
The Unstoppable Accountant - Grow your Accounting Firm
For all things business, entrepreneurship and finance!
Hi Arun here, in this podcast I will happily share my ideas, successes and failures in growing my businesses, investment ideas, and juggling this all in a rapidly changing world.
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Arun
The Unstoppable Accountant - Grow your Accounting Firm
Future Proof your Accountancy Firm
In this podcast recording from a live webinar, the Samera team explore all the issues facing accountancy firms and how to deal with them all.
Hello, everyone, and welcome to our
webinar on Future Proofing, your accountancy
firm today backed by popular demands.
I'm joined by Arun Mehra and
also our international accounts team.
So we have Pankaj in India and
we have Gagan joining us from London. Hello, everyone.
Hey, Chris. How you doing? You're right?
Yeah, not bad at all. It's good to have you all
here and back despite popular demands.
I'm Chris O'Shea, Head of Digital Marketing at Samara.
Right, so let's get straight into it.
So what's going on?
What's happening in accountancy at the moment?
How are things changing?
What's the landscape looking like?
Sure, let me answer that, Chris, with
my kind of grey hair of experience. Okay.
I've been running a firm for 20 years and
I've never seen things change in this accountancy industry
so quickly, so rapidly over the last 20 years.
And I think in the last four or five
years, things are rapidly changing even further in the
UK, US, Australia, Canada, these types of places.
What we're seeing is the need for
more and more compliance work happening.
Therefore, if you have more work to be
done, you need more and more accountants.
But a massive issue is there's such a
lack of resource in kind of Western economies,
mainly due to an ageing population, but also
due to people not entering the accountancy industry.
So that's led to many, many firms struggling.
So we see the large firms taking
a lot of the people on.
So the PWCs, the Ernst Young, those
parts taking lots of people, but then
the smaller firms really struggle to hire.
So what we're seeing now is a
change in how things are run.
We've seen kind of accountancy firms now over the last
few years have been outsourcing and offshoring, and we've been
doing that almost 20 years in different guises.
But now I think this is
kind of becoming the accepted norm.
In addition, technology is changing at a rapid pace,
with AI now kind of leading the way.
And before AI was even a thing in the
last few months, it seems to have gone crazy.
AI was already integrated into much of the
software that's out there, things like Xero and
Hubdoc and Sage and these types of things.
There is AI already in there.
But I think now AI is a
really big point issue going forward.
Okay, so lots of change,
but with change comes opportunity.
And I think it's an exciting time to
be in accountancy, but you have to be
ready to be adapt and to be flexible.
What do you guys think?
Yeah, absolutely.
I can agree with you.
I think the speed at which the technology
has changed over the last decade is phenomenal.
And especially how we see all of these apps
being integrated into basic software that allows us to
do sort of bookkeeping or accounts in all sort
of parts of accountsy fields is amazing.
And I think if you don't keep on top
of the change in technology and don't modernise your
systems and your processes, then you sort of fall
behind the competition in the industry.
It's very important to be on top of it.
And I think you really touched on a very
important aspect that really has become very prominent over
the last few years is the lack of resource,
lack of skilled resource, especially in the UK.
And we've seen that not just in
accountancy, we've seen that across all industries.
So that's heavily know, starting from a small
one man band to sort of large multi
corporations, they're all being affected by this.
So I think with the change in technology and the
issues with the resource and the compliance burden we have
in UK, I think we are now seeing a rise
in people looking at alternatives to these know, we're not
following the same approach that we had sort of few
years ago and now we're reinventing the wheel to some
extent, to be fair.
Panka, do your thoughts on this?
Yeah, so as we need to be updated, so
we need to hire our young and talented resources
and for that India is the best hub.
So we are doing our hiring and
training and we are making staff development.
It is very useful.
So let's hope for the best.
Absolutely, absolutely cool. Yeah.
So we've talked about accountancy
firms themselves being affected.
Would I be right then in thinking that
other small to medium enterprises, say dental Practise
or anything that isn't an accountancy firm, are
they seeing less and less in house accountancy? Yeah.
So if you look at a large, let's
say, let's say you look at a finance
function of an organisation, any larger business, they're
struggling to hire people just like we are,
I guess, because there's just not enough resource.
So if you had a team of ten
now increasingly some of these finance firms or
finance departments of these large corporations are outsourcing.
So if you talk about I met with a friend the
other day and he works for a very large Swiss group
that sells chocolate, which you probably have heard of, okay?
Things like Kit Kat and stuff
like that and their operation.
He's here in the UK, but he says all
our finance department, most of it is run out
of three or four other locations across the world. Okay.
