Marketing for CPA & Accounting Firms

Marketing for CPA & Accounting Firms

By Christoph Olivier, Founder, CO Consulting. Last reviewed: July 2026.

Most CPA and accounting firms do not have a marketing problem. They have a constraint problem. Some are turning work away because they cannot staff it. Others watch capacity sit idle after April 15. A few are undifferentiated in a town with a dozen other firms charging similar fees. Marketing for CPA and accounting firms only pays off when it matches the actual bottleneck, which is almost always capacity, demand, or client mix. Naming that first is the whole job.

This page walks through how accounting firms really win clients, what each marketing lever costs, where it fits, and where spending on it is a mistake. If you already know your constraint, you can book a consultation and skip ahead.

What makes CPA and accounting firms different for marketing

Accounting is a referral business first. In firm surveys, up to 89% of firms attribute the majority of their new work to referrals, and referral leads tend to convert around 30% higher than other sources. That is the good news. The bad news is that referral-only growth is passive. It plateaus at whatever your existing clients happen to mention you, and it gives you almost no control over the mix of work you take on.

The economics push in a specific direction. Compliance work (tax returns, bookkeeping, audits) is recurring but price-sensitive and increasingly commoditized. The growth is in advisory. AICPA and CPA.com benchmark data show Client Advisory Services practices growing around 17% a year, with the 206 firms surveyed projecting close to 99% median CAS revenue growth over three years. Only about 10% of those practices still bill primarily by the hour, down from 53% in 2018. Firms that sell CFO-level advisory earn more than 30% higher monthly recurring revenue. Roughly 80% of Accounting Today’s Top 100 firms named CAS their fastest-growing area. Marketing that ignores this shift tends to fill your calendar with low-margin returns instead of the advisory clients you actually want.

Then there is the seasonality. Between January and mid-April, inbound call volume at a typical tax practice rises 200% to 300%, and for firms built on annual recurring relationships, close to 90% of that revenue is captured during the season. Q1 can be 60% to 70% of a tax practice’s full year. This distorts everything. A firm drowning in April has no business running acquisition ads in March, and a firm that goes quiet in June needs demand generation built months earlier, not a scramble in January.

The backdrop matters too. The talent pipeline is thin. CPA exam candidates are down more than 30% since 2016, the BLS projects over 120,000 accounting and auditing openings a year, and roles requiring the CPA credential now take an average of 73 days to fill, about 41% longer than comparable roles without it. Meanwhile private equity is rolling up the profession fast: roughly 177 direct PE investments drove around 875 follow-on acquisitions between 2015 and 2025, with annual deal volume climbing from 22 in 2023 to 65 in 2024 to more than 100 in 2025. Baker Tilly absorbed Moss Adams, and Citrin changed hands at a reported 2 billion dollar valuation near 15 times EBITDA. If you might sell, your marketing and your recurring-revenue mix are part of your valuation, not separate from it.

Where marketing is the right lever for accounting firms (and where it is not)

The honest answer is that marketing is often the wrong first move. Below are the situations we see most, and what each one actually calls for.

Your situationFitWhat to watch
Booked solid, waitlist, cannot hire fast enoughDoes not fitAcquisition ads here just create demand you cannot serve. The real levers are pricing, offboarding low-margin clients, and productizing delivery. More leads make the problem worse.
Generalist firm, crowded local market, competing on priceFitsNiche or industry specialization plus local SEO. Specialists command higher fees and win easier. Pick a vertical you already serve well before you advertise anything.
Strong word of mouth, but no system to ask or track referralsFitsA structured referral and centers-of-influence program (attorneys, financial planners, bankers). Low cost, high trust, on-brand for accounting. Usually the highest-ROI move before any paid channel.
Want to move upmarket into CAS and advisoryFitsThis is repositioning and content, not lead-gen ads. New messaging, new pricing away from hourly, and proof of outcomes. Expect a longer runway and a different buyer.
New office or location with no local presenceFitsGoogle Business Profile, reviews, and location-specific pages. The map pack drives a large share of local clicks and most competitors barely try. Fastest path to local visibility.
Revenue cliff every year after April 15Partly fitsThe fix is year-round demand and advisory retainers, planned before January, not more seasonal ads in March. Paid can support it, but the mix change comes first.

If you saw your firm in the first or last row, the conversation is about capacity and mix before spend. That is exactly the kind of thing worth a short consultation to sort out.

Methods, limits, and compliance you must respect

Accounting is a regulated profession, and the marketing has to respect that. A few things we hold firm on.

AICPA advertising rule (1.600). A member in public practice may not seek clients through advertising or solicitation that is false, misleading, or deceptive, and may not use coercion, over-reaching, or harassing conduct. That rules out creating false or unjustified expectations of favorable results and any implication that you can influence a court, regulator, or agency. Critically, you stay responsible for promotional work even when a vendor runs it for you. If an agency writes a headline promising a specific refund or a guaranteed audit outcome, that is your exposure, not theirs.

