Kim Foard, CPA & Company

Building Bright Financial Futures

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All We Do Begins With A Thought

The purpose of this Blog is to encourage us to dream big!

Since we learn by doing and the fun is in the doing, our focus will be on having fun as we learn.  The journey to the choice of our individual destinations begins, right here!

Beartooth Mountains

SageTalk
Building Dynamic Relationships



Direct Link to All Blog Articles


Latest Top (3) News


Pearls and Pigs
The precious gem of your multifaceted life story deserves to be shared with the world.

Sat, 18 Feb 2012 20:35:19 +0000


Flights of Fancy
For a toddler, the thought was, "That looks like fun. Take the next step." Unaware of the lessons waiting for me, I learned much. "What doesn’t kill you will make you stronger."

Sat, 11 Feb 2012 16:20:26 +0000


Tops and Bottoms
Reaching the Top is, simply, a fleeting moment of recognizing it as the Bottom of a foundation, from which to build, again.

Sat, 04 Feb 2012 19:22:01 +0000


Admin Login
5 Minute Business Plan
By SageTalk | August 29, 2010 at 07:31 PM EDT | No Comments

Blueprint For Success

A seasoned carpenter shared this secret to success: “You must begin; and begin again!”

For the dreamers among us, the question is: “Where do I begin?”

The purpose of this article is to provide the parameters for a quick analysis of an idea to determine its possibility, and probability, of actionable success.  As with any legitimate construction project, we build it on paper, first.  This is our ... blueprint

Good Finders
By SageTalk | August 21, 2010 at 08:42 PM EDT | No Comments

“And now, dear brothers and sisters, one final thing: Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.”

While beginning with the ending is acknowledged to be an odd way to tell a story, truth is stranger than fiction.  For instance, some people are fond of putting carts in front of horses, trying to collect dividends before making investments, and, generally, letting bad beliefs thwart good ideas.

Human nature thrives on the gossip fueled by jealousy.  Many choose to believe the purveyors of hidden secrets, who have specialized in being Fault Finders.  Their mutual immaturity is provided a respite by dwelling on the foibles of others.  With a warped sense of reality, they believe that tearing down another provides stature to the destroyer.

Let’s resist the craziness, by focusing our thoughts on being finders of good ... here

A Better Way
By SageTalk | August 08, 2010 at 03:20 PM EDT | No Comments

Innovation only comes from those willing to think differently.

Since all we do begins with a thought, new thoughts lead to new actions.  While new thoughts are frequently accepted as entertaining, new actions give the world cause for pause!

Because these thoughts and actions are new, they are different from the old.  If everyone is doing the same old thing, the innovator gets noticed.  Our comprehension of anything stems from language.  Until we have a word, title, or category for something, we are limited in understanding its reward, or risk.

This is a story about being different.

There are days of pleasant surprises.  Yesterday was one of those for me.  The gift was wrapped inside my email Inbox.

Hi Kim,

I’ve added your blog to my AccountingBlogList.com under the category of General which, after reading some of your blog, doesn’t seem quite accurate to me. Can you skim my list and tell me if you see a better spot? Or suggest if I should create a new category and, if so, what might it be called?

Thanks and congrats on a good blog!

Michelle

My response ... here

Price We Pay
By SageTalk | August 07, 2010 at 01:58 PM EDT | No Comments

Big Sister

By eliminating variables, we arrive at one thing certain.

This is a story of three entrepreneurs: Eric the electrician, George the geek, and Lorna the landlord.  The mystery for us to solve: Although unrelated by blood and marriage, how can they all have the same big sister, Iris, who requires their support?

Lucky for us; we have The Magic Formula as a guide to the answer!  It is available by clicking this Link.  Much more than a guide, the Magic flows from our awareness of the resources from which choices are made: Time and Money.

