Épisodes

  • Episode 175: The Virtual Firm Revolution: Growth, Exits, and the Future of CPA Firms
    Jan 26 2026

    In this episode of Thrivecast, host Jason M. Blumer, CPA sits down with Salim Omar, CPA—nationally recognized CPA firm consultant, author, and industry thought leader—to explore how CPA firms are evolving in response to changing demographics, advancing technology, and shifting expectations among firm owners. With more than 30 years of experience in the accounting profession, Salim has worked closely with firm leaders at every stage of growth, helping them rethink their firms, strengthen communication, and plan intentionally for what comes next.

    Salim shares his journey from building and running a successful CPA firm to focusing on consulting, including his transition to virtual operations and the strategic advantages that come with it. Together, Jason and Salim discuss the real-world benefits and challenges of running a virtual firm, managing global teams, and maintaining strong team dynamics in distributed environments. A central theme throughout the conversation is the importance of understanding your audience—clients, team members, and potential successors—and how that clarity drives smarter decisions and sustainable growth.

    The discussion also dives deep into the complexities of mergers and acquisitions within the accounting profession. Salim explains why many deals struggle after closing, often due to communication breakdowns, cultural misalignment, and unclear expectations. He highlights the critical role sellers play after an acquisition and why their leadership and engagement are essential to successful transitions and long-term firm health.

    Drawing from his book, The CPA Firm Exit Playbook, Salim offers practical guidance for firm owners navigating what he calls the “exit evolution path.” Rather than viewing an exit as a single transaction, Jason and Salim explore how firm owners can intentionally design their next chapter—whether that means selling, merging, scaling back, or continuing to contribute in a new capacity. The conversation also touches on leadership beyond traditional retirement and how CPA firm owners can align their professional futures with personal fulfillment.

    The episode concludes with a forward-looking discussion on the growing impact of AI on the accounting profession. Salim shares why AI is both a powerful opportunity and a necessary adaptation for firm leaders, and how embracing technology thoughtfully can elevate advisory services, improve efficiency, and shape the future of CPA firms.

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    42 min
  • Episode #174: Seasons of Change: Courageous Decisions for Firm Owners
    Jan 7 2026

    This Thrivecast episode, the final one of 2025, features a solo conversation led by Jason, who reflects on seasons of change and intentional leadership as he looks ahead to 2026. Drawing on nearly 25 years of firm ownership and 15 years of leading Thriveal, Jason explores how change—whether chosen or forced—can become a catalyst for growth when approached strategically. He shares personal insights on how markets evolve, teams shift, and leaders must continually reassess where they are most needed and what they are truly committed to building.

    Jason outlines a significant pivot within his accounting firm, which is broadening its long-standing niche focus to serve entrepreneurs more generally after recognizing major shifts and challenges within its previous target market. Rather than waiting for disruption to dictate the next move, he explains why proactively adapting alongside the market is essential. That same philosophy is being applied to Thriveal, which is entering a new season after 15 years of operating as a broad, open community for firm owners around the world.

    Looking ahead, Jason explains how Thriveal is choosing depth over scale by narrowing its focus and restructuring into two core programs designed specifically for growing and scaling firms. The Venture program serves firm owners with five or more team members, while the Ascent program supports firms generating one million dollars or more in revenue. By limiting enrollment and moving away from multiple community membership levels, Thriveal is creating a more intimate, high-commitment environment where firm owners receive consistent accountability, coaching, and peer connection throughout the year.

    The episode also details several intentional changes that support this deeper focus, including sunsetting the Deeper Weekend conference, reshaping master classes, expanding self-paced courses, and developing future workshops connected to the newly released book Scale with Purpose. Throughout the episode, Jason encourages listeners to view change as a core leadership responsibility—one that requires courage, clarity, and a willingness to let go of what is familiar in order to build something more meaningful. The conversation closes with an invitation to firm owners who feel ready for this next season to explore whether Thriveal’s Venture or Ascent programs are the right fit for their growth in 2026.

