tlanta Accounting Business Cost Reduction Case Study
How an Atlanta Business Cut Accounting Costs by 45%
Snapshot: An Atlanta-based e-commerce company was spending far too much to keep its books running. By moving from a fully in-house setup to a right-sized outsourced accounting model with Countsure, the company cut its total accounting costs by 45% without losing accuracy, control, or timely reporting. Here’s exactly how that happened, and what it means if your own accounting spend has crept higher than it should be.
Key Results
- 45% reduction in total annual accounting costs
- 15 hours a week of owner and staff time reclaimed from bookkeeping
- Faster monthly close with fewer errors to rework
- On-time filings and a reliable reporting cadence in place of last-minute scrambles
A Growing Atlanta Business Outgrowing Its Books
What Was Actually Costing Them?
- Before you can cut a cost, you have to see where it's hiding. When we ran a diagnostic review, the 45% wasn't sitting in one line item - it was spread across four:
- Full in-house overhead. Salary, benefits, payroll taxes, and management time for accounting staff whose workload didn't justify full-time roles.
- Redundant software. Multiple overlapping subscriptions for bookkeeping, payroll, and reporting that duplicated each other's functions.
- Error rework. Miscategorized transactions and reconciliation gaps that took hours to chase down every month.
- Missed deadlines. Late or rushed filings that created avoidable stress and, in some cases, avoidable cost.
- None of these were dramatic on their own. Together, they were a large, recurring drain the kind that's easy to normalize and hard to notice from the inside. For businesses weighing their options, understanding is usually the first real step toward fixing it.
How Countsure Restructured Their Accounting?
The goal was never simply “spend less.” Cutting accounting costs by slashing hours or skipping controls just moves the cost to a worse place penalties, bad decisions, or a painful cleanup later. The 45% came from restructuring the function so it fit the business, not from cutting corners. We worked through it in four stages:
Diagnostic review.
We mapped every accounting cost people, software, and rework against what the business actually needed each month. That's where the four cost drivers above surfaced.
Right-sizing the model.
We moved the company from a full in-house team to a managed outsourced model, matching the level of support to real workload instead of paying for idle capacity.
Consolidating the tech stack.
We replaced overlapping subscriptions with a single, streamlined toolset removing duplicate spend and the errors that came from data living in multiple places.
lean-up and process fixes.
We corrected the historical mis categorizations, rebuilt the reconciliation process, and put a reliable monthly close cadence in place so deadlines stopped being a fire drill.
The Result: 45% Lower Costs, Cleaner Books
Once the new structure was running, the numbers spoke plainly. Total accounting costs dropped by 45%, driven mostly by the shift away from full in-house overhead and the elimination of redundant software. Just as important, the books got better: a faster monthly close, fewer reconciliation errors, and filings that landed on time. And the owner reclaimed roughly 15 hours a week time that went back into running the business instead of chasing transactions.
What This Means for Other Atlanta Businesses?
This wasn’t a special case. Most growing businesses reach a point where their accounting setup was built for a smaller company and never redesigned. The spend feels fixed because it’s familiar but “familiar” and “necessary” aren’t the same thing. A 45% cut isn’t a promise for every business; the real lesson is that meaningful savings usually come from restructuring the function, not from doing less accounting. If your costs have outgrown your needs, the savings are often larger and closer than you’d expect.
Parth Shah's Expert View
“When an owner tells me their accounting is too expensive, the fix is almost never to cut hours or lower standards,” says Parth Shah of Countsure. “It’s to look at whether the structure still fits the business. Companies overpay because they’re carrying full-time overhead for part-time work, paying for three tools that do one job, and absorbing the cost of errors they can’t see. Right-size those three things and the savings are real and durable and the books usually get more accurate, not less. Cheaper and better aren’t opposites when the structure is right.”
Facing Similar Accounting Costs?
If your accounting spend has climbed faster than your business needs, you don’t have to guess where the waste is. Countsure works with start-ups, small businesses, and growing companies across the US to right-size accounting, cut unnecessary cost, and clean up the books in the process. Schedule a Free Consultation and we’ll show you where your 45% might be hiding.
