06Jun

What are some of the best accounting firms to work for?

Accounting Today knows. Over the summer, the publication announced the best small, mid-sized, and large accounting firms to work for. Now, culled from more than 250 entrants, the lists have been compiled in a special supplement appropriately entitled, “Best Firms to Work For 2020.”

The 100 firms (based on size) are as small as Measured Results CPAs 16 employees to Kearney & Co.’s 677 and hail from all parts of the nation. Yet what they all have in common is they’ve learned how to adapt and even thrive in a business environment unlike any other.

Some, like New Jersey’s WilkenGuttenplan (ranked 17th among mid-sized firms) already had a remote culture. Transitioning their 124 employees to full-time remote work was “seamless,” the firm said. The firm holds online social hours and coffee breaks and encourages all communication among the staff be by video.

Others had to learn how to work remotely. The No. 1 ranking mid-sized firm, Martin Starnes & Associates in North Carolina, said that since going fully remote, they’ve adapted to remote hiring and onboarding and helped their clients with limited computer skills become more fluent. “We have new ways to communicate and get what we need from our clients.”

These “best firms” all had to confront the kind of work-life balance and other issues that have always existed, but which the COVID pandemic suddenly brought front and center.

“Today’s workforce compels us to think about things like alternative work arrangements, diversity, technology, and job satisfaction,” Rockville, Maryland’s E. Cohen & Co. told Accounting Today. The firm says it’s “met this challenge head on by creating a positive work environment.” That it has indeed is borne out by the firm’s low, 6% turnover.

Photo by Giorgio Trovato on Unsplash

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Jun 6, 2023

COVID Saving Added $1 Trillion to Bank Deposits

Banks are awash in money as consumers at record rates socked away the money they didn’t spend during the early stages of the COVID-19 shutdown.

Mass Mutual survey discovered one in five of us put away at least $1,000. An ambitious 10% say they’ve saved more than $5,000 since the start of the pandemic. So much money has poured into the nation’s banks that the FDIC’s Deposit Insurance Fund fell below the statutory minimum.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. guarantees money on deposit at insured banks up to $250,000. The fund is financed by fees paid by insured banks, based on their deposits, size and other factors.

Typically, when the fund falls below the required 1.35% of insured deposits, it’s because of bank failures. But in this case, the amount Americans saved during the early weeks and months of the pandemic grew so fast the ratio of the $114.7 billion fund to total deposits fell to 1.3%.

The FDIC called the influx of savings “extraordinary.”

“An unprecedented inflow of more than $1 trillion in estimated insured deposits in the first half of 2020 resulted mainly from the COVID-19 pandemic, specifically monetary policy actions, direct government assistance to consumers and businesses, and an overall reduction in spending,” said the FDIC.

The Mass Mutual survey found 46% of Americans spending less than in the past. Many spent more on food deliveries and streaming services, but almost two-thirds spent less on vacations. A majority (53%) reduced spending on day trips. Weddings, summer wardrobes and beauty care were also areas where a high percentage said they’ve reduced their spending.

Most of those who cancelled their summer vacation saved the money in one manner or another. A third put it away hoping to take a vacation later this year. 30% put it into their regular savings account; 15% added it to their emergency fund.

Among the 34% of Americans who saved at least something, 55% said not taking a vacation or doing any traveling helped them save. Many also said not going out at night, eating at home and skimping on personal care and clothing were other ways they saved.

What do they expect to do with the money they saved? 40% plan to hang on to it as an emergency fund. One-in-five will use it for necessities, to pay down debt and to eventually travel.

And when the COVID pandemic is over, 26% said they’ve developed new spending and saving habits which they plan to keep.

Photo by Austin Distel on Unsplash

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Strategic Networking: A Secret Weapon in Job Searching

Networking is more than connecting with other professionals on LinkedIn or collecting contacts; it’s about building relationships that can lead you to your dream job.