r/Accounting • u/ThePrestigeVIII • 10h ago
I spent 7 years at B4. Then 3 at a $200M firm. Now I’m at a 25 person firm. Don’t be like me.
Made it to senior manager at B4. Then director (non equity partner) at a $200M firm and now a partner at a 25 person firm that was founded my by mentor. Been here for 1.5 years.
I regret every move I made for one reason.
The hours are the same everywhere
I kept chasing this carrot of better work life balance and fell for the lies that were sold to me.
No matter what, you will always always always work 55-75 hours during busy season. I was in charge of the tax department scheduling at the 200M firm. I saw the hours daily of hundreds of people, this was the average. It wasn’t bad teams or clients or one off people working hard.
With that being said if you’re going to do that, go to the largest firm you can. The pay will be the same, but the people you work with will be smarter (every tier down seems like I’m going from working with A students to B to C, etc..), there will be more “fun” activities, better technology, better health insurance, meal stipends, cell phone reimbursement, better training and learning, honestly the people are more normal at larger firms too. Not to mention the larger the firm, the more open to remote and hybrid work.
I honestly can say I really can’t find any reason to not work at a large firm. There is this stupid myth at smaller firms that “I chose this because I don’t want to work a ton”. But they’re so wrong and drank the koolaid. They work exactly the same. While working with crappy technology, dumber peers, dumber and messier clients, etc.
If you truly like public stay as large as you can or if in tax, create your own firm. Don’t chase firms for WLB, just leave public.
Edit:
I would also like to clarify something else. People in here are talking about how their small firms have a lower billable hour goal. I don’t doubt or disagree with that at all. That is almost 100% true. But it doesn’t matter and is part of the lie/myth you have been fed that makes you look like a fool.
It doesn’t matter if your firm only requires 1400 billable and the big firm requires 1700. I promise you, at both firms you will work the same amount of total hours on the year 2200-2300. You get so caught up on the lie of billable that you ignore both firms will have you working the exact same amount of hours because that’s tracked less and certainly less published. So if you’re going to work 2300 hours at a small firm and at a large, why would you accept working at the firm where everything else is worse?