Read more ... here

Montana Jobs
By SageTalk | July 21, 2010 at 07:22 PM EDT | No Comments

A Few Good Men

Win, lose, or draw, there is a powerful and lasting legacy from doing what is Right.  No amount of words can capture the essence of that Universal Principle.  All I can suggest is, “Try it; you’ll like it!”

Within this series: Part I asked nicely; Part II probed into the core issue; now, we take a look at the choices before us.

There is only one way to defeat darkness: subject it to Light.

In this year of 2010, let’s remember the 2 x 10 plank in successful lives:
If It Is To Be, It Is Up To Me

Triumph starts ... here

Response to Commissioner
By SageTalk | June 30, 2010 at 06:42 AM EDT | No Comments

Of, By, For the People

This is Part II of what, currently is a three act play.  Part I was a request for relief from hardship on behalf of a Montana business woman.

It seems that there is widespread confusion as to what Government is.  I’m reminded of Pogo’s observation, “We have met the enemy and he is us!”

The basic purpose of government is to accomplish, for the greater good, those things requiring a united body of effort.  It is not an entity separate and apart from the people; the individuals who provide the resources!  Most importantly, our Country was founded on the belief that Government must never be allowed to reign supreme above the people!

Saga continues ... here

Letter to Commissioner and Governor
By SageTalk | June 13, 2010 at 03:11 PM EDT | No Comments

Here To Help You

Upon hearing an auditor remark, “I’m only here to do my job.”; I always wonder who wrote the job description?  And, do they understand that they work for you, me, and that group, so eloquently defined by President Lincoln: the people?!

This is a story about our Government in action.  It is a real story told through my correspondence to the Commissioner of the Montana Department of Labor and Industry.  Brace yourself; Truth is stranger than fiction!

Story begins ... here

Have Your Papers
By SageTalk | May 22, 2010 at 09:48 PM EDT | No Comments

Are You Prepared?

There are only two legitimate classes of workers in the State of Montana: Employees and Registered Contractors.

Yes; that is a Period.

No exceptions!

A recent communiqué from one of the national Payroll Services identifies four areas receiving vigorous audit activity:

Worker Classification Issues
Fringe Benefits
Reimbursed Expenses
Compensation of Owner-Employees

Every business is at risk for increased scrutiny.

Read more ... here

Moving Forward, with Feedback
By SageTalk | May 15, 2010 at 11:15 PM EDT | No Comments

Circles of Life

Baby’s first step is cause for celebration!  Even for us older kids, first steps are special times of acknowledgment.  They are, always, the beginning of a journey of discovery.  Sometimes we follow the first step with a second; other times that first step forward is followed by two steps backwards.  Regardless of the pattern, we are dancing!

Those who love to dance know about the Two-Step.  If we are to dance our way into the hearts, minds and souls of those about whom we care deeply, maybe, it’s time we learn the Three-Step.  It is much more than leading with our good foot and, then, dragging the other behind.  In fact, it has nothing to do with our feet and everything to do with our heads.

Communication is what the listener does.

Dance lessons ... here

Certified Information Technology Professional
By SageTalk | April 28, 2010 at 02:22 PM EDT | No Comments

Techno Numbers

A Certified Information Technology Professional (CITP) is a Certified Public Accountant recognized for his or her unique ability to provide business insight by leveraging knowledge of information relationships and supporting technologies.

Unlike other certifications which are presented to the marketplace based on a wide scope of skills, the CITP credential is awarded to an accounting professional, who focuses on information assurance and management; thus, making a CPA among the most trusted business advisor.

Discover CPA.CITP ... here

What We Want
By SageTalk | April 04, 2010 at 07:34 PM EDT | No Comments

VeraSage Trailblazer

 

As a door-to-door Cutco© knife salesman in my freshman year of college, I learned that people buy what they want; not, what they need.

 

When asked for several knives to sharpen, one couple would present broken blades so dull soft butter was a challenge.  While giving me hearty nods of approval that they were in need of knives and enjoying the presentation of tricks performed with the sharp knives from my sales kit, they would politely say, "No. No, thanks; we don't want what you're selling."