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    26 min
  • Episode #173: How Intentional Optimism & Strategic Purpose Transform Firms with Heath Alloway
    Nov 25 2025

    In this episode of The Thrivecast, Jason Blumer interviews Heath Alloway, Growth Partner at Sorren, who brings extensive experience from BKD and the Upstream Academy. Heath introduces a transformative framework he calls the "four pillars of success": culture, people, clients, and wise growth. This sequencing is deliberate—growth sits last because it exists to fuel the other three, challenging the profession's tendency to pursue revenue targets disconnected from organizational health.

    Heath draws a critical distinction between healthy and unhealthy growth. Firms growing too rapidly with misaligned clients experience culture rot, elevated turnover, and declining engagement, while strategic growth creates space to say yes to the right opportunities and invest meaningfully in team development. He addresses a counterintuitive reality: humans process thousands of thoughts daily, with 80% skewing negative and 95% being repetitive. Heath advocates for fundamental reorientation, asking: "When you think about the future, if it hasn't happened yet, why would you choose to think about everything that could go wrong?" This shift from defensive positioning to intentional optimism becomes the foundation for sustainable transformation. The conversation explores evolved approaches to business development in accounting. Heath challenges the conventional wisdom that business development belongs exclusively to partners, arguing that early exposure throughout team members' careers transforms what could be a shocking transition into natural professional evolution. He provides tactical frameworks rarely executed: identify your top three prospective clients by name (most partner groups cannot), prioritize cross-selling within existing relationships where trust already exists, and proactively request introductions from clients who genuinely want to see you succeed. His role extends beyond traditional growth activities to include facilitating strategic planning retreats and leadership development for clients—services that internal surveys identified as highly requested offerings, revealing that clients are inviting deeper partnership if firms are willing to see beyond compliance work.

    Heath acknowledges COVID's paradoxical gift to the profession, noting it forced changes firms should have made voluntarily: fee increases reflecting actual value, termination of misaligned client relationships, and more intentional investment in team connection. His concern is that firms might abandon these strategic gains as they return to task-focused execution, forgetting the cultural intentionality that emerged during crisis. The episode concludes with Heath reframing business development anxiety through a powerful metaphor: if you were a doctor with the cure for a rare disease, wouldn't you feel obligated to share it? Accountants possess gifts that can genuinely transform client businesses and communities, yet fear and introversion often prevent initiating the conversations where that value could be realized. His message to the profession is both challenge and invitation: "This profession will do more for you than you can ever do for it." The path forward requires moving beyond reactionary growth toward intentional design—building firms where strategic choices about clients, team development, and cultural investment align with a clearly articulated vision of who we are becoming, demonstrating that sustainable growth emerges not from grinding harder but from thinking more clearly about what we're building and why it matters.

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    45 min
  • Episode #172: Why Most Firms Remain Commoditized Despite Their Unique Potential with Kristy Short
    Oct 24 2025

    On this episode of the Thrivecast, Jason Blumer sits down with Dr. Kristy Short to reveal a profound truth about professional services: firms unconsciously choose mediocrity through their communication patterns. We explore how the accounting profession's default toward compliance-based content creates an invisible prison of sameness—a sea of templated messaging that transforms unique practices into indistinguishable commodities.

    The strategic tension emerges clearly: in an era where AI can generate unlimited content, authentic voice becomes the ultimate differentiator. Yet most firm leaders struggle to identify, articulate, and consistently express their distinctive perspective. Dr. Short's 25-year journey through the content landscape illuminates how this challenge transcends marketing tactics—it's fundamentally about leadership courage and organizational self-awareness. The "million dollar look" framework she describes isn't about aesthetic polish; it's about the disciplined practice of authentic expression in a profession that rewards conformity.

    This exploration challenges the inherited belief that technical competence alone drives firm success. Instead, we examine content as relational infrastructure—the systematic way firms build trust, demonstrate expertise, and invite deeper advisory relationships. The conversation reveals how moving from one-way compliance communications to engaging, client-centric storytelling requires leaders to confront their own creative limitations and embrace the vulnerable work of authentic brand development. This isn't simply about marketing strategy; it's about organizational transformation and the courage to stand apart in a crowded marketplace.

