
By Vincent Howard, CPA | Managing Partner, Howard, Howard and Hodges | SkillAbility for Accounting Firms
Last updated: July 2026 | 14-minute read
Most accounting firms think business development is a partner activity.
That is partly true.
Partners often bring in the work. Partners build referral relationships. Partners close strategic opportunities. Partners carry the firm’s reputation into the market.
But that is not the whole story.
A CPA firm does not grow profitably because one partner can sell.
It grows profitably because the firm has enough capable people below the partner level to support client relationships, deliver consistent work, communicate professionally, identify advisory opportunities, and create capacity.
That is where many firms hit the ceiling.
They do not have a demand problem.
They have a delivery-capacity problem.
A firm cannot market its way past a capability ceiling.
Who I Am and Why You Should Listen
I’ve been in public accounting since 1990. I founded my own firm in 1993, merged it in 2001 to form Howard, Howard and Hodges, and grew it from three people to 50 staff across four locations and multiple states. Our firm was named PASBA Firm of the Year.
Over those years, I learned that growth does not break firms at the marketing level first.
It usually breaks them inside the delivery system.
A firm can get more referrals and still stall. It can launch a better website and still struggle. It can talk about advisory services and still fail to deliver them profitably. It can ask partners to sell more and still overload the same managers and senior staff.
The reason is simple.
Business development creates opportunity.
Staff capability creates the capacity to turn opportunity into profitable service.
Since 2020, I’ve built and run a structured workforce development platform that more than a thousand accounting professionals across dozens of PASBA member firms have moved through. The pattern is clear: firms that want higher-value growth need more than leads. They need people who can support advisory conversations, execute consistently, communicate with clients, and grow beyond task completion.
That is the missing business development lever most firms do not see.
Why This Matters Now
Client expectations are changing. CPA firms are no longer being asked only to complete returns, reconcile accounts, or produce financial statements. Clients increasingly want insight, recommendations, planning, interpretation, and help making better business decisions.
Journal of Accountancy reported that firms offering client advisory services project CAS-related revenue to double over the next three years, based on CPA.com benchmark data.
CPA.com’s 2024 CAS Benchmark Survey announcement reported that participating CAS practices achieved 17% median growth, projected 99% median growth over the next three years, and increased median CAS net client fees per professional to $156,250.
That should get every firm owner’s attention.
But there is a catch.
You cannot sell advisory services sustainably if only partners can deliver advisory thinking.
You cannot build recurring client advisory revenue if managers are buried in review notes, staff are waiting for instructions, and every strategic conversation routes through the same few people.
At the same time, the labor market is not giving firms an easy escape. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects about 124,200 openings for accountants and auditors each year from 2024 to 2034.
If firms want to grow, they have to build capability internally.
1. Business Development Is Not Just Lead Generation
Lead generation is important.
Marketing is important.
Referral relationships are important.
But they are not the same thing as business development.
Business development for accounting firms should mean building the firm’s ability to create, deliver, retain, and expand valuable client relationships.
That includes marketing and sales.
But it also includes capacity.
| Weak View of Business Development | Stronger View of Business Development |
|---|---|
| Get more leads | Build the firm’s ability to serve better clients profitably |
| Partner closes the opportunity | Team supports delivery, communication, and expansion |
| Marketing creates demand | Capability creates the capacity to absorb demand |
| Business development belongs to partners | Business development is supported by every client-facing role |
| Growth means more revenue | Growth means profitable, repeatable, scalable client value |
If the firm cannot absorb the work, more leads create more stress.
If the firm cannot deliver consistently, more clients create more rework.
If the firm cannot support advisory conversations below the partner level, more advisory marketing creates more partner dependency.
That is why business development has to start with a harder question:
If our marketing worked tomorrow, could our team deliver the work without making the same few people the bottleneck?
If the honest answer is no, your first business development problem is not visibility.
It is capability.
2. Partners Cannot Be the Only Business Developers
In many firms, the partner is the rainmaker, advisor, relationship manager, problem solver, escalation point, proposal closer, and client confidence engine.
That may work when the firm is small.
It does not scale.
If every meaningful advisory conversation depends on a partner, growth will always hit a ceiling. The partner becomes the constraint. The firm can only grow as fast as that partner can meet, sell, explain, review, reassure, and rescue.
That is not business development.
That is partner dependency with a marketing plan.
If These Are True, Growth Is Still Trapped at the Top
High ceiling risk
High ceiling risk
High ceiling risk
Hidden retention risk
Visual framework based on SkillAbility’s development-first approach: growth risk rises when advisory value, client confidence, and relationship expansion depend too heavily on partners.
