Originally posted by Alan @ BroomeAffinity
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Accountants with good deals for Dormant Ltd companies?
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Originally posted by pr1 View Postand thanks to one of your competitors for advertising it openly and emailing all their clients explicitly offering itComment
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Originally posted by Alan @ BroomeAffinity View PostCan I ask who it was?
Originally posted by Alan @ BroomeAffinity View PostI’m sure they dressed it up as a great benefit to the client but it does sound like a cash grab to me. Sacrificing profit for cash in the bank seems strange, and maybe a bit worrying, especially when the monthly model creates positive cash flow anyway.Last edited by Contractor UK; 30 December 2020, 16:03.Comment
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Originally posted by pr1 View PostGorilla
You may be right - time will tell I guess but when [almost?] every accountant will demand 12 monthly payments before they'll do your end of year accounts etc IMO it's silly not to take 10% off if it's offered!
I am joining said accountancy firm, and year end accounts to be done after three monthly payments....
Good to know they offer 10% off if paid up front - once I'm up and running again will certainly take advantage of said offer.Last edited by Contractor UK; 30 December 2020, 16:04.Comment
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Originally posted by fiisch View PostNot true.
I am joining said accountancy firm, and year end accounts to be done after three monthly payments....
Good to know they offer 10% off if paid up front - once I'm up and running again will certainly take advantage of said offer.Comment
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Hmmm...given what happened to Nimble Jack (NJ) a year or so ago, I'd be nervous re paying a year in advance as a client unless I was very confident in the future of the firm.
NJ clients typically found they'd made multiple monthly payments, then accounting firm went AWOL. Client then realistically has to find a new accountant, get them to pick up the pieces (possibly charging a premium for it), with no likelihood of a refund from NJ. It would have been even worse had the client paid NJ a whole year's fees in advance.
It does beg the question why would an accountancy firm offer this? As Alan suggests, it's a temporary cash flow boost at the expense of profit over the longer term. If as a firm you're confident in your future, it's daft. To my mind it only makes good business sense to offer if you're struggling and need bailing out, or perhaps you think the client would leave without the offer.
...but yeah, re the OP, there seems to be a lot of confusion in contracting circles over what "dormant" means. Having a brief gap between contracts does not make your company dormant.Comment
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I don't normally agree with Alan, but on this occasion I do.
I see no benefit (from an accountants point of view) to offer a discount on fees paid early unless cash flow is an issue.
Seems strange to reduce profit and I can't honestly believe such a small discount to client is such an incentive!Comment
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Originally posted by craigy1874 View PostI don't normally agree with Alan, but on this occasion I do.
I see no benefit (from an accountants point of view) to offer a discount on fees paid early unless cash flow is an issue.Comment
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Originally posted by craigy1874 View PostI don't normally agree with Alan, but on this occasion I do.
I see no benefit (from an accountants point of view) to offer a discount on fees paid early unless cash flow is an issue.
Seems strange to reduce profit and I can't honestly believe such a small discount to client is such an incentive!
It wasn't about wanting cheaper services or our attempt to win work by reducing profits or a 'cash grab'.
So maybe the slight reduction isn't the incentive here but just a bonus for some - maybe there are lots of people like my client that need to be so organised and in front.Comment
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