    The deeper question emerges: Are you willing to risk distinctiveness in pursuit of meaningful client relationships, or will you remain safely hidden within the comfortable anonymity of professional sameness?

    About the guest:

    Kristy Short, Ed.D, is the owner of Type5 Content and Align Creative. She has served the accounting profession for more than 25 years—an expert in content strategy and development. And she's loved every minute of it! Kristy's passionate about helping firms and the profession as whole move forward., kick ass and conquer. She's worked with hundreds of firms and accounting-space vendors and is authentically effusive when she says: "There's no better feeling than watching clients succeed.

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    48 min
  • Episode #171: AI & Automation with Chad Davis
    Sep 25 2025

    In this episode of The Thrivecast, host Jason Blumer interviews Chad Davis, partner at LiveCA, one of Canada's original virtual accounting firms. Chad brings over a decade of experience building remote-first operations and shares practical insights about AI adoption and automation strategies. He emphasizes that automation should never be a firm's top three priorities, positioning AI as a powerful tool that enhances existing operations rather than a revolutionary change. The conversation explores the distinction between generative AI (creating new content) and agentic AI (taking autonomous actions), while Chad demonstrates how LiveCA evolved from single-person tech dependency to a distributed team model where multiple staff members develop automation skills.

    Chad provides a practical framework for AI implementation, categorizing technology spending into three buckets: core non-negotiables (accounting software), utilities (gap-filling tools), and the emerging category of AI tools that function as always-available thought partners. He advocates for starting with low-risk applications like meeting transcription to build team confidence, while emphasizing the critical importance of data organization as foundational infrastructure for future AI adoption. Chad candidly discusses LiveCA's strategic evolution, including their move away from CFO services to focus on controller-level work and their transition from value pricing back to budgeted hours when scaling to 120 employees made the former operationally challenging.

    The episode concludes with actionable advice for accounting professionals beginning their AI journey, with Chad noting that technological proficiency can be achieved in just five to ten hours of focused learning. He shares his approach to staying current through monthly AI industry roundups and building learning communities, while addressing security considerations and the competitive landscape among AI providers. Chad's Automation Town community exemplifies his philosophy of creating structured environments where accounting professionals can develop technical skills while maintaining focus on client service excellence, demonstrating that successful AI adoption requires both strategic thinking and hands-on experimentation.

    About the Guest Chad Davis is a partner at LiveCA, one of Canada's pioneering virtual accounting firms founded in 2013. With over a decade of experience building remote-first operations, Chad has guided the firm's growth from startup to a 60-person organization serving clients across North America. He specializes in automation and AI implementation for professional service firms, sharing his expertise through daily LinkedIn content and his Automation Town community. Chad's practical approach to technology adoption focuses on building sustainable systems that enhance rather than replace human expertise. His monthly AI industry roundups have become a valuable resource for accounting professionals seeking to stay current with rapidly evolving technology trends. When not exploring the latest automation tools, Chad focuses on creating learning opportunities that help accounting teams develop technical skills while maintaining their focus on client service excellence.

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    56 min
  • Episode 170: Change Management with Alice Grey Harrison
    Aug 25 2025

    In this episode of The Thrivecast, host Jason Blumer interviews change management expert Alice Grey Harrison, who brings 25 years of experience managing transformation in large professional service firms. Alice Grey opens with a fundamental insight: whether you're working with 25 people or 20,000 people, change challenges remain the same because "we're people." She debunks the stereotype that accountants are uniquely change-resistant, explaining that humans naturally resist change regardless of profession. The conversation explores how change is non-linear, more like a spiral than a straight line, often involving unexpected setbacks that require strategic pivots, as illustrated through her real-world examples including complex software implementations.

