The bar has moved in the accounting job market. Having the right degrees, latest certifications and required years of experience isn’t always enough to land you an interview anymore.
Conditions point to a candidates’ job market, with 46% of accounting firms actively adding full-time staff despite economic uncertainty. But accounting hiring managers are more selective than ever and looking beyond the basics of hiring accounting professionals with demonstrable business impact. In short, technical accuracy is table stakes. It’s no longer a differentiator on your resume.
Of course, you still need to demonstrate your professional background and accounting fundamentals. But now you need to be primed to articulate your next-level skills and prove your credentials are backed by practical experience.
The hiring manager needs team members who can connect accounting outputs to business outcomes. For interviews, be ready to explain how you translated an accounting variance into operational drivers, how you partnered with the sales team to build a new pricing structure or what changes you recommended based on fluctuating tariff policies around the world.
In addition to the basics of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), candidates are expected to be comfortable with modern accounting tools and reporting platforms. Ensure your resume reflects the tools you are experienced with, from Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), General Ledger (GL) and reconciliation automation, to planning and forecasting platforms.
Job seekers who can extract, validate and interpret data have an advantage. If you can also communicate the insights that matter to stakeholders, you have an even stronger advantage. Prepare to walk an interviewer through how you built an automated report or Power BI dashboard that improved data quality or sparked action.
One of the biggest differentiators today is familiarity with generative AI tools and using them to speed up research, draft policy summaries or build analysis support. Just over 50% of accounting professionals think generative AI will alter the way they work this year.
Employers need you to have the judgment and problem-solving skills necessary to lead automation and AI changes. Additionally, candidates who emphasize using AI tools responsibly and being aware of its risks add to their strengths. Talk about use cases that have improved your productivity while also highlighting how you integrate human judgment to avoid errors.
Impacting business outcomes often starts with communicating to stakeholders why they should take a new path and then collaborating with multidisciplinary teams to execute the approach. Interviews are a perfect opportunity to demonstrate your communication skills in real time and share examples of how your soft skills augment your technical skills.
Being open to alternative work arrangements, such as contract, contract-to-hire or part-time roles, can be a factor in your job search. As many as 45% of accounting firms are seeking more part-time and seasonal workers. Make it clear to hiring managers what you are (or are not) open to.
To differentiate yourself in the highly competitive accounting sector, partner with Aston Carter to translate hiring manager expectations into job search insights you can act on. Specializing in accounting and finance talent markets, Aston Carter helps you align your practical experience with the requirements employers are looking for today.
Contact Aston Carter for guidance on finding your next accounting role.