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Bonadio Group CEO shares successful accounting M&A strategy

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The Bonadio Group, a Top 50 Firm based in Pittsford, New York, has executed 22 successful mergers over the last 27 years, many of which have been overseen by CEO and managing partner Bruce Zicari. 

Harvard Business Review found that between 70% to 90% of M&A deals fail, but Zicari has taken a careful approach to make sure the firms mesh together. Last year, Bonadio added Howard LLP, a firm based in Dallas and Webber CPA, a forensic accounting and financial consulting firm in Rochester, New York. In 2021, Bonadio merged in Ganer + Ganer, a firm in New York City. Zicari has five key pieces of advice:

1. Ensure that every leader at your business is 100% in agreement with the acquisition.
2. Define an approach to vetting merger candidates, including reviews of finances and culture.
3. Prioritize post-merger integration, including “buddy systems” and software transition training.
4.  Always be deliberate and intentional in your employee and client communication.
5.  Consider moving some of your people into a brand new merged in office.

“We’ve done many mergers over the last 25 years, and we’ve certainly learned a lot of good lessons over the years,” said Zicari. “I think we’ve gotten better and better at them. We’ve made a lot of mistakes over the years, but learned from those mistakes. At a high level, we really take our time with mergers. We spend a lot of time on the front end, getting to know the firm that we’re looking at.”

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The Bonadio Group CEO and managing partner Bruce Zicari

Bonadio partners meet with the other firm’s partners, not only in business meetings, but also at social meetings and dinners. “It usually takes anywhere from six months to almost a year,” said Zicari. “We have a process where we have a very long series of meetings to make sure we get to know each other, to make sure as best we can determine that there is a good cultural fit, and a good alignment of our values and our vision for the future in terms of strategy. If the culture fits, and we see the world the same way, and we have the same values, everything else really works out.”

He views careful due diligence as essential. The firm has a comprehensive checklist for not only the typical forms of due diligence, including legal, financial and IT matters, but it also does a cultural assessment. “We hire an independent third party that knows and trusts us, knows the accounting industry very well, and they go in and meet with the partners of the firm that we’re looking at acquiring, and they do a cultural assessment,” said Zicari. “That’s another checkpoint for us to make sure that we’re doing a merger with somebody who sees the world the same way. That’s so important. If we have a good cultural match, everything else ends up working out. That’s something that’s worked very well for us over the years.”

He sees this as taking a different approach than the increasing number of accounting firms controlled by private equity.

“With all of the recent private equity transactions, I am seeing firms make acquisitions very quickly,” said Zicari. “They’re making a lot of transactions in a very short period of time. Although we’re competing against private equity, I think our advantage is that we are going to take our time. We’re going to get to know them.”

All the partners have to basically agree that the merger is a good move. “In the meetings we have prior to the merger, as well as the cultural assessment, we make sure that there’s clear alignment, that there are clear expectations on both sides, and we make sure that every partner is 100% in,” said Zicari. “We will not do a merger unless every partner is fully committed to the merger. We’ve walked away from mergers because there have been one or two partners not committed, and it just doesn’t work. If the partners aren’t committed, then the people aren’t committed, the clients aren’t committed, so we make sure there’s 100% alignment in that regard.”

The firm makes sure it’s being clear in any employee and client communications about the merger once it has been approved. “We have a very comprehensive communication process whereby we bring a whole team down to announce it to the employees,” said Zicari. “We make sure that all the clients are alerted exactly right at the time of the merger, and some of the larger clients are actually called ahead of time. We spend a lot of time with both the people and our clients post merger, explaining to them all the benefits of the merger.”

Both clients and staff need to be reassured. “We tell them you’re not going to see a lot of change,” said Zicari. “You’re going to continue to deal with the same partners and the same people. You’re going to continue to get the same great service, the same pricing. The benefit is that your firm now has 1,000 people behind them with resources and support to make sure that we can provide every service possible to bring value to those clients. Our philosophy is always just to make sure that we give the merged-in firm the very best resources and all the best service and surround them with the best expertise and resources to serve their clients even better than before.”

Having an integration process for after the merger is essential, “We like to say that once the documents are signed, it becomes official, but that’s just the very start of integrating and becoming one firm,” said Zicari. “We have a whole team of people that spend time in the weeks and months following the merger.”

That can involve relocating some employees. “If it’s a brand new office, we like to move a number of our people into that office, and move them geographically into the new office, to bring our culture to life there,” said Zicari. 

“When we went into New York City, we relocated a number of our people from our upstate offices to New York City,” he added. “When we went into Dallas, we moved a number of people from upstate offices to Dallas.”

