If you asked accountancy firms to list their most significant barriers to growth, most would point to familiar external pressures — talent shortages, fee resistance and economic uncertainty. While these unquestionably shape performance, the issues doing the most damage are internal: the slow grind of manual processes, fragmented data scattered across unconnected systems, and workflows that depend more on heroics than on structure. These hidden frictions drain time, energy and revenue every single day.
The total of these daily inefficiencies is staggering. Recent research by Censuswide in collaboration with Silverfin shows the average accountant loses £176 in billable hours per day to manual admin, duplicated effort and non-standardised work. In a 21-person firm, that amounts to more than £1 million per year. This is before including rework, error correction, or the cost of unhappy clients.
At the senior level, the cost is even higher. Managers spend more time coordinating work, chasing updates and fixing bottlenecks than delivering high-value advisory. The impact on growth is clear; the capacity for progress is consumed by keeping the wheels turning.
Why firms are stuck and don’t realise it
On paper, digital adoption looks strong. Most firms have moved to the cloud, adopted a patchwork of tools and shifted parts of their workflows to digital channels. In theory, this should create smoother processes, consistent collaboration and faster turnaround times.
In practice, most firms are held back by operational friction: data scattered across platforms that don’t talk to each other; staff relying on spreadsheets, email chains, and improvised workarounds; teams operating in silos rather than connected collaboration; limited real-time visibility into progress or quality, and a fragmented, inconsistent onboarding process.
Until these structural issues are resolved, true digital transformation will remain out of reach.
The growth paradox
More than half of firms, 51%, list growth as their top priority, yet many are trapped in an operating model that leaves no time to pursue it. Teams are overwhelmed, margins are squeezed, recruitment is challenging and advisory ambitions are perpetually postponed.
Firms want growth, but their systems are built for survival.
A common mistake is believing that technology alone will fix the issue. In reality, the biggest blocker is a lack of workflow standardisation. Without shared data structures, consistent processes, and centralised information, even the most advanced software will fail to deliver meaningful ROI.
The red flags are easy to spot:
- Work moves through inboxes, not systems
- Quality varies depending on who completes the job
- Reporting is retrospective, not real-time
Higher expectations, shrinking tolerance
All firms suffer from some level of inefficiency, but in today’s increasingly pressurised marketplace, there is far less tolerance. Clients expect transparency, speed and accuracy; competitors are automating compliance at pace, and talent, particularly younger accountants, will not tolerate outdated, manual workflows or low-value admin.
Markets are shifting toward advisory-led accounting, and firms that eliminate friction will move faster, deliver more value, and win better clients. Those who don’t will be forever chasing low-margin production work.
The £1 million opportunity
If every accountant recovers just one hour per day, the impact will be transformative – faster turnaround times, greater client capacity, more bandwidth, better job satisfaction and higher margins.
But it’s not automation and AI alone that will increase capacity; it’s a well-built system. Standardisation will:
- Organise your data – create one unified source of truth across clients, engagements and systems.
- Regulate your workflows – define a consistent way of working across the firm. Reduce variation, reduce risk.
- Remove manual touchpoints – replace spreadsheets, email chains and copy-paste processes with structured digital workflows.
Only once these foundations are in place should firms move towards automation and advisory at scale.
Our research identifies five distinct stages of digital transformation:
- Connect (organise your data)
- Standardise (create consistent workflows)
- Automate (eliminate manual tasks)
- Optimise (refine performance)
- Advise (enable strategic conversations)
AI-powered tools are accelerating this journey. Chart of Accounts mapping that once took an hour now takes 10 minutes with 98% accuracy. Intelligent assistants run automated checks on every file, flagging anomalies that would take accountants 30+ minutes to spot manually. But AI only delivers value when your data is connected and your workflows are standardised. Technology amplifies good systems; it can’t fix broken ones.
The practices winning today are those moving systematically through each stage, building solid foundations before racing towards AI and automation.
The mindset shift
Real digital transformation isn’t about adding more tools; it’s about re-engineering the way work gets done. The firms winning today are those treating efficiency not as a back-office project, but as a growth strategy.
Standardised workflows, connected data and real-time visibility create a platform for advisory. Automation amplifies it. Efficiency frees accountants to do the work that clients value.
If you don’t know where your firm is losing time, it’s an indication that change is overdue.
Take the next step
Want to understand where your practice sits on the digital transformation journey? Download our full whitepaper ‘Grow without the chaos: Your 5 stage digital transformation guide‘ for the complete roadmap, including real results from practices like yours.
Or speak with our team about how Silverfin can help your practice move to the next stage.












