A
Hard Look at Tax Software: 2006 Annual Survey of New York
State Practitioners
By
Susan B. Anders and Carol M. Fischer
JULY 2006
- Respondents to the 2006 annual survey of New York State
tax practitioners report that they are satisfied with available
tax software products and indicate modest increases in the
use of technology solutions over the last few years. Survey
participants reflect the national shift toward the utilization
of integrated software packages, as well as the increased
use of electronic filing. A trend away from certain technologies
was suggested by the findings that few of this year’s
respondents employ an online client organizer and that the
percentage of respondents processing returns via application
service providers actually decreased slightly from 2005. This
article presents the results of the fifth annual survey of
New York State tax practitioners, highlighting trends as well
as some changes over time. The previous four surveys have
been published in the CPA Journal’s Annual Technology
issue and are available at www.cpaj.com.
Methodology
The
2006 survey asked most of the same questions that were addressed
in the previous years, as well as new questions directed
toward hiring patterns, outsourcing of tax preparation work,
e-filing for New York State and federal returns, and integrated
software packages.
The
survey was mailed to approximately 500 New York State practitioners
selected from online yellow pages and CPA directories. A
total of 140 surveys were returned, a 28% response rate,
consistent with prior years. In fact, 95 participants (68%)
in the 2006 survey have responded to the survey in at least
one of the four previous years.
In
recent years, several tax software providers have developed
lower-cost, minimum-feature versions of their packages,
aimed at small tax practitioners. In light of this, an effort
was made this year to expand the number of smaller firms
the survey was sent to. The current participants represent
a relatively diverse group of tax practitioners and provided
ratings of many different tax software packages; the results
are similar to prior years’ responses, but also reflect
the industry initiatives toward smaller tax offices. A profile
of respondents in 2006, as compared to those in 2005, reveals
that the median number of individual returns has declined
(from 545 to 450), the median number of entity returns has
fallen (from 205 to 150), and the median number of tax practitioners
per firm has dropped (from 5 to 4).
Tax
Preparation Software
For
the two prior years in which respondents were asked to separately
rate their business-entity tax software, the ratings were
very similar to those for the individual tax return software,
suggesting equivalent levels of user satisfaction. The overall
satisfaction ratings and the average number of years used
were virtually the same as reported for the individual tax
preparation software. Many respondents also used the same
provider for both individual and entity software, and thus
this distinction was eliminated on the 2006 survey.
Important
considerations in choosing a tax software package or an
online service include cost, ease of use, customer support,
available features, updates, state tax software, company
reliability, and user familiarity. Overall, the ratings
for the tax preparation software were favorable, consistent
with prior years. One indicator of the level of satisfaction
is the desire to change tax software products. The percent
of respondents planning to switch tax compliance software
dropped from 7% in 2005 to 4% in 2006. Similarly, the percent
that planned to change tax research software products declined
from 17% in 2005 to 11% in 2006. These figures suggest a
high level of satisfaction with existing products.
The
survey instrument listed 21 of the most commonly used commercial
tax-return software vendors, based on a review of print
and electronic media. Participants wrote in the name of
two packages that were not listed on the survey. Almost
99% of the 140 respondents indicated that they used at least
one individual tax preparation software package, and 10%
used more than one product. Users ranked the vendors on
each factor, using a scale from 1 (very dissatisfied) to
5 (very satisfied). In total, 160 ratings were analyzed
for 13 software vendors; these results are summarized in
Exhibit
1.
On
average, respondents had been using their software package
for over nine years. The products receiving the largest
number of ratings, CCH ProSystem fx and Lacerte software,
had been used longer than average. The longest-used tax
preparation software, RIA GoSystem, suffered a serious decline
in its overall rating from the responses of newer users.
An analysis of the individual responses revealed that users
with one to three years of product experience rated RIA
GoSystem substantially lower than did more-experienced users.
ATX’s rating was similarly reduced by new users. Conversely,
an analysis of individual responses for CCH ProSystem fx
and Creative Solutions showed that they appeared to be better
regarded by newcomers than were ATX or RIA GoSystem.
The
mean overall satisfaction rating for the 13 software packages
rated by this year’s participants was 4.12, as compared
to the prior year’s weighted average ratings of 4.23
and 4.19 for individual and entity tax software, respectively.
The average respondents were highly satisfied with the tax
preparation software that they have been using, although
smaller firms appear to be less satisfied than larger firms.
This may correspond to a trend reported in the Accounting
Technology “Tax Software Special” (October
2005). Software providers have focused on attracting smaller
preparers by offering lower-end products with reduced features.