Younger employees seem to be especially interested in relocating to new offices. “A lot of our young people really jump at the idea of moving from upstate to some of these larger metropolitan areas,” said Zicari. “It’s a great way to transport our culture, bring our culture to life in these new offices, in these larger cities. Our goal is to try to get 10% of our people. If we do a merger in Dallas of 80 people, we try to get at least eight of our people to relocate and move into the new office and be part of the new merger.”

The firm has a “buddy system” in place. “We assign every one of the people in the new firm to somebody in our firm, so they will have somebody that they can call if they need anything,” Zicari explained. “We have a whole team of marketing, HR, IT, finance people that help integrate the new firm into ours. It’s not just the management of our firm that gets involved post integration. It’s really all of our support functions, all of our partners and all of our people through our buddy system. Everybody gets to know each other and work with each other. And then, we spend a lot of time not only integrating the systems, but just educating the new firm on all the different services we have to offer that they can bring to their clients in the months after the merger.”

The Bonadio Group is currently looking at several possible merger candidates. “We’re always meeting with firms,” said Zicari. “We always have a pipeline of potential mergers. Right now there’s somewhere around five or six potential mergers in the pipeline. We are planning on doing two smaller mergers this year, and we really hope to get those closed and make them part of our firm by the October, November or December timeframe.”

One will be in a new territory for Bonadio. “One is in the mid-Atlantic region, so we are kind of moving out of the Northeast into the mid-Atlantic region,” said Zicari. “That’s a new market for us. The other one is a niche practice. They all work virtually. It’s a smaller, boutique niche practice that’s going to bring some expertise to our tax department that they didn’t have before.”

The Bonadio Group regularly holds an Annual Purpose Day in the summer where employees volunteer to help their communities and get to know each other better. “We worked at somewhere around 40 or 50 different nonprofit entities across our footprint, across all of our offices,” said Zicari. “We had about 800 of our people that collectively did charitable projects for the better part of four or five hours, and then afterward we had a big picnic in each of our geographic regions to cap off the day. For a lot of people, it’s one of their favorite days. We really feel like we’re able to make a difference. And collectively, with 800 people working around our footprint, it’s a great way to really have a very significant, measurable, positive impact on many of these charitable organizations. It’s something we’ve been putting on for about five years now, and we’re very happy to give back to the communities that we’re in.”

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Volunteers at The Bonadio Group’s 7th Annual Purpose Day

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Accounting

GASB issues guidance on capital asset disclosures

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The Governmental Accounting Standards Board issued guidance today that will require separate disclosures for certain types of capital assets for the purposes of note disclosures.

GASB Statement No. 104, Disclosure of Certain Capital Assets, also establishes requirements and additional disclosures for capital assets held for sale. 

The statement requires certain types of assets to be disclosed separately in the note disclosures about capital assets. The intent is to allow users to make better informed decisions and to evaluate accountability. The requirements are effective for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2025, and all reporting periods thereafter, though earlier application is encouraged.

The guidance requires separate disclosures for four types of capital assets:

  1. Lease assets reported under Statement 87, by major class of underlying asset;
  2. Intangible right-to-use assets recognized by an operator under Statement 94, by major class of underlying asset;
  3. Subscription assets reported under Statement 96; and,
  4. Intangible assets other than those listed in items 1-3, by major class of asset.

Under the guidance, a capital asset is a capital asset held for sale if the government has decided to pursue the sale of the asset, and it is probable the sale will be finalized within a year of the financial statement date. A government should disclose the historical cost and accumulated depreciation of capital assets held for sale, by major class of asset.

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Accounting

On the move: RRBB hires tax partner

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Suha Uddin

BRIAN BOUMAN MEMORY CREATIO

Suha Uddin was hired as a tax partner at RRBB Advisors, Somerset. 

Sax, Paterson, announced that its annual run/walk event SAX 4 Miler, supporting the Child Life Department at St. Joseph’s Children’s Hospital in Paterson, has achieved $1 million in total funds raised since its inception in 2012.    

Withum, Princeton, rolled out a new outsourcing service offering as part of its sustainability and ESG practice designed to help companies comply with the European Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, the mandate requires reporting of detailed sustainability performance as it pertains to the European Sustainability Reporting Standards , effective January 2023.

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Accounting

Armanino takes on minority investment from Further Global

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Top 25 Firm Armanino LLP has taken on a strategic minority investment from private equity firm Further Global Capital Management.

The deal, which closed today, is the latest in the series of investments by private equity in large accounting firms that began in 2021 — but with a key difference, Armanino CEO Matt Armanino told Accounting Today.