The goal is not to turn every staff accountant into a salesperson.
That is the wrong frame.
The goal is to develop more people who can support business development by doing the work that makes growth possible:
- Delivering clean, consistent work
- Communicating clearly with clients
- Identifying recurring client issues
- Escalating opportunities appropriately
- Supporting advisory conversations
- Reducing manager and partner rework
- Creating client confidence beyond one relationship owner
That is how business development becomes scalable.
3. Staff Capability Creates Growth Capacity
Growth capacity is not just how many clients your firm can win.
It is how many clients your firm can serve well without lowering quality, exhausting managers, or forcing partners back into every detail.
Staff capability is the lever.
Better-trained staff create capacity in five ways.
How Staff Capability Supports Business Development
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Staff complete core work accurately, consistently, and with less manager rescue.
Staff ask better questions, explain work clearly, and reduce confusion for clients.
Staff recognize patterns, identify issues, and support higher-value client conversations.
Managers spend less time re-teaching fundamentals and more time reviewing judgment, standards, and client value.
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This is why staff development belongs in a business development conversation.
Without execution capacity, new clients create more production strain.
Without communication capacity, advisory opportunities stay trapped in partner conversations.
Without advisory capacity, the firm cannot move beyond task completion.
Without manager capacity, growth turns into bottleneck management.
For a deeper look at the staff skills behind this, read What Skills Are Needed for Accounting Staff? The CPA Map.
4. Advisory Growth Requires Advisory-Ready People
Advisory is not a product you bolt onto a compliance firm.
It is a capability you build into the people serving the client.
CPA.com’s client advisory services resources make the same broad point: scaling CAS requires the right support, tools, training, and coaching. In other words, advisory growth is not just a service-page decision. It is a people-development decision.
That does not mean every staff member needs to become a full advisory lead. But if the team only knows how to complete tasks and wait for review notes, the firm will struggle to sell and deliver higher-value services.
You cannot build advisory growth on task dependency.
Advisory-ready people need to understand more than how to produce the work. They need to understand what the work means.
| Task-Ready Staff | Advisory-Ready Staff |
|---|---|
| Complete assigned work | Understand what the work says about the client |
| Wait for review notes | Recognize patterns before review |
| Ask procedural questions | Ask context-rich client questions |
| Escalate only when stuck | Escalate when there is a planning or advisory opportunity |
| Think in terms of completion | Think in terms of client value |
That shift does not happen automatically.
A staff person who has only been trained to finish reconciliations will not suddenly know how to interpret financial trends for a business owner.
A tax preparer who has only been trained to complete returns will not automatically know how to spot planning opportunities or explain them professionally.
A senior who has only been trained through review notes will not automatically know how to coach a client-facing conversation.
Advisory readiness has to be developed.
For the full framework, read Developing Advisory Skills in Accountants: The 4-Skill Stack.
5. The Hidden Business Development Lever: Client Confidence
Clients buy more when they trust more.
But trust does not only come from the partner.
In a scalable firm, clients should trust the firm’s system, not just one person.
That means clients should feel confidence when they interact with staff, seniors, managers, and partners. They should not feel like every conversation has to be elevated to the owner to get a real answer.
This matters because business development is not only about new clients.
It is also about expanding existing relationships.
Most CPA firms already have advisory opportunities sitting inside their client base:
- Clients with messy books who need stronger monthly accounting
- Business owners who need cash flow conversations
- Clients with recurring tax surprises
- Payroll clients who need better planning
- Small business owners who do not understand margins
- Clients who need help interpreting their numbers
- Owners who would pay for guidance if the firm framed the value clearly
The issue is not always demand.
The issue is that the firm has not developed enough people who can identify, support, and carry those conversations forward.
Client confidence expands when the client trusts the firm’s people, not just the partner’s personal involvement.
That is a business development issue.
If clients trust only one person, every expansion opportunity is bottlenecked by that person.
If clients trust the team, the firm has leverage.
6. What Accounting Firms Should Develop Internally
Most firms train for task completion because task completion is urgent.
That is understandable.
But it is not enough.
If your firm wants to grow through better clients, higher-value services, and stronger advisory relationships, you need to develop six internal capabilities.
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Staff need to understand the story behind the numbers, not just whether the numbers tie.
Staff need to ask clear questions, explain issues professionally, and reduce client confusion.
Staff need to understand how a client’s business makes money, where risk appears, and what patterns matter.