 

The couple in the next house would struggle to find any dull knives in the sets of fine cutlery displayed in their kitchen. As they apologized for not being able to play along, I would make a little conversation, reluctantly begin the show, and then quickly navigate my way through the script.  Without even asking for the order, my focus was on an exit strategy.  They would reach over, touch my arm and exclaim, "Yes! We want to buy the biggest set!"

 

Only years later, when studying one of the greatest salesmen, Zig Ziglar, did I learn, "You can get everything you want in life, if you will just help enough other people get what they want."

 

This is my story.

 

The days of my childhood were spent horseback in a sea of cowhides with a Dad who knew the way to confidence was by doing what others said was impossible.  The evenings were spent in epic tales of adventure with a Mom who knew the portal to opportunity was by learning from the stories of others.

 

After high school, I turned down scholarships to pursue my dream of being a cowboy.  Fifteen months later, I knew I didn't have the same love of horses and cows as my dad!  Yet, all of those years living the notion, "Where there's a will, there's a way" came in handy for a poor kid with a "new dream" of going to college.  In the course of managing my fledgling business as a twenty-something entrepreneur, the counsel of an older client friend cut short my whining as he said, "Kim, your problem is not that you were born poor.  Your problem is that you were born with ambition.  Many are born poor and stay that way.  You want something else."

 

The "something else" was finally discovered twenty years later in a book written by Ronald J. Baker, Professional's Guide to Value Pricing (with CD), Edition 3, published by Aspen Law & Business, 2001.

 

By starting with one client in a little Montana town of 2,500 population, appropriately named Roundup, the cowboy in me was enjoying the gathering of a small herd of loyal clients.  They understood from the very beginning: I was in the business of selling dollars.  I didn't understand Value Pricing; I did understand the importance of finding 5 to 10 times my fee in benefit for them.  In the early years, there was an Exit Conference with every single client to explain what had been done.  That made quite an impression and they would say, "No one has ever cared enough to spend time with me, like this!"  Spend time?  Heck, no!  I was investing time with them; I wanted a long-term relationship!

 

Then, one day, time had taken its toll on a ranch family and they were in the process of transitioning the next generation into the accounting function.  I remember the excitement of working with the new twenty-something CFO, as we set up QuickBooks© and enjoyed a day's worth of coaching and visiting.

 

In the course of adding families, processes, and infrastructure to the ranch operation, right in the middle of a seven year drought, there was a Net Operating Loss to be carried-back: Many thousands of dollars of benefit for a thousand dollar fee.  To my surprise, I received a call from the new CFO, who had questions about the bill.

 

Remember, this was before Value Pricing, Fixed Price Agreements, Retainers and crystal clear Communication at the beginning of every project.

 

Sure enough, he was right.  There was a line on his bill, and every other client's bill, that read:

Photocopies and Assembly ­--- $75.00

 

Made perfect sense to a bean-counter; we have overhead.  After a few years in business, we have a history of expense; we can project that cost into the next year and we can reasonably estimate number of clients and projects for a given year.  So, we do the math.  $75.00 was a good number, all clients paid the same on any project and it, definitely, was a Fixed Cost, to me.  Not to the client.  He wanted to negotiate that amount, downward.

 

In fact, he had counted the number of pages, and fasteners, applied the going Office Supply Store rate for those commodities and arrived at his number of $7.50.  In his mind, he had been overcharged by a factor of 10.  Ah, that "Perfect 10"; yet, this time it was viewed as being in my favor, not the client's, and it was causing harm to our relationship!

 

He thought I was cheating him; I thought he was behaving stupidly.  We were, both, on to "something"!

 

The value provided to the family for the last twenty years didn't matter at that moment.  In essence, he was a "new client" and deserved my respect.  So, we began at the beginning.

