04/27/2026
As I sit here at the beach recharging and regrouping after tax season, I have been reflecting on the past few months.
This tax season was rough.
For me, for my team, and for a lot of our clients.
And to be honest, it was emotional.
Not because taxes are complicated. That is expected.
But because of how many situations we walked into after the fact that could have been handled very differently.
There were too many moments where we had to deliver news clients did not want to hear.
And those conversations are not easy.
We felt it. The stress, the frustration, the disappointment. We carry that with our clients. We sit in those conversations feeling the weight of it, knowing it could have been different.
Here is the blunt truth:
Most people do not actually know what they are hiring their CPA for.
Is it compliance?
Or is it advisory?
And in many cases, whether intentional or not, the relationship is set up around compliance.
Quick filings. Meeting deadlines. Getting it done.
Because if it is compliance, then understand this:
We are the messenger.
We take what already happened, your decisions, your transactions, your timing, and we report it. We interpret the result and deliver the outcome.
That is it.
We cannot go back and fix decisions that were made without us.
And this season, there were too many conversations around business sales, investments, and major financial moves where we were brought in after everything was done.
At that point, it is not strategy. It is damage control.
Advisory is different.
That is when we are part of the conversation early. That is where we challenge decisions, structure things properly, and use tax law and experience to actually influence the outcome.
If you are not bringing your CPA into those moments, you are not getting the value you think you are.
This season made one thing very clear for me and my team:
We need to be aligned with our clients on expectations.
So I will ask you directly,
What are you actually engaging your CPA for? Compliance or guidance?