I think he mentioned India as one
of them, Indonesia as another one and
somewhere else, or Philippines as well.
So the large corporates have probably been doing it for
a number of years because they can see the benefit,
the staff, the costs are lower capable people.
But now it's coming ubiquitous.
I think even small to medium sized enterprises
need to do that, but it's much harder
when you're a small business to do that.
Therefore you need partners to help you to achieve
the same goals that these large corporates have.
Do you think it might be the end of
in house accountancy in small to medium businesses.
I don't think it'll be the end. Okay.
I think you still need good
think, and that's the point.
I think the issue that we have, I think,
here in the UK is finding good people.
There are certainly some very good people, but all businesses
need good people and therefore sometimes you have to look
further afield, say, well, I've got some good people in
the UK, but I want to find good people.
And they may well be in India, they may well
be somewhere else in the world to support my business.
Because as a business owner,
you've got to think globally.
You cannot think just get hiring the local bookkeeper
and hiring the local accountant in my team.
You might not just find anyone. Right?
So if they're going to compete smaller
businesses, they're pretty much going to have
to look into outsourcing, offshoring for accounting
in some shape or form, I think.
So, Goggin, what do you think?
What do you think?
Yeah, I think you're Chris. You're right.
I think in order to be competitive, in order
to grow, in order to run a business effectively
and efficiently, you do need to look at the
changing world around you and change with it.
And like Aaron mentioned already, large corporations have
been doing it for a number of years
and I think upsourcing has existed for over
a decade and it's been very effectively used.
But it is very easy to get it
wrong if you don't have the right experience.
And when you do have the right
experience, it can work like a dream.
And I know from experience and talking to
colleagues who've tried offshoring and outsourcing before and
things haven't gone in the right direction for
them, it's because it could be the circumstances,
it could be the partner.
For one reason or another, they've
not had great success with it.
And I think with the change in
technology and the development in technology now,
there's a lot more opportunity.
And as this grows, it's growing at such
a pace that if you don't join this
particular I don't necessarily want to call it
trend, but I think it's a business strategy.
If you don't join this business strategy, if you
don't embrace the change, if you don't embrace the
change in technology and what is happening, you'll sort
of realise in somewhere down the line that you've
missed out on that opportunity.
And it gets harder and harder because
the world keeps moving forward every day,
every minute, as the industry changes.
So I think you will see a lot of
change in the next five to ten years, significantly.
But it's now more accessible to smaller
businesses than it was before, largely because
to the development of the technology.
And if you have the right partner, it makes
it easier and it does actually become fruitful.
Whereas if you don't have the right partner,
or if you don't have the right experience,
it can very easily go the wrong way.
So that's really the thing to think about.
Punkage, have you got any thoughts on that as well?
I think Gogan covered it all. Good. Brilliant.
So who's going to win?
Out of all mean, it seems mean
offshore Accounts is going to win.
Is this going to make it
easier for small to medium businesses?
Are they going to see problems with this
or is it going to essentially take the
worry off their hands in house?
If you looked at it from the point of accountancy firms
in the UK, this is a market I know well.
I've been running a firm for the last 20 years and
I know how it got increasingly difficult to hire good people
here in the UK at an affordable rate of quality.
And personally, I think the winners will be those
who do embrace changes Guggen mentioned, who are involving
and using technology to the best of their benefit,
but also those who also embrace the offshore model.
Now, when I say offshore model, outsourced model, you
still need good people here in your team here
in the UK, there's no doubt about that.
I'm not questioning that at all.
But a lot of the routine jobs, routine activity, can
be offshored, which can save time, which can save cost,
and therefore the team in the UK can then start
working on other added value services, such as tax planning
or business advisory or whatever it might be.
So the winners, in my mind, are the
ones who are embracing change, embracing offshoring, embracing
technology and AI and all of these things.
They're going to be the winners.
I think we're in an era and also in
an industry that if you do stagnate, as Guggen
quite clearly said, if you stagnate, you're dead in
the dishwaters, they say you're dead.
So you have to change, you have to evolve.
You mentioned that some jobs will still be able to
be done in house, some will have to be offshored.
What kind of things do you think will need
to be offshored if you want to grow competitively?
Guggen, what do you think you're on the operations
side particularly, so, you know, more than on an
operational point of view, I think it really sort
of depends on your business model.
But largely, I would say that typically what we've
seen that works quite well is having client relationship
managers here for a number of reasons.
Whether there's a cultural gap, whether there's a
timing issue, whether it's that ability or proximity.
