NJCPA Looks to Rebuild Accounting Talent Pipeline

By Don Meyer, CAE, NJCPA Chief Marketing Officer – June 5, 2024
NJCPA Looks to Rebuild Accounting Talent Pipeline

The NJCPA is aiming to help firms and businesses find more accounting talent in 2024 and beyond, as demand for young people to succeed retiring accountants  continues to grow.

The ongoing talent shortage known as the pipeline problem has created a crisis in the profession in which talent is in high demand but fewer people are studying to be accountants and even fewer are becoming CPAs. A host of factors are contributing to the pipeline problem, like the challenging CPA Exam, comparatively low starting salaries and concerns about work-life balance, to name a few.

Identifying Opportunities 

In summer 2023, the NJCPA formed the Pipeline Task Force, headed by Zack Cohen, CPA, senior manager at CFGI and chair of our Emerging Leaders Council. The group, which included a diverse set of members, developed a set of actionable and measurable recommendations that identified areas that need improvement; practices and programs that the NJCPA should launch, continue or ramp up; where to direct resources; and where further research is needed. Three areas of focus were identified:

  • Raising awareness of the profession among high school students and addressing negative perceptions among college students and recent grads.
  • Removing obstacles to licensure and improving access to resources.
  • Engaging with and getting buy in from key professionals at firms, companies and in academia.

To raise awareness of the profession among high school students, the task force recommended conducting year-round outreach to high schools and educators, connecting firms and companies with high schools in their areas and promoting positive accounting stories through social media, blogs and podcasts. Members agreed that CPAs need to tell more success stories and fewer war stories.

The task force also said that the intersection of the NJCPA s pipeline and advocacy efforts can support the development of more accounting classes in high schools and make headway toward getting accounting recognized as a science, technology, engineering and math or STEM program.

Expanding the Path to CPA Licensure 

Among the obstacles to licensure discussed by the task force was the 150-hour education requirement. Some believed that the additional year of education and costs associated with it are a significant barrier to potential accounting students and those who may sit for the CPA Exam.

The NJCPA has joined the national conversation about the 150-hour requirement and is monitoring efforts around the country to create additional pathways to licensure for CPA candidates. A bill backed by the Minnesota Society of CPAs that would ease the path to a CPA license is moving forward. The bill would maintain the current 150-credit-hour rule but would offer an additional option to licensure with a bachelor s degree (120 credits) and two years of work experience.

Additionally, the NASBA Professional Licensure Task Force is studying a structured experiential learning program that would provide for education, documented experience and other elements that would offer an equivalent path to licensure without needing a fifth year to complete a 150-hour education program. This additional path, to be defined in greater detail, would include an education and experience component to measure a participant s competency to be licensed as a CPA and would be considered equivalent to the current 150-hour pathway defined in the Uniform Accountancy Act.

Research shows that we have much more work to do around awareness and perceptions of an accounting career. The pipeline problem will not be solved this year or next. The NJCPA, as well the other state CPA societies and the AICPA, are developing multiyear, collaborative, data-driven campaigns that will address the continuing accounting pipeline challenges.

Don  Meyer

Don Meyer

Don Meyer, CAE, is the chief marketing officer of the New Jersey Society of CPAs, where he is responsible for setting the vision, strategy and direction for the organization’s marketing, communications and membership campaigns and for driving the success of a deep and broad swath of organizational initiatives.

More content by Don Meyer:

Learn more from Don Meyer:

This article appeared in the Summer 2024 issue of New Jersey CPA magazine. Read the full issue.

 

 

Related events

January 3, 2025Hackensack
January 4, 2025Neptune
Monmouth/Ocean Chapter
Annual Tax Seminar
January 6 - 9, 2025Live Webcast
January 9, 2025Live Webcast
January 10, 2025Live Webcast
January 14, 2025Secaucus
January 15, 2025Paterson
January 16, 2025Paramus
Bergen Chapter
State Taxation
January 17, 2025Red Bank & Live Webcast
January 17, 2025Webcast Replay
January 22, 2025Live Webcast
January 23, 2025Webcast Replay
January 23, 2025Live Webcast
January 23, 2025Live Webcast
January 31, 2025Webcast Replay
February 5, 2025Linwood
Atlantic/Cape May Chapter
Federal & State Tax Update
February 6, 2025Paramus
Bergen Chapter
Special Topics
February 6, 2025Haddonfield
Southwest Jersey Chapter
Technology Update
February 12, 2025Live Webcast
February 19, 2025Live Webcast
February 24, 2025Webcast Replay
March 19, 2025Live Webcast
April 16, 2025Live Webcast
April 21, 2025Live Webcast
April 22, 2025Clark
April 25, 2025Roseland
April 25, 2025Live Webcast
April 29, 2025Webcast Replay
May 7, 2025Northfield
Atlantic/Cape May Chapter
Estate Planning
May 8, 2025Haddonfield
Southwest Jersey Chapter
Nonprofit Update
May 20, 2025E. Brunswick
Middlesex/Somerset Chapter
New Jersey Law and Ethics
May 21, 2025Live Webcast
June 3 - 6, 2025Atlantic City
June 25, 2025Live Webcast
August 18 - 20, 2025Atlantic City
October 22, 2025Live Webcast
November 13, 2025Live Webcast
December 11, 2025Live Webcast