
By Vincent Howard, CPA | Managing Partner, Howard, Howard and Hodges | SkillAbility for Accounting Firms
Last updated: July 2026 | 15-minute read
Most CPA firms are still treating workforce problems as hiring problems.
That is too narrow.
Hiring matters. Recruiting matters. Compensation matters. Flexibility matters. Culture matters.
But none of those solve the deeper issue if the firm cannot turn people into productive, review-ready, client-ready professionals.
A new hire is not capacity on day one.
A course completion is not capability.
A CPE transcript is not independence.
A checklist is not judgment.
A knowledge base is not knowledge transfer.
And shadowing is not a scalable development system.
CPA firms need a bigger operating model for developing people.
That model is accounting workforce development.
Training teaches a task. Workforce development builds the person the firm needs next.
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.
I have hired staff, trained staff, lost staff, promoted staff too early, watched managers become bottlenecks, and seen good people struggle because the firm expected them to develop without giving them a real path.
For years, most firms could survive with informal development.
Hire someone smart.
Let them shadow.
Give them work.
Review the work.
Leave notes.
Repeat until they figure it out.
That model produced some capable people. It also wasted a lot of manager time, delayed staff independence, created inconsistent standards, and left too much knowledge trapped in the heads of senior people.
That is no longer good enough.
Since 2020, I’ve built and run a structured workforce development and knowledge-transfer platform that more than a thousand accounting professionals across dozens of PASBA member firms have moved through. The lesson is clear: CPA firms do not just need more training. They need a system for building capability.
Why This Matters Now
The accounting profession is facing a capacity problem that cannot be solved by recruiting alone.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects about 124,200 openings for accountants and auditors each year from 2024 to 2034. Many of those openings are expected to come from replacement needs as people transfer occupations or leave the labor force.
At the same time, AICPA & CIMA reported that accounting firms showed strong hiring demand while accounting bachelor’s and master’s degree graduates declined again in the 2023–24 academic year.
There are signs of pipeline improvement. AICPA & CIMA reported in January 2026 that U.S. accounting undergraduate enrollment had risen for the third straight year.
That is encouraging.
But enrollment improvement does not immediately solve the capacity problem inside a CPA firm.
Firms still have to develop the people they hire.
They still have to reduce manager burden.
They still have to protect institutional knowledge.
They still have to prepare staff for AI, advisory work, review readiness, client communication, and leadership.
That is why accounting workforce development matters.
Hiring fills a seat. Workforce development builds capacity.
1. Accounting Firms Do Not Just Have a Hiring Problem
When firms feel pressure, they usually describe it as a hiring problem.
“We need more staff.”
“We need another senior.”
“We need a tax manager.”
“We need experienced people.”
Sometimes that is true.
But the problem is often bigger than headcount.
Many firms have a development problem, a capacity problem, and a knowledge-transfer problem hiding underneath the hiring problem.
| What Firms Think They Have | What Is Often Underneath | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Hiring problem | Development problem | New people do not become productive fast enough |
| Manager workload problem | Training-system problem | Managers spend too much time re-teaching and rescuing |
| Quality-control problem | Review-readiness problem | Work reaches review before staff understand the standard |
| Client service problem | Client-readiness problem | Staff cannot yet communicate with confidence or context |
| Succession problem | Leadership-development problem | Future partners are not being built early enough |
Hiring is part of the answer.
But hiring without development just gives the firm more people who still need to be turned into capacity.
That is why firms need accounting workforce development.
2. Why Traditional Training Is Too Small
Most CPA firms already have some form of training.
They have CPE.
They have webinars.
They have checklists.
They have SOPs.
They have lunch-and-learns.
They have firm meetings.
They have people shadow seniors.
They have managers leave review notes.
Those things may help.
But they are too small to solve the workforce problem by themselves.
| Traditional Training | Why It Is Not Enough |
|---|---|
| CPE | Proves hours, not firm-specific capability |
| Webinars | Can teach concepts but rarely prove workflow execution |
| Checklists | Help with consistency but do not create judgment by themselves |
| SOPs | Explain a process but do not prove the person can apply it |
| Shadowing | Transfers habits inconsistently and depends on busy seniors and managers |
| Review notes | Correct work after the fact but do not automatically create repeatable capability |
The problem is not that these tools are useless.
