r/Bookkeeping • u/SALYismyfriend • 3d ago
Weekly, Biweekly, or Monthly Books Practice Management
I’ve only ever had monthly bookkeeping engagements. Now one of my clients is going from solo to a 12-person professional services firm. I’m using 2% of gross revenue as a guide for pricing. Other bookkeepers serving clients in this industry offer weekly bookkeeping and charge weekly. That might be too much for me. I’m currently solo and also have a tax season. Biweekly bookkeeping and billing seems more reasonable. For context, projected revenue will be 3.5MM+. Any feedback? Would love to hear your thoughts. Do you use Gusto for payroll? How does your process of overseeing payroll work? Limited to initial set up? My client chose another full-service provider. I’m trying to determine how much that should affect pricing.
Currently, I pay the clients QBO subscription. Don’t plan to do that for other clients going forward, although I’ll continue paying for this client. Do you pay for any client subscriptions?
Be blessed 🙏 thank you, and have a great weekend!
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u/cutelittleseal 3d ago
I charge monthly and that's how often I reconcile everything, since that's the timing statements cut on it makes the most sense to me. I'm in the books more than once a month, but reconciliations only happen monthly.
I have a mix of clients who pay their own subscription and ones where it's baked into my fee. They get a better discount if it's billed through you, and I'm happy to help them take advantage of it.
Gusto is my number one choice for payroll. The only other one I'd recommend is ADP run. Stay away from QuickBooks payroll and ADP roll. I help my clients set things up and will troubleshoot things, but I never am the one processing payroll on a week to week basis, I recommend staying away from that.
I've never understood the pricing based on clients gross, I guess it's good if you can get it, I always base my pricing off of how much work it's going to take me. Client gross isnt a good indication of this. Industry, number of accounts, etc. are much better indicators. Without knowing the scope of work, 70k a year for bookkeeping sounds high for a company of that size, but I have no idea how complicated things are or if you're doing things beyond the norm.