To go see the client and build that relationship,
and to provide an outstanding service to a client,
you really need to understand their business.
And again, proximity is an element of that.
So to be able to go see a client, to
sit face to face, to have that human interaction, to
be able to discuss the issues they're facing, not just
from an accounting point of view, from a business operations
point of view where they don't have somebody else they
can speak to on that front.
And that's typically what we find is that businesses
don't necessarily have the resources to have a full
time, for example, financial Director on board, but they
do need those expertise from time to time.
It could be you just need them once a
month or twice a month, but you need that
input, whether it's from a tax point of view,
from a business structure point of view.
So I find that the roles that really sort
of work well in UK are the ones where
you have that relationship management element, CRM element, and
the other compliance work largely, which is bookkeeping accounts
or anything that can be done remotely, whether mostly
administrative tasks that don't require constant interaction or physical
meetings, then those can be done very well, provided
we have got good systems and processes surrounding that
particular element of it.
And there's good communication across borders
that works quite well in India.
And they're very capable and intelligent workforce
in India that are very technically astute
and they can deliver great results.
And again, that comes back to being able to provide
that service at a cost effective model so that you
can then do more added value work here in UK.
And that's a win win for everybody.
Offshoring wins, the clients win because you're able to then
charge a reasonable fee for the work that you're doing,
and you also win because of the lower cost.
It sort of adds to the bottom line on your end.
So it works as a win win for everybody.
But getting those key roles right is very
crucial at the start of the relationship.
Agree.
Okay, so it sounds like in house accountants
might need to not necessarily develop the role,
but account management skills are going to become
much more important, as opposed to just financial
management skills, like you said, being that bridge
between the offshore and the in house.
Yeah, correct, very much.
That's going to be an interesting development.
Yeah, very much so.
Very much so.
How else do you reckon small businesses and
council firms can grow and compete competitively?
Is it essentially just embracing the change, not
holding back from it, getting ahead of the
curve and bringing in the right knowledge?
I think that's certainly that go on.
Yeah, I definitely think that it's
not just about embracing the changes.
I mean, there's an element of understanding how to
actually implement that change in your operations, in your
business, to incorporate that in your strategy, to structure
it properly so that it's not something that it's
not just an idea that we're implementing.
It's having a thoughtful, planned strategical
action behind it and then monitoring
it and then growing with it. Really.
It's something that sort of grows with you, because when
you implement a change and this is a big change
for any firm, whether small or large, and it requires
a lot of careful planning from an operations point.
Of view from clients point of view from your
point of view to manage know compliance work is
really at the heart of all of this.
You cannot miss a hard deadline, for example, with
HMRC and you'll have soft deadlines with clients who
would want their work done on time, early.
So having that sort of strategical planning would help
to make sure there's minimum disruption to business, minimum
disruption to the team members, to the existing team
members, to the management, to the systems.
Because then there's an element of incorporating systems here
and abroad and doing that right would make it
easier and there'll be less change resistance in the
early stage and make it more successful later on.
So I think having that is a very important
aspect of actually putting it in action, not just
knowing it that this is how you do it,
but the detailed action plan behind it.
Sorry, Aaron.
No, I interrupted your apologies.
No, that's fine.
I kind of echo exactly what you're saying.
I think it's so important change has to be
at the heart of everything that you're doing.
But one of the other things to differentiate yourself is
if you're offshoring much of the kind of compliance related
work that gives you as a firm an opportunity to
look at other areas in your business.
Okay, what else can I do?
Is there tax planning work I could do?
Or maybe I want to become a specialist in
a particular sector or maybe I want to focus
on more the commercial finance side of things.
I help clients raise finance and get business plans
and do startups and that type of thing.
So there's so many angles.
But at the core of any accountancy firm
is a compliance that is at the core.
That is the heart of it.
And that's what most clients are expecting for you to
be able to do the compliance, the payroll, the accounts,
the tax returns and do that with your eyes shut.
We all know it's not that easy, but it all
can be outsourced, it all can be offshored, it all
can be done by more than capable people overseas to
support your business as an accountancy firm for you then
to look at other angles which perhaps you can generate
greater revenue from as well.
That's some really good points there.
And Pankaj, I wanted to ask you so you're out
in India helping to head up the international accounts team.
We've there's.
There's not necessarily a death of account C over
here, but there's certainly a dearth of account C.
Why is India becoming such a go
to market for these kind of resources?
Yeah, so the only reason is we have a
pool of talented individuals and they are young and
they are energetic and obviously they are just freshers.