State board of accountancy rules. These vary and they are not optional. Some states, including Texas, Florida, and Oregon, restrict or prohibit client testimonials and self-laudatory claims. Others, such as North Carolina and Louisiana, allow testimonials only with written client consent and disclosure of any relationship. Review-generation and case studies have to be built around your specific state’s rules, not a generic template.

Independence rules. If your firm performs audits or other attest work, SEC and PCAOB independence standards are stricter than the AICPA’s, and they constrain how you market to and around attest clients. Marketing that blurs the line into performing management functions, or that bundles non-audit services in a way that looks like an ownership or contingent-fee relationship, can impair independence. For audit-heavy firms this shapes which services you can promote to which clients.

None of this is a reason to sit still. It is a reason to work with people who write the conditional, defensible version. We use language like may, can, often, and typically, and we do not promise rankings, leads, or results. If a marketer offers you guarantees in this industry, that is the tell.

How this fits with your other options

Marketing is one input. Here is how the common channels compare for an accounting firm, honestly.

Most of what we do sits inside the broader fractional CMO and growth services at CO Consulting, because for accounting firms the marketing decision and the pricing, capacity, and mix decisions are the same decision.

Why there is no one-size-fits-all answer

Two firms can look identical on paper and need opposite things. One is at capacity and should raise prices and shed low-margin work. The other has idle staff and a weak local presence and should be visible in the map pack yesterday. A third is quietly building toward a private-equity sale and needs its recurring-revenue mix to tell the right story. Handing all three the same marketing plan is how budgets get burned.

The first move is not a campaign. It is a diagnosis: is your constraint capacity, demand, or mix? Get that right and the channel choices mostly make themselves. That is what a first call is for. Book a consultation and we will name your actual bottleneck before anyone talks about spend.

In our work with CPA and accounting firms, the pattern that comes up most is a firm convinced it needs more leads when it actually needs fewer, better ones. We have sat with partners who were running ads into a fully booked calendar, and the fix was to reprice and reprioritize, not to advertise harder. We have also helped generalist firms pick a single vertical, rebuild their local presence around it, and stop competing on fee. What we do not do is promise a number. We diagnose the constraint, match the lever to it, and keep the messaging inside the rules your board expects you to follow.

Frequently asked questions

How do accounting firms actually get most of their clients?

Referrals, by a wide margin. In firm surveys up to 89% of firms credit most new business to word of mouth, and referral leads convert around 30% higher than other sources. The catch is that referral-only growth is passive and hard to steer. Firms that add a structured referral system, a niche focus, and local visibility grow faster and control their client mix better than those waiting on referrals alone.

Should my accounting firm run Google Ads?

Only if you have capacity to serve new work and a close process that filters hard. Average cost per lead was near 70 dollars across industries in 2025, and professional services often clear 100 dollars. One firm hit a 60 dollar cost per lead but 75% were unqualified, so the real cost per qualified lead reached 240 dollars. If you are already at capacity, paid search is usually the wrong lever.

What marketing rules do CPA firms have to follow?

The AICPA rule 1.600 bars advertising that is false, misleading, or deceptive, along with coercion or harassment, and you stay responsible even when a vendor runs the campaign. State boards add their own rules, and several including Texas, Florida, and Oregon restrict testimonials. If you do audits, SEC and PCAOB independence rules further limit how you market to attest clients. Every claim should be conditional, never guaranteed.

Is local SEO worth it for an accounting firm?

For firms serving a defined area, usually yes. The local 3-pack captures a large share of clicks, and top-three listings can see well over 100% more traffic than positions four through ten. Google Business Profile is often the highest-ROI local asset because most competitors neglect it. Reviews matter, and recency counts, so a steady monthly flow of fresh reviews beats a single burst that then goes stale.

How does moving into advisory or CAS change our marketing?

It changes who you target and what you charge, not just your ads. Client Advisory Services practices are growing around 17% a year, most have moved off hourly billing, and firms selling CFO-level advisory earn over 30% higher recurring revenue. Marketing advisory is repositioning and proof, built on content and referrals, with a longer runway and a different buyer than compliance work. Lead-gen ads rarely sell it.

When is the right time to invest in marketing, given tax season?

Plan before January, not during it. Inbound volume rises 200% to 300% from January to mid-April, and for many firms close to 90% of annual recurring revenue lands in that window. Running acquisition when you are already slammed rarely helps. The firms that avoid the post-April revenue cliff build year-round demand and advisory retainers months ahead, so the pipeline is full when the season is not.



About the author

Christoph Olivier Christoph Olivier is the founder of CO Consulting and a fractional CMO who has managed millions of dollars in ad spend and built a combined audience of over a million followers across social platforms. He works with 7- and 8-figure businesses, primarily in tax, M&A, consulting, real estate investing, capital raising, and financial services. His edge is a practitioner’s command of every major marketing channel, theory and execution, backed by the original marketing data reports he publishes here on CO Consulting.

Follow: YouTube · Instagram · LinkedIn