Three Ways Accodex Utilises Value Pricing for Bookkeeping

As technology transforms what accountants can achieve in an hour, practices all over the world are experimenting with new ways to charge for their services.

Here, Sammie Johannes of Accodex explains how her firm has been meeting the challenge.

WHO IS ACCODEX?

Accodex is an accounting technology company headquartered in Adelaide, South Australia which services Accounting and Technology Partners in Australia, the UK and USA. Our Accounting Partners offer services from bookkeeping and payroll, through to full compliance and advisory services, as well as software deployments.

THE HISTORY OF PRICING

Receipt Bank has been instrumental in ensuring that Accodex Partners can add value to their clients by providing a streamlined solution to receipt and invoice management.

The Receipt Bank platform has enabled our partners and their clients to reduce the amount of time they have to spend on bookkeeping each week, and ensured that they can focus on business growth.

Receipt Bank also provides us with the flexibility to use value pricing so that our clients get value for money.

What is value pricing? Value pricing is the process of ensuring that the product and services offered are based on the perceived value by the consumer.

We used to use three different methods to determine how much we are going to charge for bookkeeping:

  1. Hourly rate
  2. Dollars per transaction
  3. Percentage revenue

1. HOURLY RATE

The most pervasive way accountants collect fees; cost per hour multiplied by the number of hours they spend working on their client’s books.

Advantages:

  • Get paid for the hours you spend doing the work
  • Ensure work is recovered (Excluding write offs obviously)

Disadvantages:

  • Fee uncertainty for the client
  • Difficulty forecasting cash flow

2. DOLLARS PER TRANSACTION

The main determinant of accounting fees is transaction volume. The dollars per transaction is fairly straight-forward, we set a price and multiply it by the number of transactions processed on a monthly basis.

Advantages:

  • Easy to understand for both client and accountant
  • Predictable fixed fee

Disadvantages

  • May produce issues with scope management
  • Volume may fluctuate between months

3. PERCENTAGE REVENUE

We don’t use percentage revenue as a hard fast rule. Rather but use it in conjunction with the above mentioned methodologies, to confirm our price rationale. If there is a disparity between the this methodology and the others, it prompts us to dig a little deeper.

From our benchmarking studies, we know the average company will be spending between 1% to 3% of their gross revenue on accounting and finance. The key drivers of the variance, will be:

  • Transaction volume
  • Complexity of business
  • Level of service

This percentage range can be made up from either a fully in-house finance team or fully outsourced. More often than not it’s a mix somewhere in between.

Advantages:

  • Service fee grows with client revenue, aligning interests
  • Simple to estimate

Disadvantages:

  • Really vague, cannot be used in isolation
  • Creates a conflict of interest if used in isolation

WHAT WAS THE RESULT

These methods have been happily received by both our Partners and their clients. It has ensured that all parties understand how the value of accounting services has been calculated.

At the end of the day, pricing strategies are about managing expectations and providing certainty for both parties with respect to fees and scope.

About Sammie Johannes

Sammie Johannes is the Business Development Executive at Accodex, an accounting technology company based in Adelaide, South Australia. Connect with Sammie on Twitter.

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