 

Having read enough of "Professional's Guide to Value Pricing" to think differently and having found the CD in the back of the book with templates, I approached this "new beginning" with fervor.  I had nothing to lose and everything to gain; a relationship hung in the balance!

 

There must be a better way to build relationships than: work hard; send bill.  For twenty years, I had done what I had been trained to do by my accounting mentors.  It worked, most of the time: 95% of the clients understood the value and were willing to be surprised by the bill.  For a competitive perfectionist, that other 5% was the challenge, and at that moment I had one very irate customer on my hands, and my mind!

 

Change nothing; Nothing changes.

Insanity is repeating the old, expecting a new result.

Easy is hard; Hard is easy.

We get what we allow.

 

It was time for a change.

The insanity was tiring.

A new path was needed.

I had created this mess.

 

A single line on a bill was the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back.

 

One more witticism became the mantra of the day, "Fake it until you make it!"  At the time, all I had was a page of script titled, "Questions You Should Ask The Customer During The Fixed Price Agreement Meeting" and a burning desire to find a better way.

 

Today, those questions have been customized and internalized until they are at the center of every new beginning, and potential client relationship.

 

They look like this:

  • What do you expect from me?
  • What are your biggest worries?
  • How do you see me helping with these challenges?
  • What growth plans do you have?
  • What role do you want your CPA to play in your business?
  • How would you define quality service?
  • Is a 100% Money Back Service Guarantee important to you?
  • What would you consider as timely response to your questions?
  • Why are you changing professionals?
  • Are you concerned about anything I should give special attention?
  • Were you referred to me by someone?
  • Are you Able To Pay for guaranteed exceptional value?
  • Are you Willing To Pay a retainer in advance and the balance upon completion of services?

 

Forget about Perfect 10s; these are the Lucky 13!

 

As accountants, we will eventually need, and want, to answer this question:

Are we Relationship Builders, or Paper Shufflers?

 

Paper, as a commodity, is cheaper by the case.

 

Relationships are priceless.

 

For those who want to debate whether the glass is half-full, or half-empty, handling commodities might be an excellent career choice.  For those of us who wonder why so much attention is given to "half" of anything, "Creating and Capturing Value" is quite a noble profession!

 

Wholeness comes from tapping into the Universal Principle of abundance; our real potential is unlimited.  Yet, this isn't about us.

 

Communication is what the listener does.  Are we listening to our clients?  Do we really hear, and understand, what our customers want?

 

Oh, sure, they will grudgingly accept bills for the compliance work they "need" to have done.  When they understand how much we care about them, demonstrated by how we actively listen to their dreams, they are open to new ideas.  As they consider all of the many menu choices available to them, with a clear pricing structure designed to express the value of each one, and ultimately commit to partnering with us, the "want" is palpable!

 

Yes, that new CFO in charge of the family ranching heritage understood the Value in the Price (when I covered up the detail of the bill) and wanted me to understand that he wanted more of that simplicity.  Why did it take me so long to get the horse in front of the carriage?  Answer: Good judgment comes from experience; Experience comes from bad judgment!

 

Disciples of Value Pricing never hear "The check's in the mail."  In fact, because "the checks are in the drawer", we manage risk, schedule our days, attract quality clients, stumble into opportunities, enjoy open communication, reap financial rewards, and tie "Ribbons and Bows" around each and every project on our way to building relationships.

 

I have learned a deep respect for one of Goethe's couplets:

Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it.

Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it.

In our world of technological advances, "www" has become the gateway to infinite possibilities.  If we will decide "What We Want" and, then, offer that with passion to others, the result is guaranteed to be a "Win Win Win": for Customers; for Us; and, for the Whole Wide World!

Beginning of Blog
Kim Foard, CPA
First Interstate Center
401 North 31st Street, Suite 813
Billings, MT  59101
406.294.9392

QuickBooks Advanced Certified ProAdvisor
Certified Information Technology Professional