ACCOUNTING OPPORTUNITIES
The accounting profession will give you many career
options. Accounting can provide the student with an exciting career which
is constantly changing. Most of today's accountants no longer work behind
a desk forty hours a week. Accounting is a profession that opens the doors to
the students. I strongly believe that professional accountants,
specially CPA's with a good overall business sense, have an excellent
competitive advantage. This is the reason why most CEO's of multinational
have an accounting background. Likewise, accounting will give you the
training and get you ready to run your own business. Accounting helps you gather
financial data and use that data to help you take good sound business
decisions.
Accounting: Job
Options
- Audit
- Work in audit involves checking accounting ledgers and financial
statements within corporations and government. This work is becoming
increasingly computerized and can rely on sophisticated random sampling
methods. Audit is the bread and butter work of accounting. This work can
involve significant travel and allows you to really understand how money is
being made in the company that you are analyzing. It's great background!
- Budget Analysis
- Budget analysts are responsible for developing and managing an
organizations financial plans. There are plentiful jobs in this area in
government and private industry. Besides quantitative skills many budget
analyst jobs require good people skills because of negotiations involved in
the work.
- Financial
- Financial accountants prepare financial statements based on general
ledgers and participate in important financial decisions involving mergers
& acquisitions, benefits, and long-term financial projections. The work
can be varied over time. One day you may be running spreadsheets. The next day
you may be visiting a customer or supplier to set up a new account and discuss
business. This work requires a good understanding of both accounting and
finance.
- Management Accounting
- Management accountants work in companies and participate in decisions
about capital budgeting and line of business analysis. Major functions include
cost analysis, analysis of new contracts and participation in efforts to
control expenses efficiently. This work often involves the analysis of the
structure of organizations. Is responsibility to spend money in a company at
the right level of our organization? Are goals and objectives to control costs
being communicated effectively? Historically, many management accountants have
been derided as "bean counters". This mentality has undergone major change as
management accountants now often work side by side with marketing and finance
to develop new business.
- Tax
- Tax accountants prepare corporate and personal income tax statements and
formulate tax strategies involving issues such as financial choice, how to
best treat a merger or acquisition, deferral of taxes, when to expense items
and the like. This work requires a thorough understanding of economics and the
tax code. Increasingly, large corporations are looking for persons with both
an accounting and a legal background in tax. A person, for example, with a JD
and an CPA would be especially desirable to many firms.
Places Where
Accountants Work
- Public Accounting Firms
- Public Accountants work in partnerships which provide accounting services
to individuals, businesses and governments. The largest, high-profile public
accounting firms are known as the Big Five and dominate the field of
accounting. This field offers advancement potential to audit manager, tax
manager or partner reached by only two to three percent of new hires.
-
Big
Public Accounting Firms
-
National Public Accounting Firms
-
Regional Public Accounting Firms
-
Local Accounting Public Accounting Firm
Actual salaries paid in the 1990s from Smart Money survey
were as follows:
|
Deloitte
& Touche |
Grant
Thornton |
Typical
Experience |
| Entry Level |
$33-55,000 |
$34,000 |
First year |
| Junior Staff
Accountant |
$36-63,000 |
$37,000 |
1-2 years |
| Senior Staff
Accountant |
$40-85,000 |
$42,000 |
3-5 years |
| Manager |
$50-110,000 |
$63,000 |
5-7 years |
| Senior Manager |
$72-160,000 |
$87,000 |
7 years plus |
| Partner |
$260,000 |
$180,000 |
10 years
plus |
-
Government
- Government accountants may work at the local/state level or the federal
level and administer and formulate budgets, track costs and analyze programs.
This work can have high impact on the public good but can also get political
and is subject to bureaucratic obstruction. Government accounting offers
advancement in most organizations to controller and possibly to higher
administrative positions. Places which hire heavily at the federal level
include the Department of Defense, the General Accounting Office and the
Internal Revenue Service.
-
- Corporations
- Corporations big and small typically have an accounting group which
prepares financial statements, tracks costs, handles tax issues, works on
international transactions. The work is exciting and offers tracks to audit
manager, tax manager, cost accounting manager and controller on the accounting
side or to manager of financial planning and analysis and Treasurer on the
finance side.
| CLERKS |
Starting average pay $ 9.00 per hour |
| BOOKKEEPERS |
Starting average pay $ 11.00 per hour |
| A/P CLERK |
Starting average pay $ 13.00 per hour |
| A/R CLERK |
Starting average pay $ 13.00 per hour |
| STAFF ACCOUNTANTS |
Starting average pay $ 20.00 per hour |
| ACCOUNTING MANAGERS |
Starting average pay $ 40.00 per hour |
| CEO or CFO |
Six figure salary and up..!
|
- Solo
- A time-honored form of employment is to become a CPA and hang out your own
shingle. This form of work requires you to generate your own business, but has
the benefits of offering close customer contact, a high degree of independence
and, depending on how good you are, high financial rewards. This work can be
risky but puts you in the midst of community affairs.
Accounting:
Salaries
The median entry level salary in public accounting in 1999 was $29,000. After
four years you can expect to make something approximating $40,000 to $55,000.
Salaries are usually similar in the private sector and slightly lower in
government. They tend to higher in major cities.
Accounting: Facts
& Trends
- Future is Bright
- The future of accounting is bright according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics which projects a 34% increase in job openings by the year 2005.
Much of this reflects the increasing complexity of corporate transactions and
growth in government. Demand is especially high in the tax and health care
areas.
-
- Managerial Accounting Ideas Taking Off
- An important new way of thinking about accounting in the 1980s was
activity-based costing. Now firms are focusing on activity-based management,
process-view analysis, constraint checking and business process analysis as
well. The world of management accounting is evolving rapidly and there is high
demand for accountants who are knowledgeable about these trends.
-
- Image of Accountants Improving
- Accountants are working on their image. The AICPA announced a $3 million
campaign to spread the word about how CPA's add value. In a Wall Street Journal on the topic Mitchell
Klein, a partner of Fasman, Klein & Feldstein, a New City, N.Y.,
accounting firm, said "Too many people associate accountants with death, tax
and bad news and question our integrity because of the big audit failures that
major accounting firms have failed to catch."
-
- Ever Think of Working as a Temp?
- An interesting option for persons interested in not spending their entire
lives in the office is become an accounting temporary. There is high demand
for specialized accounting temps and CPA firms have started to hire temps to
smooth out their staffing through seasonal cycles in the business.
-
- Skill Depth Becoming Deeper for CPA
- Over 30 states now have laws which require a fifth year of education to
become a CPA by the year 2000. This change reflects a more competitive
business environment and increasing skills requirements because of the rising
complexity of many businesses.
-
- Skill Requirements Becoming Broader
- There is high demand for individuals who can go beyond technical skills
and display good interpersonal abilities, legal knowledge sales abilities and
foreign language skills. Accountants are broadening as business globalizes and
becomes more team-oriented.
-
- Experienced Players Gaining Currency
- There is also rising demand for persons with consulting skills or industry
experience and falling demand for college graduates.
-
- CPA and CMA Both Highly Valued
- A recent survey found that over half of corporations which hire
accountants feel that the CPA (Certified Public Accountant) designation and
the CMA (Chartered Management Accountant) as very important. To learn more
about the CPA contact the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
at (212) 575-5505. To learn more about the CMA contact the Institute of
Management Accountants at (201) 573-9000.