May 08, 2026

Why Positioning Matters More Than Ever for CAS Firms

And How It Can Significantly Improve Operations and Growth

By Jeremy Estey

The rise of client advisory services (CAS) has created a major opportunity for accounting firms looking to move beyond transactional work and into higher-margin, ongoing client relationships. Advisory services allow firms to deepen client relationships, increase recurring revenue and play a more strategic role in helping businesses succeed.

However, simply adding advisory services is rarely enough. The way those services are structured and positioned in the market often determines whether a firm experiences meaningful growth or struggles to gain traction.

For firms that want advisory work to become a meaningful driver of revenue and firm value, one strategic decision can dramatically improve both marketing effectiveness and operational efficiency: defining a clear market focus and solving specific problems for a well-defined client group.

The Hidden Power of a Defined Practice Focus

Serving a broad range of industries may feel like the safest strategy. However, it often creates operational complexity and makes it harder for firms to stand out.

Generalist firms frequently face several challenges:

  • Expansive service offerings that are difficult to standardize;
  • Operational variability across clients;
  • Marketing messages that sound indistinguishable from competitors.

These factors can contribute to lower margins, increased pressure on staff and inconsistent growth.

By contrast, firms that concentrate their work around a defined industry or client type create meaningful leverage. When a firm works repeatedly with similar clients, it develops a deeper understanding of the financial challenges those businesses face, the metrics that matter most to them and the strategic decisions that drive performance. That insight strengthens both service delivery and market credibility.

Positioning is an Operational Decision

Positioning is often viewed as a branding or marketing exercise. In practice, it has just as much impact on internal operations. When a firm clearly defines who it serves and the problems it helps solve, the entire organization becomes easier to manage and scale.

For example, firms with a clear market focus can:

  • Develop standardized workflows rather than customizing every engagement;
  • Train team members on a consistent playbook;
  • Package services into structured offerings rather than ad-hoc deliverables;
  • Reduce scope creep and client confusion;
  • Build repeatable systems that improve over time.

These operational advantages allow firms to onboard clients faster, maintain consistency in delivery and create a stronger foundation for growth.

Clear Positioning Creates a Growth Cycle

When positioning and operational design are aligned, firms often experience a positive cycle of improvement:

  • Marketing becomes more effective because messaging resonates with a clearly defined audience;
  • Service delivery becomes simpler because offerings are built around recurring client needs;
  • Client satisfaction increases because the firm understands the industry and its challenges;
  • Growth becomes more predictable as marketing and operations reinforce one another.

Consider a firm that focuses primarily on construction companies. Rather than offering broad  advisory services,  the firm might develop a structured offering tailored to that industry s needs. This could include job costing analysis, cash-flow projections and performance dashboards aligned with construction project metrics.

With a clear industry focus:

  • Marketing messages become more precise;
  • Sales conversations center on confirming alignment rather than explaining the value of advisory services;
  • Delivery processes become consistent and repeatable;
  • Clients view the firm as a trusted advisor who understands their business.

This clarity benefits both the firm and its clients.

The Marketing Advantage of a Clear Focus

Marketing a broad advisory offering can be difficult and expensive. When messaging attempts to appeal to everyone, it rarely resonates strongly with anyone.

A clearly defined practice focus allows firms to speak directly to the challenges faced by a particular audience. That clarity helps attract better-aligned prospects and makes marketing investments more efficient. Effective positioning typically answers three questions:

  1. Who do you serve?
  2. What business problem do you solve?
  3. What structured solution do you provide?

For example:  We help independent medical practices improve profitability by turning complex financial data into clear insights that guide strategic decisions.

A statement like this immediately clarifies whether the message applies to the listener.

Why This Matters Now

Across Texas and throughout the profession, more firms are expanding their advisory capabilities. As adoption increases, the competitive landscape becomes more crowded.

Standing out in that environment requires more than adding new services. Firms that define their practice areas clearly and build structured offerings around the needs of specific client groups are better positioned to differentiate themselves and operate more efficiently.

Clear positioning also helps firms grow without overwhelming their teams. Standardized systems, repeatable services and aligned clients reduce operational strain and support sustainable expansion.

In today s advisory market, firms that are known for solving a specific set of business problems often outperform those that attempt to serve every possible client need.

Key Takeaway

Positioning is not simply a marketing tactic. It provides a foundation for building an advisory practice that is operationally efficient, scalable and aligned with the needs of a defined client base.

When firms clarify who they serve and what problems they solve, both marketing and operations become more focused. The result is stronger client relationships, more consistent delivery and a clearer path to growth.

Related CPE:

  • The ABCs of Advisory Services
  • Surgent's Client Advisory Services (CAS): A Guide to the Variety of Offerings Professionals Can Provide
  • Independence Requirements for CAAS Engagements
  • K2's Optimizing Your CAS and Advisory Tech Stack

Click here to search the calendar

About the Author: Jeremy Estey is the Founder of AmberSky Marketing Ltd. He built the Positioning Suite, an AI tool that helps identify ideal client(s), understand the problems these clients want solved and productize your services, and it provides branding and messaging so you can start positioning your firm as the only choice to solve your client s specific accounting and financial challenges. Contact him at jeremy@amberskymarketing.com.

 

Thanks to the Sponsors of Today's CPA Magazine

This content was made possible by the sponsors of this issue of Today's CPA Magazine:

8amCPACharge

Accounting Biz Brokers

Accounting Practice Sales

Goodman Financial

Paychex

TXCPA Member Insurance

 

 


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CHAIR
Mohan Kuruvilla, Ph.D., CPA

PRESIDENT/CEO
Jodi Ann Ray, CAE, CCE, IOM

CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER
Melinda Bentley, CAE

EDITORIAL BOARD CHAIR
Jennifer Johnson, CPA

MANAGER, MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS
Peggy Foley
pfoley@tx.cpa

MANAGING EDITOR
DeLynn Deakins
ddeakins@tx.cpa

COLUMN EDITOR
Don Carpenter, MSAcc/CPA

DIGITAL MARKETING SPECIALIST
Wayne Hardin, CDMP, PCM®

CLASSIFIEDS
DeLynn Deakins

Texas Society of CPAs
14131 Midway Rd., Suite 850
Addison, TX 75001
972-687-8550
ddeakins@tx.cpa

 

Editorial Board
Derrick Bonyuet-Lee, CPA-Austin;
Aaron Borden, CPA-Dallas;
Don Carpenter, CPA-Central Texas;
Rhonda Fronk, CPA-Houston;
Aaron Harris, CPA-Dallas;
Baria Jaroudi, CPA-Houston;
Elle Kathryn Johnson, CPA-Houston;
Jennifer Johnson, CPA-Dallas;
Lucas LaChance, CPA-Dallas, CIA;
Nicholas Larson, CPA-Fort Worth;
Anne-Marie Lelkes, CPA-Corpus Christi;
Bryan Morgan, Jr, CPA-Austin;
Stephanie Morgan, CPA-East Texas;
Kamala Raghavan, CPA-Houston;
Amber Louise Rourke, CPA-Brazos Valley;
Shilpa Boggram Sathyamurthy, CPA-Houston, CA
Nikki Lee Shoemaker, CPA-East Texas, CGMA;
Natasha Winn, CPA-Houston.

CONTRIBUTORS
Melinda Bentley; Kenneth Besserman; Kristie Estrada; Holly McCauley; Craig Nauta; Kari Owen; John Ross; Lani Shepherd; April Twaddle; Patty Wyatt