Staff need to know when to solve, when to ask, when to escalate, and when something is a client opportunity.
Staff need to own deadlines, open items, handoffs, and status communication without constant manager chasing.
Staff need to connect client issues to recommendations without overstepping their role or creating confusion.
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These are business development skills even if they do not look like sales skills.
Why?
Because they make growth deliverable.
They help the firm serve better clients without forcing every client relationship back to the partner.
7. Marketing Without Capability Creates Operational Drag
This is the part marketers do not always want to hear.
Marketing can make a weak delivery system more visible.
It cannot make it stronger.
If your firm generates more leads before building delivery capability, you may simply create more pressure on an already strained system.
| If Marketing Works But Capability Is Weak | What Happens Next |
|---|---|
| More leads come in | Partners spend more time qualifying and explaining |
| More clients are onboarded | Managers absorb more questions, rework, and handholding |
| More advisory services are sold | Partners stay trapped in delivery because staff are not advisory-ready |
| More work enters the system | Review notes, deadline pressure, and staff confusion increase |
| Revenue grows | Profitability may not improve if delivery strain grows faster |
This is not an argument against marketing.
It is an argument against disconnected marketing.
Business development should be tied to the firm’s ability to deliver what it sells.
If the firm wants to market advisory, it has to develop advisory-ready people.
If the firm wants better clients, it has to build a team capable of serving better clients.
If the firm wants recurring revenue, it has to create consistent delivery below the partner level.
Otherwise, growth becomes expensive.
8. A 30-60-90 Day Business Development Capability Plan
You do not need to turn every staff member into a rainmaker in 90 days.
That is not realistic.
But you can begin building the internal capability that supports profitable growth.
| Timeframe | Goal | Firm Action | What to Measure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Days 1–30 | Find the capability ceiling | Identify where growth gets stuck: partner dependency, manager bottlenecks, staff rework, weak client communication, or advisory unreadiness | Top 10 repeated questions, review-note patterns, client communication gaps, and manager bottlenecks |
| Days 31–60 | Build support capability | Train staff on cleaner execution, client questions, financial interpretation, escalation judgment, and advisory opportunity recognition | Improved first-pass quality, fewer repeated questions, better client notes, and stronger escalation patterns |
| Days 61–90 | Connect capability to growth | Assign staff to support client expansion conversations, advisory prep, client follow-up, and manager-reviewed recommendations | Manager time recovered, client confidence, advisory opportunities identified, and readiness for expanded responsibility |
The point is not to make business development another vague initiative.
The point is to connect growth goals to staff capability.
9. What to Measure If Business Development Starts With Capability
If business development is only measured by leads, the firm will miss the internal constraints that determine whether growth becomes profitable.
You still need to measure pipeline.
You still need to measure referrals.
You still need to measure revenue.
But you also need to measure the capability underneath the growth.
Track Whether the Firm Can Actually Support Growth
- First-pass work quality
- Repeated review-note patterns
- Manager interruptions by topic
- Client questions handled without partner rescue
- Client communication quality
- Advisory opportunities identified by staff
- Client expansion support by managers and seniors
- Time partners spend in delivery vs. growth
- Staff readiness for client-facing responsibility
- Revenue per professional in target service lines
These metrics expose the truth.
If leads are increasing but manager interruptions are rising, the firm is not scaling.
If advisory revenue is increasing but partners are doing all the advisory work, the firm is still dependent.
If new clients are coming in but staff cannot communicate confidently, client confidence will weaken.
Business development without capability metrics is incomplete.
10. How SkillAbility Builds the Team Behind Business Development
SkillAbility was built around a simple reality: CPA firms cannot scale if every new client, every advisory conversation, and every judgment call depends on the busiest people in the firm.
Business development requires more than a marketing calendar.
It requires a development pathway.
That is why SkillAbility organizes staff growth from execution to advisory to leadership.
The SkillAbility Growth-Capability Pathway
Staff learn the work, the software, the workflow, and the firm’s standards so growth does not create constant rework.
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Staff move beyond task completion into client communication, financial interpretation, advisory framing, and professional judgment.
High-potential people learn ownership thinking, client transition, firm economics, team leverage, and future growth responsibility.
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BASE: Build execution capacity
BASE helps new hires and early-career professionals learn accounting, tax, payroll, and software workflows through structured practice, sample sets, and assessments.
The business development value is simple:
Growth gets easier when new work does not immediately turn into manager rescue.
MAPS: Build advisory confidence
MAPS helps staff develop client communication, financial interpretation, professional presence, advisory thinking, and judgment.