The problem is that firms mistake them for a complete system.
They are ingredients.
They are not the engine.
Accounting workforce development is the engine.
3. What Accounting Workforce Development Actually Means
Accounting workforce development is not generic employee training.
It is not a course library.
It is not simply buying more CPE.
It is the system a CPA firm uses to move people through capability stages.
Those stages look like this:
From New Hire to Future Partner
Learns standards and workflows
Completes work with less rescue
Produces work others can trust
Communicates, interprets, and advises
Develops others and protects firm value
Visual framework based on SkillAbility’s development-first approach: firms build capacity when people move through clear capability stages instead of waiting for development to happen by chance.
That movement requires more than technical training.
It requires a full capability model.
What CPA Firms Actually Need to Develop
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Can the person do accounting, tax, payroll, bookkeeping, cleanup, or advisory support work accurately?
Can the person move work through the firm’s actual software, processes, and standards?
Can the person explain what was done, what support was used, what remains open, and what was concluded?
Can another professional review the work efficiently without decoding the person’s thought process?
Can the person recognize issues, question assumptions, spot inconsistencies, and escalate appropriately?
Can the person ask better questions, explain issues clearly, and maintain client confidence?
Can the person interpret numbers, identify meaning, frame opportunities, and support higher-value conversations?
Can the person review, delegate, coach, protect standards, and think like a future firm leader?
“`
The AICPA PCPS CPA Firm Competency Model similarly frames firm capability across role-based competencies such as productivity, technical knowledge, client service, people development and teamwork, business development, and culture and inclusion.
That reinforces the point: technical training matters, but it is not enough.
CPA firms need full workforce development.
4. Why Capacity Has to Be Built From Within
Experienced talent is expensive.
Experienced talent is slow to hire.
Experienced talent is scarce.
And experienced hires still need to learn your firm’s standards.
That means firms cannot depend entirely on buying capacity from the outside.
They have to build more usable capacity from the people they already have.
This is especially true in tax departments, client accounting services, bookkeeping teams, advisory groups, and multi-office firms where the same managers keep absorbing the training burden.
Capacity from within means the firm can turn:
- New hires into useful staff faster
- Staff into review-ready seniors
- Seniors into client-ready advisors
- Managers into coaches instead of bottlenecks
- High-potential people into future leaders
For the tax-specific version of this problem, read How to Scale a Tax Department Without Senior Hires.
The principle is the same across the firm:
A firm cannot hire its way past a weak development system.
Hiring brings people in.
Workforce development turns those people into capacity.
5. The Manager Burden Problem
In many CPA firms, managers are the real training system.
Not because that was the plan.
Because no better system exists.
Managers answer the questions.
Managers explain the workflow.
Managers leave the review notes.
Managers rewrite the client email.
Managers fix the workpaper.
Managers explain the same standard again next month.
Managers become the help desk, reviewer, trainer, editor, coach, and deadline protector all at once.
That does not scale.
When Managers Become the Workforce Development System
Training gap
Readiness gap
Capacity drag
Dependency risk
Leadership risk
Visual framework based on SkillAbility’s development-first approach: managers should reinforce standards and coach judgment, not serve as the entire training system.
Managers should develop people.
But managers cannot be the only development system.
For more on this issue, read Your Managers Are Not Too Busy to Train. Your Training System Is Broken.
6. The Knowledge-Transfer Problem
Every CPA firm has knowledge that makes the firm work.
Some of it is documented.
Much of it is not.
It lives in senior people’s heads.
It lives in partner memory.
It lives in manager habits.
It lives in client history.
It lives in how people review, explain, question, escalate, and solve problems.
That knowledge is valuable.