“What’s maybe the punchline here — what’s really unique, I think — is that we wanted to focus on a minority investment that allowed us to retain not just operational control of the business, but ownership control of the business,” he said. “Those are some of the guiding principles that we’ve been thinking about over the last number of years, and we felt like if we could accomplish those things strategically with the right partner, it would really be just a home run, and that’s where we think we’ve landed.”

As is common with CPA firms taking on private equity investment, Armanino LLP will restructure to an alternative practice structure, splitting into two independently owned and governed professional-services entities: Armanino LLP, a licensed CPA firm wholly owned by individual CPAs, will provide attest services to clients, and Armanino Advisory LLC, a consulting and advisory firm, will perform non-attest services.

Inside the deal

As have many large firms, Armanino LLP had been looking at private equity for some time.

“We’ve been analyzing the PE trend over the last few years and our discussions with Further Global actually began several years ago, and along the way we confirmed our initial inclination that Further Global would be a great partner for us,” CEO Armanino said.

“We had the opportunity to meet with dozens of leading private equity firms,” he explained. “Ultimately we concluded that Further Global would be the best partner for us based on their expertise in partnering with professional service businesses in particular, and our desire for a minority deal structure.”

Matt Armanino
Matt Armanino

Robert Mooring

While citing Further Global’s “deep domain expertise” in financial services and business services firms, Armanino noted that this would be the PE firm’s first foray into the accounting profession: “This is their first accounting firm deal, and I think they’re only focused on this one at this time.”

An employee-owned PE firm, Further Global invests in companies in the business services and financial services industries, and has raised over $2.2 billion of capital.

Guggenheim Securities LLC served as the financial advisor and sole private placement agent to Armanino LLP, while Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP acted as its legal counsel. Further Global was advised by Pointe Advisory, with Kirkland & Ellis as legal counsel.

“Armanino ranks as high as any CPA firm in the country with the private equity community,” commented Allan Koltin, CEO of Koltin Consulting Group, who has advised Armanino for over two decades. “Their deal with Further Global fit just like a glove. They will keep control and now have the capital structure to compete on the biggest of stages.”

Internally, the Armanino partner group was unanimous in its support for the deal — and in its insistence on only selling a minority stake.

“We’ve had transparent discussions at the leadership level around not only adding an outside investor, but we knew very early on that a minority investment was the best path forward for us, and we were very excited that there was unanimous support from the entire partnership group around that decision,” Armanino said. “This structure is also going to allow the long-term owners and partners of Armanino to maintain full control over our day-to-day operations, and the proud culture that we’ve built.”

“No other firm in the Top 25 has a structure like this, and I think that’s pretty significant,” he added.

Capital plans

The goal of the deal is to give Armanino the capital it needs to take itself to a new level of growth while also addressing some of the most pressing challenges in accounting: investing in technology, pursuing inorganic growth through M&A, and attracting and retaining talent.

The firm has always been tech-forward, and recently has been a major pioneer in artificial intelligence.

“The capital will enable us to fast-track our investments in advanced technology solutions, particularly AI,” said Matt Armanino. “We’ve seen growing desire from our clients to deploy real applications for AI solutions. And while we’ve been at the forefront of automation and AI since the early days, with the development of our AI Lab a few years ago, innovative AI-driven solutions that address our clients’ most urgent challenges remain a top priority for us.”

Beyond technology investments, the firm plans to continue its aggressive M&A strategy, which has brought on 19 acquisitions since 2019.

“Those transactions have allowed us to expand our capabilities and enter into new markets and drive greater value to our clients,” said Armanino. “And we think we can accelerate that now with this capital structure that we have.”

All that M&A has brought the firm a lot of fresh talent, but no firm these days has enough, and that’s a third purpose for the new capital.

“We think there remains a lot of ripe talent across the country out there,” he said. “I think the capital will support our efforts to attract, retain, develop and reward top talent by investing in people who drive our entrepreneurial spirit here at the firm.”

The deal will allow the firm to reward top talent, for instance through equity plans that allow them to extend the firm’s ownership culture beyond the partner group that it has traditionally been restricted to.

“In many cases, for our most senior employees today, there’s not a natural mechanism to align their effort to the success of the firm to the growth of our enterprise value and how that ultimately rewards them,” explained Armanino. “And we are very excited that we have new mechanisms, and plans in place, that are going to allow us to do that very well, and effectively push down the benefits of ownership and that ownership culture to our most senior employees.”

“Finally,” he added, “speaking to our innovative culture — and that’s a big part of our brand — the capital will empower us to say ‘Yes’ more frequently to great ideas, to entrepreneurial ideas and initiatives that truly make a difference for our clients and set us apart as a leader in this industry.”

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