of Finance Summit in Austin, Texas, challenges leaders to think of uncertainty as an opportunity, not an obstacle. He asks: "How do you actually show up as a leader in a world of uncertainty and lead into, and then lead, in the unknown?" Also, here's the late 2021 interview with Finette in which he talked about the accounting profession's "interesting inflection point."

Feb 16, 2023 • 21min
Culture you can feel: Advice for making it an accelerator, not a constraint
A well-defined, vibrant work culture certainly can help employees perform at or above expectations. And a poor culture can absolutely be a performance constraint. But how do leaders change culture, or grow it in the age of remote and dispersed workforces? Kerry Brown has a few thoughts. Brown specializes in workforce transformation, and she spoke recently to finance executives about such issues at the Future of Finance Summit in Austin, Texas.

Feb 9, 2023 • 14min
How CPAs focused on advisory services can answer several common questions
Robin Thieme, CPA/CITP, CGMA, the founder and CEO of KBS CFO, has gotten all kinds of questions over the years from clients. As an early adopter of offering advisory and fractional CFO services, she's someone well versed to share the insights that simply getting those questions can unearth.


