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Pros And Cons Of Accounting ??? Vault Career Advice Article






Pros And Cons Of Accounting

Accountants have always had an image problem, stuck in the public consciousness as a profession populated by math geeks who love crunching numbers but little else. While this stereotype may have been accurate at one point in history, it no longer presents an accurate picture of what the career is like. While the base level mechanics of accounting can certainly become tedious, such functions are increasingly becoming automated, with accountants focusing more on analysis, interpretation, and business strategy.

As a matter of fact, accounting has been rated one of the most desirable professions available. According to The 2002 Jobs Rated Almanac, ?accountant? was the fifth best job (out of 250) in the nation in terms of low stress, high compensation, lots of autonomy and tremendous hiring demand. Following are some of the pros and cons of working in accounting:

Pros and cons

Pros

Collegial work environment. Public accounting firms, particularly the Big Five firms, tend to hire large classes of newly graduated accountants. Being surrounded by so many people with similar interests and concerns make acclimation to the firm and the job much more agreeable. It also provides fertile ground for networking opportunities. According to one public accountant, ?I started with a class of almost 100 other college graduates, and we bonded quickly through all of the training and client work. While most of these people have since left the firm, I still keep in touch with most of them, which is great since they?ve all fanned out to dozens of interesting companies. I?ve already turned some of them into clients and am working on many others. The networking opportunity is tremendous.?

Applicability to many functions. A strong knowledge of accounting is applicable across all management functions, including purchasing, manufacturing, wholesaling, retailing, marketing and finance. It provides a base from which to build broad knowledge about virtually all business functions and industries. As the collectors and interpreters of financial information, accountants develop comprehensive knowledge about what is occurring and close relationships with key decision makers, and are increasingly being called upon to offer strategic advice. Senior accountants or controllers are often selected as production or marketing executives because they have acquired in-depth general management skills.

Exposure to different companies. Public accounting offers rapid exposure to a number of different clients and activities, accelerating the attainment of skills and experience. According to one Big Five audit senior who specializes in entertainment industry clients, ?I?ve been with the firm for less than three years, but I?ve become intimately involved in work for large industry players like Sony, Viacom and Disney, as well as for a good number of smaller entertainment and media companies. Being able to learn about the business of entertainment from the industry?s benchmark companies has really sped up my professional development. Few professions would have offered me such a great learning opportunity.?

Better hours and less stress than investment banking and management consulting. The hours and travel required by the accounting profession are much less stressful and more predictable than that found in investment banking and consulting. In public accounting, you generally know you?ll be very busy for a few months out of the year and then settle in to a manageable 40-45 hour workweek, whereas I-bankers and consultants are notorious for regularly pulling 60-80 hour weeks (at least) and hopping on planes at a moments notice. ?As hard as I worked as an accountant, my life has truly been swallowed by my I-banking job,? says one former auditor who, after attaining an MBA, is now an investment banker. ?I pretty much work six days a week, with at least part of my Sunday spent on some work item or another. I actually had a life when I was an auditor ? not anymore.?

? Great for women. Women represent more than 60 percent of accountants in the United States The profession has taken great strides to implement flexible work arrangements and other initiatives to provide lifestyle choices for women. According to one partner ?At the risk of sounding politically incorrect, my 17 years of experience have shown me that women tend to make better accountants than men. In my observation, men often tend to be focused on the big picture, while women are more acutely aware of intricate detail. Well, accounting demands a detail-oriented approach more than any other skill, so you do the math.?

Cons

Lower pay than investment banking and consulting. The more manageable lifestyle has its tradeoff, and it is lower pay. On average, starting base salaries in accounting are 15 to 20 percent lower than investment banking or consulting, not including the significant bonus incentives that can significantly increase a banker?s/consultant?s overall pay package. According to the same ex-auditor/current investment banker from above, ?I do make a lot more money as an I-banker ? I mean a LOT ? which does make up somewhat for losing my personal life, but it doesn?t feel that way all the time. Sometimes it seems that, if you divided my I-banking compensation by the number of hours I spend working, I would be making about minimum wage.? Bonus incentives are much smaller in public accounting, if they exist at all. ?You?ll never become ?stinkin? rich? on an accountant?s wage,? adds one Big Five tax partner, ?but I like to think that, since we are designed to be conservative and intelligent in matters pertaining to money, we know best how to take care of our money and make it work for us. You will definitely lead a comfortable life.?

Many bosses with different priorities. Accountants, particularly public accountants, are usually assigned to multiple projects at any given time and must prioritize and, when needed, learn to say ?no.? This is particularly true in public accounting, where multiple, simultaneous projects for different clients are commonplace. According to one auditor, juggling projects ?has honestly been the hardest part of my job. Forget the clients, they?re relatively easy to deal with ? it?s the partners on those clients that get you. They all want you to focus on their projects first. On more than one occasion, a partner has screamed my head off, really got down and cursed, because a perceived ?lack of focus? on my part. You just have to try to explain your situation, try to demonstrate that you have everything covered, and move on.? However, this premium on time management is no different than investment banking or consulting.

Relatively conservative, conformist cultures. After all, accountants are generally looking to see if reported numbers conform to one set of regulations or another (GAAP, the Internal Revenue Code, SEC regulations, etc.).

Staying ?chargeable.? This is one of the subtler, yet highly sensitive parts of being an accountant. Like attorneys, public accountants generally work under billable hour arrangements. This means that they must account for every single hour they work and accurately allocate them to each project they work on, whether client-related or otherwise. Being ?chargeable? means you are billing a high percentage of your hours to work performed for paying clients and not to non-billable projects. This administration, while often tedious, is absolutely crucial to the profession ? it is the basis for how public accounting firms determine revenues, expenses, profitability, efficiency, performance and a host of other metrics. With such vital items at stake, timesheets and chargeability often are the subject of much stress and consternation.

?Yeah, we can work 60 hours in a week,? says one audit senior, ?but not all of those hours are chargeable to a client. Some days, you can spend time on a proposal for new business, some time on developing a new product or service, and some time on performing general research on a specific issue. All of these activities are important to continued success, but they hurt you because none of them are chargeable to a specific client. In other words, the firm isn?t getting paid for this work. While the firm values this non-chargeable work, it doesn?t want you doing too much of it ? it wants you out there making money for the firm. So when you find yourself doing this stuff, your chargeability goes down and your performance numbers suffer, which can hurt your reviews, your paycheck, and ultimately, your future at the firm. However, you can?t err on the other side either ? you bill too many hours to your clients and you run the risk of going over budget and having the client give you the third degree on why the job is taking you so long. It can be pretty stressful.?








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