Users want the cost savings, but may miss some of the higher-end
features.
Interestingly,
Accounting Technology also reported that ATX had
been successful in reducing its prices for lower-end products;
however, survey respondents actually rated cost satisfaction
with ATX slightly lower than in prior years. On the other
hand, Intuit ProSeries’ three-year price freeze appears
to be responsible for a substantial increase in its cost
satisfaction rating. Across the industry, prices for higher-end
products increased slightly, although our survey shows that
the mean cost rating remained similar to prior years. Cost
continues to be the feature respondents are least satisfied
with.
Over
53% of the ratings received were for just two software packages:
CCH ProSystem fx (43 ratings) and Lacerte Software (42).
There were three other vendors with more than 10 ratings:
Creative Solutions (25), Intuit ProSeries (19), and ATX
(13). RIA GoSystem received fewer ratings than in the past
(seven ratings), and its user demographics moved toward
larger firms. Together, these six packages represent 89%
of the ratings received from respondents. The following
discussion of specific ratings and features will focus on
these top six packages. Drake Software, H&R Block TaxCut,
Intuit TurboTax, TaxACT, Tax$imple, TaxWise, and TaxWorks
were each evaluated by only one or two users; the ratings
for these vendors are presented for completeness, but should
be interpreted with caution.
The
software packages with the most respondents also received
the highest overall ratings. CCH ProSystem fx and Lacerte
Software earned overall ratings of 4.22 and 4.15, respectively.
Creative Solutions’ overall rating of 4.14 was close
behind, followed by Intuit ProSeries’ 4.05. RIA GoSystem
and ATX had the lowest overall ratings of the most popular
products, at 3.71 and 3.69. Creative Solutions and Intuit
ProSeries had strong increases in their overall ratings
from prior years, while the ratings for ATX, CCH ProSystem
fx, and Lacerte Software declined, apparently influenced
by the perceptions of smaller users. RIA GoSystem suffered
the greatest drop in the overall rating, driven by new users
rather than smaller firms.
The
ratings of individual features, also provided in Exhibit
1, reflected mixed results. Satisfaction with timely updates
and familiarity increased, while satisfaction with ease
of use, customer support, available features, state availability,
and company reliability decreased slightly. Users were on
the whole very satisfied, although cost continued to be
the greatest source of dissatisfaction. Importantly, for
the five packages rated by more than 10 survey respondents,
the ratings of individual dimensions and overall satisfaction
are similar to ratings in previous years. The ease-of-use
rating increased for ATX, while the customer-support rating
increased for Creative Solutions. For RIA GoSystem, timely
updates increased, reliability was constant, and all other
ratings declined.
Exhibit
2 provides descriptive information about the tax preparation
software users for the packages rated by more than five
participants. Respondents rating CCH ProSystem fx, Lacerte
Software, and RIA GoSystem represent some of the larger
firms in the sample, although the companies’ software
was used by firms in all size categories. As noted above,
RIA GoSystem was used by fewer small firms than in prior
years. Intuit ProSeries continued to be used by firms preparing
fewer returns, with fewer full-time tax preparers, and with
25% or more of their practice in tax.
Tax
Research Software
Practitioners
were also asked to rate any of the nine most commonly used
tax research software vendors (chosen based on a review
of print and electronic media) with which they had experience.
Respondents could also write in the name of any package
not listed on the original survey instrument. Almost 84%
of the respondents indicated that they used at least one
tax research software package, and 39% used more than one
package. Use of multiple products may reflect users’
dissatisfaction with any single tax research software package,
or may reflect preferences for features that are not available
in one product alone.
The
ratings for these vendors are summarized in Exhibit
3. A total of 200 ratings were received for seven vendors.
RIA had the most users (47 ratings), followed by Kleinrock
(44), CCH (42), BNA (40), and PPC (20). Only four users
provided ratings for LexisNexis, and three for Tax Analysts;
these ratings are presented for completeness, but should
be interpreted with caution. Similar to the tax preparation
software ratings, the average ratings on the tax research
software declined slightly, with the exception of customer
support. This may be due to the inclusion of a larger proportion
of smaller firms in the participant pool. The mean number
of years used increased, and an analysis of the individual
responses revealed that only Kleinrock and PPC seemed less
satisfactory to new users than to experienced users.
Respondents
ranked the vendors on a scale from 1 (very dissatisfied)
to 5 (very satisfied). The average overall rating for all
seven vendors was 3.77, very similar to the overall ratings
in past years. The overall ratings for the vendors used
by more than five respondents were very similar, ranging
from the highest rated, Kleinrock at 3.99, to PPC at 3.55.