It is also risky when it stays trapped in a few people.
| Knowledge Type | Where It Often Lives | Firm Risk If It Does Not Transfer |
|---|---|---|
| Firm standards | Managers and reviewers | Inconsistent work quality |
| Client context | Partners and long-term staff | Client confidence weakens when people leave |
| Workflow habits | Local teams and informal processes | New hires learn inconsistently |
| Review judgment | Experienced reviewers | Staff repeat avoidable review-note patterns |
| Leadership expectations | Partners and senior managers | Future leaders are promoted before they are prepared |
This is why accounting workforce development and knowledge transfer belong together.
A knowledge base tells people where information lives.
A knowledge transfer system proves people can use it.
For the full framework, read How to Build a Knowledge Transfer System in a CPA Firm.
7. The Pathway Model: BASE, MAPS, and Summit
Accounting workforce development needs a pathway.
Not random training.
Not disconnected courses.
Not “find a webinar when there is a problem.”
A pathway.
The path should show how a person moves from new hire to future partner.
That is why SkillAbility is built around three stages:
The SkillAbility Accounting Workforce Development Pathway
BASE builds technical execution, software workflow fluency, workpaper standards, documentation habits, and review-ready preparation.
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MAPS builds client communication, financial interpretation, professional presence, advisory thinking, and judgment.
Summit builds review leadership, delegation, ownership thinking, firm economics, client transition, and future partner readiness.
“`
BASE: Build execution capacity
BASE helps new hires and early-career professionals learn accounting, tax, payroll, software workflows, documentation, and review-ready standards through structured practice and assessment.
This is where firms build the foundation:
- Can this person do the work?
- Can they follow the firm’s workflow?
- Can they document clearly?
- Can they reduce repeated questions?
- Can they submit cleaner work for review?
MAPS: Build advisor capacity
MAPS helps staff develop client communication, financial interpretation, professional presence, advisory thinking, and professional judgment.
This is where firms move staff beyond task completion:
- Can this person interpret what the numbers mean?
- Can they explain issues clearly?
- Can they ask better client questions?
- Can they spot advisory opportunities?
- Can they support client confidence?
Summit: Build leadership capacity
Summit prepares high-potential people to understand ownership thinking, firm economics, team leverage, client transition, succession, and leadership responsibility.
This is where firms protect the future:
- Can this person review and coach others?
- Can they delegate without losing standards?
- Can they understand firm economics?
- Can they support client transition?
- Can they think like a future partner?
That is accounting workforce development.
It is not “take more courses.”
It is “build the next level of person the firm needs.”
8. Why Workforce Development Is Different From an LMS
This distinction matters.
An LMS can store content.
A course library can provide lessons.
A webinar can teach a topic.
But accounting workforce development has to do more than deliver information.
It has to move people through capability stages.
| LMS / Course Library | Accounting Workforce Development Platform |
|---|---|
| Stores training content | Builds firm-specific capability |
| Tracks completion | Measures readiness and progress |
| Teaches isolated topics | Develops people through role-based pathways |
| Often disconnected from daily workflow | Connects training to actual accounting work, review, judgment, and client service |
| Answers “Did they watch it?” | Answers “Can they do the work the firm needs next?” |
That is the category difference.
SkillAbility is not trying to be another place to park videos.
It is designed to help firms protect knowledge, develop people, and scale capacity.
9. What CPA Firms Should Measure
If accounting workforce development is working, the firm should be able to see it.
Do not measure only course completion.
Measure whether people are becoming more capable.
Track Whether Training Is Turning Into Capacity
- Time to first independent assignment
- Accuracy on assigned work
- Review notes and repeated review notes
- Documentation quality
- Manager interruption load
- Time to review-ready work
- Client communication readiness
- Escalation judgment
- Advisory issue spotting
- Staff confidence and progress milestones
- Promotion readiness
- Future leader pipeline strength
The most important question is not, “Did they complete the training?”
The better question is:
Is this person becoming more useful, more independent, more review-ready, more client-ready, and more valuable to the firm?
That is workforce development.
10. How SkillAbility Helps CPA Firms Build Capacity From Within
SkillAbility was built around a simple reality: CPA firms cannot scale if development depends on shadowing, repeated explanations, scattered SOPs, manager rescue, and hope.
