Tax

A Little Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning Can Go a Long Way

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A Little Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning Can Go a Long Way

Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning and The Five Pillars of Tax Planning are these: Deducting, deferring, dividing, disguising, and dodging to save tax.

Some may tell you that it’s too late to do some Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning; that you’ve done all you can do. That it’s time to just hunker down and wait for tax season to start, hoping it will be over before you know it. In truth, it may be too late to drastically change the course of your tax season. However, some relatively easy workflow strategies can help you realize timesaving efficiencies and help you better weather the storm.

By polling firms formally and informally, Tax Preparation Miami uncovered five tried-and-true strategies for a smoother busy season, Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning. Not surprisingly, most agree that a little pre-season Tax Planning and preparation can go a long way.

Tax Return Preparation easier with Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning

1. Communication

This is critical. It won’t eliminate unexpected kinks in your busy season plan, but it will help to minimize them. Your Tax Preparation Miami firm should have a clear communication strategy for clients, staff, and any third-party resources you plan to utilize during the busy season. Don’t assume that everyone is already on the same page.

Depending on the size of your Income Tax practice and your relationship with individual clients, communication may be in person or in an engagement letter. Key elements should include the following:

Clearly, state when, how, and where to submit tax information.

  • Give the deadline for tax data, making it clear that failure to meet that deadline results in an automatic extension
  • Provide disclosure and consent forms.
  • Use this as an opportunity to manage expectations, emphasizing constraints on your time.
  • If you have people going into the field, arm them with the list of information needed for tax season so they can address it in person with the client. Make it part of your year-end planning to tell your client when their work is scheduled and get their buy-in. This gives them an opportunity to alert you to scheduling conflicts such as vacations, board meetings, etc.

It’s important to clearly articulate your expectations for your staff – hours, weekend work, the opportunity to work remotely, contingency plans in the event of an unexpected absence due to illness, weather, or personal matters (if this varies from your normal HR policy).

Additionally, if you’re using temporary or seasonal workers, or outsourcing, now is the time to inform that resource of what to expect in terms of a time commitment in order to avoid misunderstandings or over-commitments later.

Finally, set a staff schedule for when you will meet during the busy season. Allow some flexibility, but lock in key dates for things like determining when to extend clients to avoid wasting time trying to schedule management discussions on the fly. If you’re planning to meet once a week to review workloads and schedules, do it the same day and time every week and set a standing, manageable agenda that will allow participants to get what they need quickly to balance work and address potential resource issues.

2. Capacity Tax Planning

Two important themes to Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning and preparation: Use what you learned last year as a guide, and do as much as possible before the season really gets going. For example, you might want to run last year’s extension report and prepare these same extensions in early January.

Look at how you handled the larger, more complex client returns last year to see exactly when the return was prepared and reviewed, and build it into your scheduling for this year. Research major tax law changes in advance, and add that intelligence into the appropriate client tasks within your workflow software. For example, you might do a data scan to identify all the clients that will be impacted by the new tax legislation this year, then flag them and add instructions to those tasks universally so the preparer and reviewer have the information at their fingertips.

Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning should coordinate scheduling and client responsibility early. This tip goes back to communicating expectations and creating a plan of accountability. Utilize software tools like workflow and scheduling to enforce your plan. Mail your completed organizers in early January, and utilize available technology resources for your client data (i.e., Goldman Sachs provides online access to clients’ 1099s, etc.).

3. Prepare for Problems

Let’s face it – there will be glitches, so it’s best to expect them and prepare for how you will handle them when they arise. Create a schedule that carves out time to plan for and address potential workload and bottleneck issues. Use real-time scheduling and workload management tools to get an up-to-the-minute view of all work in progress by person and status to see who’s buried in preparation or review, who’s overbooked, and who’s under-booked so you can make those on-the-fly capacity planning decisions.