    Alice introduces two key frameworks that drive successful change management. First, she discusses Change Response Styles—a scientifically validated diagnostic tool that identifies four main styles: secure, preoccupied, dismissive, and fearful. Understanding these different approaches helps leaders guide teams more effectively through transitions. Second, she emphasizes the critical importance of communication through her "content compass" concept, ensuring all leaders use identical language when discussing change initiatives. As she quotes George Bernard Shaw: "The single biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place." For smaller firms, Alice Grey provides a practical framework anchored in mission, vision, and values, including creating clear "why" statements, demonstrating success through behavioral changes, and assigning dedicated project managers.

    Looking ahead to the Deeper Weekend, https://thriveal.com/deeper-weekend/, conference in October, Alice Grey will present two sessions on change management, including hands-on experience with the change response style assessment and practical implementation strategies. She illustrates how even seemingly simple changes like software updates actually represent fundamental cultural shifts, transforming organizations from "follow the leader" cultures to ones requiring independent problem-solving.

    About the guest:

    Alice Grey Harrison shapes organizational narratives across professional services, bringing over 25 years of strategic wisdom to firms navigating critical transitions. Her expertise centers on three transformative dimensions: cultural integration through complex mergers, change management that transcends resistance, and strategic communication that unlocks performance. With 16+ merger integrations in her portfolio, Alice doesn't just manage change—she orchestrates it with remarkable intuition, helping firms discover their highest expression while honoring their foundational strengths. Her work has earned recognition from the Association for Accounting Marketing and Ragan Communications, reflecting her ability to transform theoretical frameworks into lived organizational experiences. As a national speaker and thought leader, Alice approaches each engagement with profound questions that invite discovery, meeting organizations precisely where they are in their evolutionary journey and creating pathways that align purpose with performance. Alice Grey can be reached on LinkedIn under Alice Grey Harrison and through her website https://www.aghconsultinggroup.com/ where she shares bi-monthly insights on change management for professional service firms.

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    50 min
  • Episode 169: Transforming Professional Services through Uncomfortable Questions with Alan Whitman
    Jul 25 2025

    Alan Whitman challenges firm leaders to embrace uncomfortable questions as catalysts for organizational transformation. His central thesis: we are already advisors, trapped not by capability but by inherited paradigms that no longer serve our evolving purpose.
    Jason and Alan discuss how advisory and compliance were once integrated, but now we've artificially separated them. Modern firms must position traditional services as support structures for advisory work, not the primary focus. This requires asking: "Is this really our highest and best use to the organization?"

    Some specific reflection points from this episode are how many leaders are actively questioning their status quo versus simply going through the motions? The "ShoShin" approach—embracing beginner's mind when facing major changes—demands we start from scratch rather than incrementally adjust failing systems. Begin with uncomfortable questions that challenge existing assumptions. Evaluate whether you're accumulating clients or strategically building practice. Assess which non-negotiables could most transform your firm's trajectory.

    As a reminder, transformation is not about perfection, but about courageous, intentional movement toward our highest organizational potential. We are architects of possibility, constantly redesigning our structures to align with our evolving vision of what professional services can become.

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    48 min
  • Episode 168: Navigating Cross-Border Accounting Excellence with Katrina Nacci
    Jun 25 2025
    In this episode, we chat with Katrina Nacci, a CPA based in Frankfurt, Germany who helps European companies navigate US accounting standards. Originally from Boston, Katrina describes her work as "bridging the gap with two A's" - taking companies from local European accounting to US GAAP or IFRS when they're seeking American investors or planning IPOs. After 12 years abroad and experience at PwC and in private equity, Katrina found her niche with scale-up companies in the $30-50 million revenue range. Her approach leverages clients' internal teams through collaborative "GAAP summits" where she guides finance departments through accounting differences, making the process more cost-effective than larger firms. Interestingly, Katrina often discovers companies struggle not just with accounting standard differences, but with correctly applying their current standards. She works across the UK, Germany, Netherlands and other European countries, each with their own requirements. Despite initial language barriers, Katrina has adapted to life in Europe, traveling monthly throughout the continent. She reflects on her growth from a "dorky technical accountant" to a confident business owner with a unique specialization at the intersection of European and American financial requirements.
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    38 min