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The Tax Professional’s Guide to a Paperless Tax Workflow

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Best Practices for a Paperless Tax Workflow - Suggestions from Peer Professionals

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best practicesAt the close of tax season 2008, we interviewed hundreds of tax professionals about how the season went—what worked, what didn’t, and what they’d do differently next year.  Of about 50 questions, two in particular really stood out to us.  For these two questions, survey participants weren’t choosing one of the five answers that best relates to them—they were writing in their own answers.  And even though these questions were open-ended, we kept seeing the same responses over and over again. 

Question #1:  What advice would you offer someone who is considering adding scanning to their tax workflow?  

Overwhelmingly, the #1 answer was: "Do it."  "Go for it."  "Get started."  "Try it."  And my personal favorite: "Change or die!"  You get the idea.  Paperless is the way the industry is headed, and the general consensus is that it’s a better, more efficient way of preparing tax returns. 

Question #2: Share your best practice from this tax season.  

Here are summaries of the 5 most popular responses we received (following the order of the tax preparation process):

  1. Use a high-quality scanner to scan tax documents before tax preparation

  2. Automatically organize your clients’ scanned tax documents with a scan-and-organize or scan-and-populate tax document automation solution

  3. Supply your tax team with dual monitor workstations.  This allows them to view the source documents on one screen and their tax compliance software on the other, without all the messy clicking in and out of windows.

  4. Save the organized scanned tax documents to a document management system (DMS) or an informal file organization system on a shared network drive so that all preparers can quickly access documents from a centralized location at different stages of the tax preparation process.

  5. Train your tax team to use PDF editing software, such as Adobe Acrobat Standard, to add tick marks, comments, and annotations to digital workpapers.  It’s easier than you think and a little training goes a long way.

We’ll dive into each of these bullets individually in the coming weeks—starting with scanning tax documents.  Until then, you can learn more about the responses to our tax season survey by watching the webcast replay, "Scanning Tax Documents - A Look Back at the 2008 Tax Season" (brought to you by the CPA Technology Advisor). 

NEXT UP: Scanning Tax Documents—Learning the Basics 

Comments

I find that most of my clients are missing one or more documents needed to complete the return. If I scan their documents before I start preparing the return, I will have to insert these supplemental or missing documents later. Seems like double work compared to scanning after the return is prepared.
Posted @ Thursday, September 24, 2009 2:31 PM by Mike
GruntWorx Organize customers have found that using the organized, bookmarked PDF to prepare and review returns saves them anywhere from 10 to 45 minutes per return (and this takes scanning time into account). With the help of support staff and software, GruntWorx eliminates the time-consuming manual task of identifying and sorting client documents, typically done by professional staff.  
 
The question you have to ask yourself is--how long does it take to add one or two additional client documents? Using PDF editing software, such as Adobe Acrobat Standard, it is very easy to merge a document with an existing PDF and drag the document to one of the existing bookmarks. 
 
We have found that the overall benefits of scanning up front, even if you were to take 3 – 5 minutes to add an additional document or two per return, heavily outweigh having to manually sort each return before preparation.
Posted @ Friday, September 25, 2009 2:21 PM by Tara DeMaio
I too was concerned about that - this is what I did/said - oh well - make a second backup file - there is no reason you can't have two, three, etc backup files as long as you are not duplicating the information.  
 
 
 
make sure you get a fast scanner :)
Posted @ Friday, September 25, 2009 3:21 PM by Patty
Most clients provide 90% of their paperwork up front and we prepare the preliminary return based on this information, then send an email detailing the missing items.  
 
 
 
If we were to scan before the preparation instead of after, how do you KNOW which pages are the new ones?? I'm concerned that you'd waste so much time searching thru the PDF file to find the new pages that it wouldn't be worth it.
Posted @ Sunday, September 27, 2009 1:39 PM by Laura
Laura, 
 
If you're manually adding new scanned documents to an existing PDF, the new documents will automatically be added to the end of the PDF--making them relatively easy to identify as "new". Then, if you're bookmarking, you can manually change the color of the new bookmarks you create (before dragging the forms into your existing bookmark hierarchy)--so that you'll be able to quickly see which forms are new. To change the bookmark color, right click on the bookmark and select "Properties".  
 
If you're using GruntWorx Organize to automatically bookmark scanned documents for you, you can resubmit the new client documents to be merged in with your original organized documents. In this case, GruntWorx Organize will label the new documents as a 2nd submission (or 3rd, 4th... and so on and so forth).
Posted @ Monday, September 28, 2009 2:40 PM by Tara DeMaio
We started using Gruntworx Organize this year and are finding an extreme amount of frustration because the Supporting Documents section contains about 70-80% of our client records, which is very difficult to review in electronic format, especially for our clients with several rental properties because the pages are in complete random order.  
 
 
 
We decided to create new bookmarks (Rental, Medical, Donations, etc.) after the file is returned from Gruntworx, then tried to cut/paste the random pages into the correct area, but the cut function doesn't only pull the ONE page that you need to move, it pulls every single following page from the tree, with disastrous effects. For example, if the supporting documents section has 80 pages and you selected page 12 to be cut and moved to the new location, you now have an additional 68 pages under the new bookmark that you did not want.  
 
 
 
Does anyone have any suggestions to be able to cut/paste correctly within the bookmarks?  
 
 
 
We're using Adobe Acrobat and the cut/paste function is available from within the software, but after the file is returned from Gruntworx, it does not work correctly.  
 
 
 
Help!! Paper and scanning at the end is so much faster!!!
Posted @ Saturday, February 27, 2010 7:28 PM by Laura
Laura,  
 
Using the list of bookmarks, click and drag a document to the new bookmark you've created. You can rename the bookmark by right clicking on the current name and entering the info you want to see. For example, change '# 1' to 'Salvation Army'. 
 
If you're having trouble, give our Support team a call (800-291-2136 x3) and they can walk you through it.
Posted @ Monday, March 01, 2010 11:23 AM by Tara DeMaio
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