For example, one firm has a weekly meeting between the scheduler, the audit team leader, and the tax team leader during which they review issues, identify chunks of time and conflicts, discuss new unexpected business, and locate additional resources. This allows them to gain a seven-week outlook and move work dynamically within the workflow system. Part of the purpose of this meeting is pre-emptive problem-solving. It’s possible that you can schedule tax season well in advance, but there will always be issues that come up.

Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning relies on its workflow software to see clients with 3/15 and 4/15 filing deadlines to quickly view and proactively address any missing information or other issues holding up the client return. Armed with that view, this firm can proactively work with clients and staff to address the bottlenecks.

Of course, having a real-time view of the work also empowers accounts receivable to stay on top of billing for all the returns that went out that week.

4. Digital Work Environment

The specific software applications your firm employs vary according to the size of your firm, the Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning services you offer, and perhaps even your culture. I think we can all agree that, in addition to some software basics (MS Office, Adobe), the following tools enable you to work digitally: dual monitors, scanners, workflow systems, electronic file storage (DMS or shared network filing tree), and a portal.

Some of these you can still put in place before the upcoming busy season. You don’t have to make a career out of picking a scanner; just get started. Use the resources available to help you make a good selection quickly: consultants, technology-focused publications, networks and associations, peers, AICPA and state-society resources, and websites like TotallyPaperless.com.

Now is the time to make sure that your staff knows how to properly use the tools at their disposal. An Adobe refresher and a plug-in toolbar can empower partners and managers to review online.

5. Process Improvement

Adopting paperless technologies and understanding workflow is at the heart of process improvement to attain greater efficiency throughout your practice. In an ideal scenario, you would have time to create a committee, document current processes, identify best practices, optimize for technologies used, map your new workflow, standardize and train across the firm, and automate workflow for a digital environment.

This late in the game, you may have to settle for focusing on your 1040 process or whatever your firm does most and, if time allows, move onto smaller processes. The key here is to question every step so you’re not just doing what you did last year. Your processes should evolve over time. I know one firm that created teams of employees tasked with flow-charting existing processes and recommending improvements. Involving staff members gives you greater insight and gives them ownership of new processes.

Now is not the time for fundamental changes (you’ll have to make that a priority after the busy season), but you can address simple modifications that allow you to eliminate redundant loops, valueless steps, and the ever-wasteful search for information. Tightening your process so that you save even 10 to 20 minutes per return (a very conservative goal) can have a real impact on your season if you’re preparing hundreds or even thousands of the 1040s.

Although preparing for the coming season in January is not ideal, a little Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning can help your season run a lot smoother. These steps can serve as the foundation from which you build for next season. Do a post-season review to see what worked well, what didn’t, and what can be improved so that you can build some of those bigger changes into your strategy.

Reviewing and refining your Tax Planning strategy in May allows you to take lessons from the just-finished season while they’re still fresh. Then, you can implement process improvements and new technologies during the more relaxed summer months and use the fall filing deadlines to test them in a live situation that’s not quite as stressful as the real deal.

 

 

Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning Can Go a Long Way

Pre-Tax Season Tax Planning and The Five Pillars of Tax Planning are these: Deducting, deferring, dividing, disguising, and dodging to save tax.
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This post was last modified on March 13, 2021 5:21 PM

Gustavo Viera

Gustavo A Viera is the managing partner of Accountants in Miami. His experience spans more than 35 years. He started his career in public accounting at the Big 4 CPA Firm of PriceWaterHouseCoopers where reached the level of senior audit manager. His Fortune 500 experience includes positions as CFO - Latin America Region for both Hewlett Packard and Telefonica of Spain. Gustavo also writes a blog twice a week that addresses trending accounting and tax issues. He is an SBA Advisor and teaches workshops for aspiring entrepreneurs. His office is located at 8950 SW 74 Court Suite 2201 – Miami, FL 33156 and is admitted to practice in the State of Florida as a licensed Certified Public Accountant. Gus welcomes questions and he can be reached at 305-431-2601.

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