Firms need a structured way to:
- Protect institutional knowledge
- Develop new hires faster
- Reduce manager burden
- Build review-ready staff
- Prepare staff for AI, automation, and advisory work
- Improve client communication
- Create leadership and succession capacity
That is why SkillAbility is an accounting workforce development platform.
Not an LMS.
Not a generic course library.
Not training software with accounting content dropped inside.
A development system built for the way accounting firms actually create value.
Accounting workforce development is how firms stop depending only on the labor market and start building the capacity they need from within.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is accounting workforce development?
Accounting workforce development is the system a CPA or accounting firm uses to build staff capability over time. It includes technical execution, workflow fluency, documentation, review readiness, judgment, client communication, advisory skill, and leadership readiness.
How is accounting workforce development different from training?
Training usually teaches a task or topic. Workforce development builds the person the firm needs next. It creates a pathway from new hire to productive staff, review-ready senior, client-ready advisor, and future leader.
Why do CPA firms need workforce development?
CPA firms need workforce development because hiring alone does not create capacity. Firms must develop people into capable, independent, review-ready, client-ready professionals who can reduce manager burden, protect knowledge, and support growth.
Why is shadowing not enough for accounting staff development?
Shadowing is inconsistent and manager-dependent. It may expose staff to work, but it does not guarantee they can perform the work, document it, question it, prepare it for review, communicate about it, or apply judgment independently.
What should an accounting workforce development system include?
An accounting workforce development system should include structured onboarding, role-based skill pathways, real workflow practice, review-ready examples, documentation standards, professional judgment scenarios, client communication training, manager development, and measurable readiness checkpoints.
How does workforce development reduce manager burden?
Workforce development reduces manager burden by moving repeated explanations, basic workflow training, documentation standards, and review-readiness habits earlier in the development process. Managers can then coach judgment instead of constantly re-teaching fundamentals.
How does accounting workforce development support retention?
Accounting workforce development supports retention by helping staff see progress, build confidence, receive useful feedback, and understand their path inside the firm. People are more likely to stay when they can see how they are becoming more valuable.
Is SkillAbility an LMS?
No. SkillAbility is not positioned as a generic LMS or course library. SkillAbility is an accounting workforce development and knowledge-transfer platform designed to help CPA firms protect knowledge, develop people, reduce manager burden, and scale firm capacity.
External Research and Authority Sources
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Accountants and Auditors Occupational Outlook
- AICPA & CIMA: Accounting Firms Report Strong Hiring Outlook
- AICPA & CIMA: U.S. Accounting Undergraduate Enrollment Rises for Third Straight Year
- AICPA & CIMA: CPA Firm Competency Model
- AICPA & CIMA: Learning and Development for CPA Firms
- Gallup: State of the Global Workplace 2026
- LinkedIn Learning: 2025 Workplace Learning Report
The Bottom Line
Most CPA firms are still treating workforce problems as hiring problems.
That is too narrow.
Hiring matters.
But hiring does not solve the real issue if the firm cannot turn people into productive, review-ready, client-ready professionals.
CPA firms need accounting workforce development.
They need a system that moves people from new hire to productive staff, review-ready senior, client-ready advisor, and future leader.
They need to protect knowledge before it walks out.
They need to reduce manager burden before managers burn out.
They need to build capacity from within before the labor market forces the issue.
Training teaches a task. Workforce development builds the person the firm needs next.
Build execution.
Build review readiness.
Build judgment.
Build client confidence.
Build advisory skill.
Build future leaders.
Protect knowledge.
Develop people.
Scale the firm.
Want an accounting workforce development system instead of another course library?
SkillAbility helps CPA and accounting firms replace shadowing, repeated explanations, and manager-dependent training with a structured development pathway that builds capability from new hire to future partner.
Book Your Free 10-Minute Structural Alignment Review →
Includes our 45-Day Out-of-Pocket Performance Guarantee for qualifying onboarding engagements.
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.
