What will people say about your firm in three years?

Most businesses spend enormous energy treating symptoms.

A missed deadline becomes a new checklist.
A frustrated client prompts another meeting.
Staff turnover leads to another recruitment drive.
Slow growth sparks another marketing campaign.

But the firms that truly transform themselves ask a different question:

What are the root problems creating these issues in the first place?

For accountancy firms, this question matters more than ever. The industry is evolving rapidly. Technology is reshaping expectations. Clients demand faster insights, better communication and more strategic value. Meanwhile, firms are under pressure to attract talent, maintain profitability and differentiate themselves in a crowded market.

The firms that thrive over the next three years will not simply work harder. They will solve deeper problems.

Start With the Outside Perspective

A powerful exercise for leadership teams is to imagine an outside observer looking at your firm three years from now.

What would they say about your culture?

What would clients say about your service?

What would your team say about innovation, leadership and growth?

And most importantly, would those perceptions reflect genuine progress, or just better management of ongoing frustrations?

Because there is a significant difference between solving symptoms and solving causes.

Symptom Management vs Real Transformation

Consider a few common examples within accountancy firms.

Client Service

A firm experiencing client dissatisfaction may introduce more status updates or increase meeting frequency.

But the root issue may actually be unclear processes, inconsistent ownership or reactive communication.

Three years from now, an outside observer should not simply say:

“They respond quickly.”

They should say:

“They anticipate client needs before problems arise.”

That only happens when operational systems, accountability and client understanding are fundamentally improved.

Culture

Many firms attempt to improve morale through perks, events or wellbeing initiatives.

While valuable, these efforts often fail if the underlying problems remain unresolved.

If employees feel unheard, overworked or disconnected from leadership, culture initiatives become surface-level solutions.

A truly transformed culture would lead outsiders to say:

“People genuinely want to build their careers there.”

That reputation is earned through trust, clarity, development opportunities and leadership consistency.

Innovation

Innovation is frequently mistaken for technology adoption.

Implementing new software alone does not create an innovative firm.

Real innovation happens when firms rethink how they deliver value, streamline decision-making and empower teams to improve processes continuously.

In three years, would clients and competitors describe your firm as:

“Digitally capable”

or

“Forward-thinking and commercially intelligent”?

The difference is profound.

The Firms That Will Stand Out

The most respected accountancy firms of the future will likely share several characteristics:

  • They solve recurring problems permanently rather than repeatedly firefighting.
  • They invest in systems and people equally.
  • They use technology to enhance relationships, not replace them.
  • They create cultures where accountability and collaboration coexist.
  • They position themselves as strategic partners, not simply compliance providers.

These qualities are not created overnight. They emerge from leadership teams willing to ask difficult questions today.

A Useful Leadership Question

Perhaps the most valuable strategic question an accountancy firm can ask is this:

“If we genuinely solved the root causes holding us back, what would the outside world say about us three years from now?”

The answer often reveals more than operational reports or financial targets ever could.

Because ultimately, reputation is not built by intention.

It is built on consistent experience, from clients, employees and the wider market.

And those experiences are shaped not by how well firms manage symptoms, but by how effectively they solve the problems beneath them.

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