They are ACCA qualified CAS MBAs, so they are not asking
for money, they are asking for experience, and they do their
jobs very so I think India is the main hub right
now, and it will be increasing day by day.
And not only UK, US and Canada and Australia.
They're also relying on Indian talented, I think.
So India is the best place, right? Yeah, yeah.
If I can put that into some other points
to add there, Chris, I think a large point.
English speaking.
Okay, so people speak English, they
talk from a young age English.
So that's very helpful.
From a time zone point of view, it's a four
and a half to five and a half hour, depending
on what time of year you're talking about.
Time difference.
But increasingly, many of the firms in India,
many of the people on the team, work
UK hours, which is a huge thing.
So anyone that you have on your offshore team
over there, it's effective extension of your team.
So what we're seeing, and this is what I predict
going forward, is people might be working from home, increasingly
here in the UK or US and everything, but if
they're not going to the office, other companies will start
thinking, well, actually, why am I paying UK salaries when
I can get someone in India at a lower salary?
And they're effectively working the same
hour sitting in the office?
And that's an accountancy that's across all industries.
Okay, so I think that's another issue.
And I think bottom line, though, is
the volume of people in India.
That's the bottom line.
The UK population is around 60 to 70 million people.
Population of India is 1.5 billion people.
So the UK population is 4% of the India population.
Now, not everyone in India can be an accountant.
Not everyone's skilled up and speaks English.
Not everyone does that.
But there is the population, probably about four
to 500 million people in that country who
are young, hungry, energetic, learning skills.
And it might not be in accountancy.
It could be in it, it could be in
law, it could be in other professional services.
So I think this is a general shift
in professional services happening across the board.
And what we're seeing just recently, the
Indian government announced the opening of the
whole legal sector in India.
So what we're going to see is a whole load of
legal work increasingly going from law firms here to India, I
think, over the next few years, because that was a big
barrier for the law firms here to do it.
But I think that will change things as well.
Accountancy is ahead of the curve in that, but we're still
in its infancy, so I think it's an exciting time.
And for anyone who has never been to
you'll, I just came back last month and
met Bankerj and Gunjan and other team members.
But for anyone who hasn't been, and I've been
going to India since I was very little boy,
on a regular basis, india is happening right now.
It's not going to happen in ten years.
It's not going to happen in 20 years.
It's going to happen now.
And the next 20 years, personally,
I think, is what we saw.
China, what happened in China over
the last 20 to 25 years.
India is at that stage now
where it's about to take off.
Okay, there are challenges, there are
political issues, there are other things.
But underpinning India, underpinning are its
capable people and who speak English.
So China cannot do this because they
don't speak English or a large proportion
of the population that's being English.
They've been very good at manufacturing, but I think
even manufacturing will be shifting to India as well.
From China, as we've seen with Apple,
they've moved a large manufacturer operation from
China to Chennai in southern India.
So this is just the beginning.
Just the beginning, absolutely.
Especially when you couple it
with the development of mean.
You talk about the changes in the legal sector.
I was reading a couple of days ago that they're
testing out AI in courtrooms now, and it's now just
starting to be able to beat human lawyers in arguments.
So, yeah, the number of industries that are going
to be hugely affected by shifts in technology and
demographics is scary and exciting at the same time.
It is scary and exciting, but the key here is
that I don't think AI will take away jobs.
It will take away some jobs.
But the key is to have AI trained people in your
team who understand how to get the best out of AI.
So our job as a team, for our
team in India, here and in the UK.
Similarly, is to say, well, you're
an accountant, but you know what?
We need to develop your skills in getting better with
AI and using AI in your day to day job.
And that's a role that everyone has to do.
If you don't do that, if you don't change and adapt,
then again, you're dead in the dishwater or it's done.
A dishwater.
I can never get that saying right.
But anyway, it's one of those something
about water, something about dishes, you're dead
in the water, whatever it is.
But that's kind of what we're seeing in answer.
And India, from a UK standpoint, time zone is great.
Now, I know the Philippines is another massive offshoring
kind of country that's happening, and they seem to
work predominantly for the west coast of the US.
California that side, because of the time zones.
Okay, so time zone does play another part,
and then another country is South Africa as
well, which is happening across the board.
But we know India, as I said, been
going to India many years, know lots of
people there, know how the culture works.
And that's a very important thing.
It's the culture.
How do you navigate through that culture,
understand how the Indian kind of team
members work and what their needs are.
And at the similar time, the Indian team
also need to understand what the requirements are
of UK US Australian clients are as well.
And culture plays a very large part of this as well.
That's a really good point.
