Originally posted by: Orsorum
Originally posted by: JS80
Originally posted by: Orsorum
For those of you audit professionals, why are you so adamant that this person not go the tax route?
1) Tax is really boring
2) You fill out tax forms all day
3) There is ALWAYS work. There is a ton of down time in Audit, and you can cheat the system/stay home, etc
4) You get mileage, meals, parties, some client perks
5) You get to experience multiple clients
6) You get to see the entire company's operations
7) You get to shmooze with the client
8) You're not holed up in the office cubicle all day filling tax forms
9) Hotter chicks in Audit
10) Better hours
11) Opens more doors
12) You're not doing tax
13) Your 15 years of tax experience can literally become worthless overnight if congress decides to change to a flat tax or the fair tax.
I can go on.
1) Tax is really boring.
Audit work is excruciatingly mind-numbing to most tax professionals, that's why we chose tax work.
2) You fill out tax forms all day.
No we don't.
3) There is ALWAYS work. There is a ton of down time in Audit, and you can cheat the system/stay home, etc.
I can work from home quite often, if I wish, because my work is portable and I do all my research online. I'm at a client site two days a week and even in that I have flexibility. I prefer consistent work, because it means that I know I'll be at work around 9AM and home by 6PM, 99% of the year, as opposed to 3 months or 6 months of hell for Audit folk.
4) You get mileage, meals, parties, some client perks.
So do we.
5) You get to experience multiple clients.
So do we. I have four major clients right now and spent time each week on projects for them.
6) You get to see the entire company's operations.
That is the one major downside of tax; it is possible to avoid any level of depth with respect to your clients' operations. However, GOOD tax accountants learn their clients' operations because knowing how their business operates at a functional level helps you recognize opportunities to sell work.
7) You get to shmooze with the client.
So do we.
8) You're not holed up in the office cubicle all day filling tax forms.
Neither am I.
9) Hotter chicks in Audit.
True.
10) Better hours.
Not true.
11) Opens more doors.
Some truth to this, though I don't mind. I chose tax for many reasons, but the sheer breadth of career openings afterward wasn't one of them. Tax experience at a Big 4 opens up a LOT of doors, but not as many as audit.
12) You're not doing tax.
I see that as a downside.
13) Your 15 years of tax experience can literally become worthless overnight if congress decides to change to a flat tax or the fair tax.
Not true. First, Congress won't change to a flat tax. Second, there are multiple layers of taxation for any business. International, federal, state, and local, and they won't all switch to a flat tax or sales tax overnight. Even if they do, I'll just go back to law school.