I have just come off the telephone to the owner of Another Answer Ltd http://anotheranswer.net/index.html and was informed that they are looking for ICB qualified Bookkeepers (AICB) PMD. Should you be interested please call Sylvia direct for a chat on 01628 530 805
no, no... can't... press... send... without........ Oh damnit.
Thats like saying a client only wants Dulux paint and no other brand of paint will do.
But thats it, I'm being good today.
Hope that your well and keeping busy Dave.
Todays a CPD day for me (doing a course on Agile, Scrum, Lean and Six Sigma) so would be so easy to get up to mischief but as I say, I'm being good and playing nice today.
Thanks for posting the job ad and hope that someone makes a few bob out of it (if you do remember that you owe Dave a bevvie or two).
Talk later,
Shaun.
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Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
Well its nice to be nice don't you think? I am sure your mischief days will soon return, will be posting another job on here in a mo. It is always nice to be involved in getting someone a job even if it is just making a little post.
Good luck with the CPD and have a good weekend my friend
While I tend to agree Shaun can I point out that our licence terms require that if we employ staff to work on bookkeeping stuff for our practices that they HAVE to be ICB qualified!
So if I want to get someone in because I have too much work to handle myself (haha) if I want them to do anything more than basic data entry they must be at the very least currently registered and paid up ICB students.
I haven't followed the link but it could be that the company in question is working from an ICB licence.
Basically that means that the ICB works on a closed shop policy of only employing their own.
By that logic and extrapolating it, they're saying that no qualified accountant should ever hire any ICB people as they are not from the same professional body. (well, can't have one rule for one and a different one for everyone else).
Seems strange to include something like that when ICB are desperate for bodies some as ACCA, ICAEW, ICAS, CIMA etc to notice of them but are effectively saying that people with other professional bodies are not good enough to work for an ICB employer (#1).
This seems a similar mindset to protectionist trade policies and they've never worked particularly well.
The question of course has to be is it just something thats included that would never be enforced? You know like some excessive notice periods and non compete clauses where the hope is that those signing them will simply accept them rather than challenge their content which in many cases would not stand up in court.
I think that all of the professional bodies have the occassional silly thing in their bye laws where the consequences of such inclusion have not been thought through properly. Maybe the mention of this one from the ICB will get comment from James as to whether its something that they would enforce on their members (if not why not just remove it?).
talk later,
Shaun.
#1 I'm thinking here of perhaps an ACCA student that is allowed to do bookkeeping under regulation 8 so the scenario would not cause them an issue. Or maybe an AAT bod looking to get their 12 months experience to get MIP status.
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Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
The 'get out' from the situation is to subcontract. Then, as long as you do a thorough check and have a solid contract the subject of which body, if any, they are a member of goes away.....
I must add that as and when I get to the point of wanting to expand, subcontracting is not how I wish to go so I will have this dilemma. Find an AICB or MICB who is looking for some part-time employment or shift base to a different professional body. Or I could accept that the size of my practice will always be limited to the work I can do myself. Given that the ICB route is geared towards those who wish to be principally self employed the first option is unlikely, the other two options are unpalatable but I may be left with very little choice.
I do have to agree with you though, if the person you wish to employ has the qualifications for the job form ANY of the professional bodies - surely you should be able to choose the most competent applicant? This sort of limitation only fosters schisms and an almost playground attitude of 'my exams are better than your exams!' when in reality there is precious little to pick between in many cases.
so in the case that you do know of was the bookkeeper fined for hiring outside of ICB or forced to get rid of the non ICB employee?
One can sort of see the ICB's mindset when making this policy, probably sat around a table brainstorming idea's and in that environment I'm sure that the question would have come up of how does one ensure the quality of the people working under an ICB banner meet ICB standards.
I would also imagine that those rules were also fashioned when ICB was the new kid on the block where they were still attempting to take market share from the IAB.
Now that they have grown and carved their own niche maybe its time for divisive rules such as this to be retired as ultimately protectionist policies will do more damage than good with members large enough to hire others being able to choose the best people for their business rather than their choices being restricted by their potential employee's chosen professional body.
I am not saying that the best person for a role may not be ICB qualified. As an example, If he would work for me I would choose Bill (Wella) over most others. Thats nothing to do with his professional body (ICB), just that he's one of the best regardless of the professional body that he is associated with.
What I am saying is that employers should be free to choose their own staff as the best available within their budget.
Anyway, issues are not just in the ICB's camp. I've just written this after writing a long letter to the ACCA trying to get them to fix regulation 8 which I think is another one of those things that sounded great all sat around the table making policy decisions but application in the real world didn't translate quite as it was first envisaged (i.e. regulation 8 see's no differentiation between a student, an affiliate, and a member (who must have at least three years signed off experience). Also there is no differentiation between students at the fundamental, skills and professional levels!).
Its frustrating isn't it being in this position where you can see that our various professional bodies that we are so proud to be parts of have very nearly got it right but for this bit here and that bit there that doesn't quite translate to the real world as it should.
Then again, one always has to consider the kerplunk syndrome in that change one thing incorrectly and the whole lot can come tumbling down.
Fingers crossed though, between us we'll eventually be able to fix the profession Theresa.... lol, I think that James may change it just in the hope of shutting me up for five minutes.
All the best,
Shaun.
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Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.
Think that I would have dropped ICB before dropping a good employee as finding the right employee that really fits with one's busness on both a personal and professional level is right up there with attempting to locate a Unicorn.
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Shaun
Responses are not meant as a substitute for professional advice. Answers are intended as outline only the advice of a qualified professional with access to all relevant information should be sought before acting on any response given.