So I'm going to ask a couple of questions about
challenges and pitfalls of all this, but just before I
do, we mentioned very briefly local tax regulations.
And do you think it's going to be a while
until AI and outsourcing can really tackle local tax regulations?
I think it's going to happen very soon.
It can do everything. Okay.
AI is so smart, it'll pick up everything.
So the software we've been using over the
years has been pretty good, but now AI
integrated into these software, things will change, I
think, in a nutshell, yeah, I do.
Tax planning might even be yeah, to some extent,
because what will happen that the AI will be
able to scan a tax return somehow and interpret
the numbers and then come out with this opportunity.
That opportunity. This opportunity.
It's like, bingo, here you go, okay.
And I'm sure people are developing software around that
already and I'm no kind of AI expert in
terms of software development, but it's a great idea.
Maybe we should look into that.
Just making a note of that now yeah, is a big element
of this, isn't it, where AI is introduced to sort of be
able for people to sort of pay their tax based on what
the projected tax might be at the end of the A.
That's been a big shift in the accounting industry.
So we can already see this being embraced by
HMRC, we can see this already being embraced by
software companies like Xero or Sage or QuickBooks and
Cashflow or free agent and you name it.
I think there's a lot of development happening.
It's not necessarily at the forefront right now, but
there's a lot of change happening and before you
know it, if you don't keep pace with it,
then you'll be outdated, as they call it. Absolutely.
So what will happen, really?
If you look at how we've worked historically, you
prepared the accounts, you've prepared the tax returns for
an individual and then they pay their tax.
But what we'd want to do before you pay
the tax, what you can do is some type
of AI software would analyse that tax return against
all the tax legislation here in the UK.
And within minutes it'll say, you know what, you
haven't optimised this, you need to do this.
It put some money in this pension, do this
and it'll tell you how much to do this.
It's like, Christ, okay, it's all done.
And then ultimately, you need to sign off an
accountant to sign it off and off you go.
And suddenly, instead of paying a certain
amount of tax, you're paying 30% less.
Because the AI has told you this is the
model and it's in compliance with tax legislation. Okay?
That's where we're heading.
So the key is to understand how to use that technology.
And there will certainly be some winners in this
market in terms of the software side of things.
But those firms that embrace that type of approach
as well will be the winners as well.
That's actually going to raise some really interesting
points with big businesses finding tax loopholes.
If one day we'll have AI telling every Tom, Dick
and Harry, oh, there's this loophole and this loophole that's
been very interesting for tax legislation as well.
Closing loopholes, like they won't be exclusive anymore
to people who can afford the big accountants.
It's said to be open to everyone. Absolutely.
That's going to be a very interesting development.
It will be an interesting wonder.
I just don't know how it's going to evolve.
And if you think about it, this is where A is
going to take us on this little aspect of life.
Okay, imagine on all other aspects
of life how it will change. Exactly.
So let's get into it.
What are the pitfalls and the problems and the
challenges we're going to face with all of this?
It can't all be sunshine.
There are any brilliant. Excellent. Next question.
Okay. What are the challenges?
Punkard, you tell me from your Indian perspective,
what do you think right now, being in
outsourcing industry from the past 1213 years, I've
seen the major challenge initially was communication.
But we have improved a lot on that side.
So communication is not a challenge right now.
Yeah, sometimes there is a challenge of data privacy
and some firms in India and some accountants here,
they don't follow the data privacy practises.
And so this becomes a major also, I mean,
sometimes there's a challenge about the delivery, the turnaround
time they are not able to follow.
But coming again to the point, everything is
improving now and I don't feel offshoring and
outsourcing is a bad idea when it comes
to India because we have improved already.
So nobody's perfect.
Yeah, but yeah, we are going up the ladder, right?
Correct.
Okay, yeah, fair point. Guggen, what do you think the
challenges are with AI in particular?
Yeah, I think the main know in a nutshell, I
think Panka just covered that any change will have its
opportunities and any change will have its challenges.
And it's how you convert those challenges into
opportunities which makes you the winner, effectively.
And yeah, I completely agree.
There's been issues in the past with
outsourcing, whether it's to do with India
or any other part of the world.
And those issues with the change in
technology, as you can see, have started
to eradicate and things are moving forward.
The major issue that people will have in sort of implementing
AI or just general issues with AI is having an understanding
on how to best use it, how to best use it,
where to use it, how it serves a central function.
To their organisation and how we'll help them
do more added value and advisory work specifically
for UK accountants in the UK.
Because effectively, if you're delegating data driven work
through AI and offshoring that to, let's say,
India, then you have that space.