The order of the overall ratings for the tax research software
has fluctuated from year to year, with Kleinrock and CCH
taking first and second place, respectively, in the past
two years.
An
analysis of respondents revealed that, in general, BNA and
CCH were used more often by larger firms. Use of Kleinrock,
PPC, and RIA shifted toward smaller firms. Kleinrock and
Tax Analysts received the best cost-satisfaction ratings,
which may be reflected in a preference for these less-expensive
products by smaller firms.
Other
Technology Solutions
Respondents
continue to demonstrate an increase in e-filing, with 74%
indicating use of this technology for federal returns and
76% for New York State returns (an increase from 72% for
all individual returns last year). Preliminary IRS data
for the 2006 filing season indicate that 68% of all returns
were e-filed, up from 63% for 2005. Tax professionals were
responsible for 70% of the e-filed tax returns. All of the
software vendors listed in Exhibit 1 were accepted to participate
in the Internal Revenue Service’s federal/state e-file
program.
According
to a June 2005 Federation of Tax Administrators report,
“Electronic Filing Mandates: Lessons Learned”
(www.taxadmin.org/fta/ftapub.html), 13 states require e-filing
by practitioners who prepare more than a given number of
tax returns. Exhibit
4 summarizes the thresholds for 2005 through 2007.
Many
tax software vendor websites (Exhibit
5) promote tax preparation packages integrated with
tax research software, as well as with accounting, payroll,
financial planning, and document-management resources. Of
all survey participants, 44% indicated that they used tax
preparation software bundled with other applications. Almost
61% of these respondents reported that the tax software
component was more important than the other applications,
and another 33% stated that it was of equal importance.
This suggests that the tax preparation component of integrated
software packages may be driving the software selection
process. Perhaps this would change if users were not so
highly satisfied with the tax software available. Interestingly,
although some tax compliance providers are bundling their
products with another vendor’s tax research resources,
such as ATX with Kleinrock, Drake and TaxWise with CCH Master
Tax Guide, and Creative Solutions with RIA Checkpoint, almost
83% of respondents did not purchase their tax research software
in connection with their tax preparation software.
The
use of an online organizer increased slightly, to 14%, following
a lack of movement in this direction in prior years. The
percentage of tax practitioners expressing an interest in
processing returns via an application service provider continued
to decline, and only 9% used this technology in 2006. Although
tax software providers promote the development of their
web-based products, the percentage of respondents that subscribed
to a proprietary Internet site to conduct tax research,
used CD-ROM–based tax research software, or maintained
firm websites declined from prior years. The significant
decline in the percentage of firms with a website (from
71% to 63%) may have been attributable to the inclusion
of smaller firms in the sample. Of the firms that did have
a website, the survey found modest increases across the
board in terms of the functions the website was used for.
For example, 87% of respondents used their website to market
to new clients (up from 84% in 2005), 57% used it to market
new services to existing clients (up from 53%), 47% used
it to provide a client newsletter (up from 41%), and 18%
used it to provide an online tax organizer (up from 11%
in 2005).
Over
96% of respondents indicated that they have not outsourced
any of their tax return preparation work, while only 4%
said that they have done so. Less than 1% of those who did
not outsource were considering it. The reasons given for
outsourcing in accounting and technology literature are
a lack of staff accountants in the U.S., time savings (returns
can be processed overnight), and cost savings (overseas
accountants’ salaries are a fraction of those received
by U.S. staff). Interestingly, 50% of participants plan
to increase their number of full-time tax professionals
over the next two years, while only 1% expect the number
to decrease. These findings would indicate that the demand
for new accountants will remain strong.
Analysis
The
2006 tax software survey respondents reported a high level
of satisfaction with both tax preparation and tax research
software. Although ratings of tax software have decreased
slightly, respondents generally express satisfaction with
all of the features offered by these products. New York
State practitioners report a high propensity to use tax
software combined with integrated packages that provide
other applications, such as accounting, payroll, financial
planning, or document management. Furthermore, tax preparation
software appears to drive the package choice in most cases.
Participants in this study indicated increased use of e-filing,
both for New York and federal returns. Finally, 96% of respondents
complete all of their tax preparation work in-house, and
half of them expect the number of full-time tax practitioners
on staff over the next two years to increase, while only
1% were considering outsourcing the preparation of tax returns.
Susan
B. Anders, PhD, CPA, is an associate professor and
Carol M. Fischer, PhD, CPA, is a professor,
both at St. Bonaventure University, St. Bonaventure, N.Y.
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