The business development value is clear:
Advisory growth becomes more scalable when more people can support advisory conversations.
Summit: Build leadership and future rainmaker readiness
Summit prepares high-potential employees to understand ownership thinking, firm economics, client transition, team leverage, capacity planning, and growth responsibility.
The business development value becomes long term:
Future rainmakers are not found at the last minute. They are developed through progressive responsibility.
This is how business development becomes a firm capability instead of a partner burden.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is business development for accounting firms?
Business development for accounting firms is the process of creating, retaining, expanding, and delivering valuable client relationships. It includes marketing and sales, but it also depends on staff capability, client confidence, advisory readiness, manager capacity, and consistent service delivery.
Why does business development start with staff capability?
Business development starts with staff capability because more leads do not help if the firm cannot serve the work profitably. Staff need to execute consistently, communicate with clients, identify issues, support advisory conversations, and reduce dependence on partners and managers.
Are partners still responsible for business development?
Partners still play a major role in business development, especially in referrals, strategic relationships, client trust, and closing higher-value opportunities. But partners cannot be the only business developers if the firm wants scalable growth. Staff, seniors, and managers must be developed to support delivery, communication, and expansion.
How does staff training improve business development?
Staff training improves business development by creating delivery capacity. Better-trained staff reduce rework, free manager time, improve client communication, spot advisory opportunities, and allow partners to spend more time on growth instead of rescue.
What skills do accounting staff need to support advisory growth?
Accounting staff need technical execution, software and workflow fluency, documentation and review readiness, financial interpretation, client communication, escalation judgment, project ownership, and advisory framing. Those skills help staff move from task completion to client value.
Why do advisory services fail in some CPA firms?
Advisory services often fail when the firm sells advisory before developing advisory-ready people. If only partners can interpret financials, frame recommendations, and speak confidently with clients, advisory growth becomes partner-dependent and difficult to scale.
How can accounting firms measure business development capability?
Accounting firms can measure business development capability by tracking first-pass work quality, repeated review notes, manager interruptions, client questions handled without partner rescue, advisory opportunities identified by staff, staff readiness for client-facing work, and partner time spent in growth versus delivery.
What is the biggest mistake accounting firms make with business development?
The biggest mistake is treating business development as only a marketing problem. Marketing creates demand, but staff capability determines whether the firm can serve that demand profitably. A firm cannot market its way past a capability ceiling.
External Research and Authority Sources
- CPA.com: AICPA and CPA.com CAS practices report 17% growth
- CPA.com: 2024 CAS Benchmark Survey
- Journal of Accountancy: Growth in client advisory services set to continue rapid increase
- CPA.com: Client Advisory Services practice resources
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Accountants and Auditors Occupational Outlook
- AICPA & CIMA: Firm Practice Management resources
The Bottom Line
Business development for accounting firms is not just getting more prospects.
It is building a firm capable of turning opportunity into profitable client value.
Partners may bring in the work.
But staff capability determines whether the firm can absorb the work, deliver it consistently, expand the relationship, and grow without burning out the same few people.
If every advisory conversation depends on a partner, growth has a ceiling.
If every client question requires a manager, growth has a ceiling.
If every new service line depends on people who have never been trained beyond task completion, growth has a ceiling.
A firm cannot market its way past a capability ceiling.
The solution is not to stop marketing.
The solution is to connect marketing to development.
Build execution capacity.
Build advisory confidence.
Build future leaders.
That is how business development becomes scalable.
Protect knowledge.
Develop people.
Scale the firm.
Want business development that does not depend on partners carrying every advisory conversation?
SkillAbility helps CPA and accounting firms replace shadowing, repeated explanations, and tribal knowledge with a structured development pathway from new hire to future partner.
Book Your Free 10-Minute Structural Alignment Review →
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To your firm’s capacity,
Vincent Howard, CPA
Managing Partner, Howard, Howard and Hodges
SkillAbility for Accounting Firms
About the Author
Vincent Howard, CPA has practiced public accounting since 1990. He holds a Master’s degree in Taxation from the University of Central Florida, leads a 50-person multi-state firm, and built the SkillAbility staff development platform used by accounting firms nationwide through the PASBA network. Howard, Howard and Hodges was named PASBA Firm of the Year and has offices in Lake Mary, Sarasota, and Winter Springs, Florida.
© 2026 SkillAbility for Accounting Firms. 45-Day Out-of-Pocket Performance Guarantee applies to qualifying onboarding engagements. Contact us for full terms.