You have that space, thinking wise,
you have that space time wise.
You have that space in terms of cost savings to
be able to think about what else you can provide
to your clients, what other services you can provide, how
you can add more value in order to grow.
So I think having a good understanding of how
to utilise it, along with a good sort of
business strategy would be the key challenge.
And that's why it's important to really understand it at
its early stages, because AI, as we can see, has
developed so much in the last five years.
In the next five years, it'd be a
completely different it'd be a game changer.
Yeah, I think if I could add I think I remember
the days when I started off my firm, what, 2003?
So 20 years ago.
And we started outsourcing very early in those days, but
the technology wasn't as advanced as it is now.
So it was literally I'd had an admin person
in my team and clients would send in all
their paperwork into the office, someone in the post.
Then I'd have a permanent team member standing at
a scanner all day, scanning all the documents.
That would then get put onto an server. Okay?
Then someone in the UK would have a
QuickBooks file and that wasn't on the cloud.
There's no cloud or anything like that.
What would happen is then a little bit of information
would be set up in that QuickBooks file and that
would then be Ftp'd across to India and downloaded on
crappy 56K modem connection over in India.
They would then look all the scan documents, do
their work, and once they'd done it, then they'd
have to send the file back again over an
FTP server to the UK for someone to review.
So that was my kind
of early introduction of offshoring.
Now things have changed, okay, with cloud accounting
and everything else that's going with it.
But bottom line, bottom line, the biggest
challenge is getting the right people.
The right people, whether it's UK team, India
team, and that, to me, is everything.
Because if you have the right people,
your life is so much easier.
And we have people like Bankuj and Gunjan in
India who kind of lead the hiring side of
things and identify the right people with the right
technical skills, but also with the right communication skills
and with the right attitude.
And as we know, attitude is everything.
They might not have all the qualifications or have all
the experience that we want, but if they're keen to
learn and they can be trained, we'll train them up.
Okay?
So we'll train them up, for instance,
to get all their zero qualifications.
We'll train them up to get everything that they
need to do the job, not just satisfactorily, but
to a very high standard to meet our high
standards, which ultimately meet our clients high standards.
It's a good investment. Yeah. Correct. Okay.
So it sounds like the main challenges are
going to be overcome by essentially keeping ahead
of the changes in technology and by building
the right relationships with the right people. Correct.
Yeah.
Essentially, essence of business.
Correct. You're absolutely right.
It is the essence of business. It's all about people.
And technology will evolve and AI will come.
And there'll be something in the
future beyond AI, I'm sure.
But a business is ultimately about people, okay?
Your clients, your team, and managing and looking after that
team, who then do a good job for your clients.
That's what it was all about. Yeah.
Culture beating strategy. Correct.
So, I mean, we've been talking about AI.
Is AI going to make offshoring kind of superfluous?
Because right now, yeah, smaller businesses and account
see, firms might need to outsource so that
people who know what they're doing can take
advantage of the AI technology.
But in 510 years, if it is going
to be a case of upload your accounts
here's my accounts, figure this out for me.
That's a great question, Chris.
I think to some extent, yes. Okay.
But as I said earlier, I think accountants will
need to the good accountancy firms will embrace AI.
So you'll need good people who understand it, who are
at the kind of leading front of this all.
So you'll need people who are trained in AI, who
are trained in accountants, who can do both things.
And therefore those will be the firms that
really dominate the space in my mind.
And I think what will emerge is for the
larger players out there, they might struggle, and too
many opinion makers or partnerships might struggle.
People not making the right decisions
and stuff, they come clunky.
So it's the smaller, lean firms that could
have a real advantage here to be able
to adopt AI, adopt technology, adopt good people
in their firms overseas using offshoring.
I think if you combine the two AI
plus offshoring, as I kind of mentioned earlier,
I think that's your really winning strategy.
Yeah, absolutely.
I think you're right, Aaron.
When we refer to that conversation, regardless to how much
development there is in AI, you'll always need that expert
input from the accountant to be able to cross Cast
and cheque as a quality cheque to say what AI
has told me is correct and I agree with it,
or whether I disagree and whether it needs a change.
So you obviously cannot blindly rely on it,
regardless of how brilliant AI might be.
So I think it does come back to having
that right sort of people in place who are
equally competent in AI and their specialist field in
order to sort of deliver the final output.
That's a very good point.
With outsourcing, obviously you're going to be sending
a lot of financial data around the world
and a lot of sensitive documents.
And I know Pankaju touched on this a moment ago,
how can people be sure their data is going to
be secure and looked after and safe and not breached?
Okay, so if I could answer that, I think
we'd use, obviously all our servers and data centres
and stuff are here in the UK.
Then we comply here in the UK,
we comply with all the GDPR standards.
Then the technology that we use overseas is
all very up to date, compliant, controlled here
by us here in the UK.
And we're just making sure that data protection has to be
at the top of our list to protect our clients.
So there's various standards that we need
to meet, which we do, and obviously
those standards are constantly changing and data
protection laws are changing in the UK.
But I know in India, there's even further data protection
laws have just emerged in the last few weeks and
months, which we're making sure that we're doing.
So security, data protection, personal data, that is
at the heart of what we do. So if we don't get that
right, then we've got a problem.
And like with many other firms,
they have a problem as well.
So, yeah, it's a very important aspect
that has to be addressed by anyone
doing outsourcing, anyone doing anything. Okay?
Yeah, of course, operationally, we've developed over some time
some very robust and secure systems and processes that
help us manage and control the use of that
data, whether that's existing clients or extinct clients, or
any other data that we've gathered.
So having that sort of robust policies in
place, proper training in place for the entire
team, having good systems in place, having good
control processes in place, having good quality cheques
in place, all of that really matters.
And I think that's certainly something that
we've had a heavy focus on even
before we even considered outsourcing.
Okay, and can you touch a little bit on
that point on some of the specific software platforms
that we've been using and how they help?
Essentially, yeah.
So I think we use all the
UK common software that are out there.
So from accounting point of view, we use Xero,
QuickBooks, Sage, Tax, Calc, Payroll, we use BrightPay Moneysoft,
all of these things that are out there.
So our teams are trained in all
of the relevant softwares, wherever they need.
They have a zero, not a
user licence, a zero certification.
Our teams get certified in those types of software
where they need them, and we actively encourage that.
So software is an important aspect as well, and
it's at the heart of what we do to
make the job quicker, faster, better for everybody.
And since everything's on the cloud, it's
easy, it's very easy to do.
Okay, do you think this is going to be?
Because we touched on the changes and
how council firms especially may need to
slim down and change their modus operandi.
Is this going to be profitable for accountsy firms
here, or do you think it's going to be
something they're going to have to overcome and adapt
to and essentially change their outlook?
It's going to be extremely profitable for county firms in the
UK and us if they adopt what we've been talking about,
because what it'll do, it'll free up their time.
And time is the most valuable thing.
The cost of living here in the
UK, for instance, is so high.
But if you can free up your time by passing
on much of the day to day compliance work to
an offshoring firm, that then affords you, if you're running
a firm, to focus on perhaps higher revenue generating aspects
such as tax planning, such as business advisory, such as
whatever you want to do.
And that's when it becomes really profitable. Okay?
Alternatively, you might just say, I just want to
run a compliance and I don't want to do
any of that, and I'll offshore it.
Again, that's just profitable.
But time is the most expensive thing here.
So if you can offshore much of the
kind of day to day operational work to
a capable, experienced, knowledgeable team who are delivering
on time at a decent, affordable rate, then,
yeah, it'll be certainly very profitable.
If I can add to that, Chris, I think not only would
it be profitable, I think it'd be the key to survival.
I think if you're not sort of up to date
with what's happening around you, you'll find that you'll have
outdated systems, you won't have the right pricing structure, you
won't have the right team in place, and you'll struggle
to keep up with the rest of them, and you'll
just get sort of pushed out of the block, really.
So I think not only is it important
for growth and profitability, but I think it's
the key to survival going forward. Good point.
That's a really good point.
So, big question.
How do we do it?
How do firms, small businesses, medium businesses,
how are they going to outsource?
How are we going to survive?
Great question.
I think to kind of highlight.
So there's a few options.
One option is that you're a firm running
in the UK and, you know, I want
to offshore to India or outsource to India.
Now, you could get on a plane and fly
out to India and try and hire a however,
and I'm not saying don't do it, but however,
navigating India at the best of times is challenging.
Okay? As I said, we said
earlier, there's opportunities there.
It's exciting times, there's a lot going on.
But going to a foreign country, understanding their legislation,
dealing with the foreign culture, how things done, how
things are done, it's no easy thing.
And now I'm of a british Asian abstract.
And I go to India and I've got Indian heritage and
I know lots of people in India, lots of contacts, friends,
family, very well to do people that I know out there.
But even they're saying, well, are you
sure that's the right thing to do?
But that's because I've got experience, I know how
to do these things out in India, and I've
got useful contacts and we built a team up.
People like Punkaj, people like Gunjan, people like others
out there, but that takes time, that takes effort.
And you might say, you know what, I want to do that.
If that's the case, absolutely, go for it.
Or the alternative is they say, well, why don't you work
with a firm like ourselves who bridges India to you?
We're not exclusively in okay, we're
not exclusively in the UK.
We work both. Okay?
So we have a team in India, we have
a team in the UK, our UK team.
People like Guggen, like myself, like you, understand the
UK psyche, understand the needs of UK accountants.
We can then help bridge that to get our
team in India to do the work to the
standards, the quality and the deliverability that you require.
So kind of two approaches to this.
But I think the message is that
you want to build a team.
Whichever way path you take.
That is an extension of your
current setup here in the UK.
So they come part of your
team, they're part of your culture.
And I'd like to think the team that we
have in India is definitely part of that.
And they're ready and able to help.
Whether you're a one man banner counselling firm or
a multi partner Practise doted across the UK, we
can do that because we've got everything in place.
We've got the team, we've got the hiring systems in
place, we've got the recruitment processes in place, we've got
the training processes in place, and ultimately we've got the
team that can deliver and do all the work.
So that's kind of my thought process.
Gagan, anything to add on that?
Yeah, and that's taken us years to actually get there.
It's not something that's happened overnight.
We worked incredibly hard to sort of
develop these systems and processes and training
manuals to sort of get it there.
And, yeah, you can sort of get on a plane
and go to the other side, but getting it right
and navigating all of those elements in India is not
necessarily easiest, but also you've got to think about the
impact of your focus being diverted into that.
You don't have the experience, you don't have the knowledge,
or you may have the knowledge and the experience.
And if you've sort of gone through the experience
enough times, you know what not to do.
It's something we touched on, I touched with
Aaron, touched on earlier on in a conversation
with me, that we've seen what you shouldn't
really do and what you should do.
So I think, depending on what sort of stage you
are in the cycle, I think when you're bringing in
a change organisation wide and something for the long term,
it's always better not to jump into it straight away.
And look at sort of the experts in the field get
some advice and guidance to do it right because doing it
wrong can have such a costly can be so costly not
only for you for your business, but also for your clients.
And that can very easily go wrong.
So I think the important thing here is to
embrace the change, but to do it in the
right way, to make sure you have the right
support and guidance on your team, on your side.
Make sure you do it gradually.
Make sure you have a plan so that it
sort of becomes fruitful over a period of time
rather than something that gives instant results.
There's no short term fixes if you want
to do this for the long term. Absolutely.
And if I could kind of add to that, I
think I've got the T shirt of experience here.
We've done it, I've been there, done
that, and I've made every linking mistake.
Trust me, I have.
Okay, I'm just being honest with you.
But we've been doing it 20 years,
so I've made plenty of mistakes in
this process, but from mistakes you learn.
And I'd like to think that we've got a
very robust, solid service and delivery capability now coming
out of India, primarily because of the mistakes that
I've made or that we've made.
Because you'll only know how good you are
once you've actually tried something, once you've made
a mistake, and then you kind of think,
you know, oh, shit, I did that.
Let's rectify that.
Let's make it better.
The decisions come from experience and then
experience come from, unfortunately, a lot of
bad decisions that sort of makes sense.
So it sounds like people need to understand that if
you are going to go down the offshoring routes on
your own, you need to understand that it's not just
hiring a few new accountants in a different country.
You are literally setting up a new business.
And with all the headaches and issues
and problems that come with not 101,000%. Correct.
1000% correct. Yeah.
Right, well, sounds like it's going to be
a very interesting ten years for accounting business.
Absolutely.
Honestly, I'm so excited about what's
happening in the accountancy sector. It's scary.
It's like, oh, my God.
But at the same time, it's like, yeah, very exciting.
For those who embrace this change, for those
who kind of really understand the power and
potential with offshoring and AI coming together and
getting the right people to support you.
It's a very exciting time. Yeah.
And the ludnites are going to be left behind. Correct.
Well, if there's nothing else, any
other points from anyone else?
I think I've asked everything I wanted to ask
I think we've commented you've worn us out, Chris.
Yeah, I feel like I can go set up my own one now. Yeah.
I'll set up a rival accounting firm.
Wonderful.
I hope everyone enjoyed some
of our insights and knowledge.
And this is something I believe we're going
to be doing on a regular basis.
Watch out for our next webinar. Yeah.
Thank you, everyone, for joining us.
And thank you to you three.
That was so informative. Thank you.
I personally like lots and I
hope everyone else did, too. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you for everyone joining us. Cheers. Goodbye.