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Selecting an Accounting Advisory Firm — The Most Overlooked IPO Hire

Your PCAOB auditor audits your financials. Your accounting advisory firm helps you prepare them. Independence rules require two separate firms — and the advisory firm is consistently the most underestimated hire in the IPO process.

Last updated: June 2026

Accounting Advisory Scope

ASC 606 Revenue Recognition Core Service
Financial Close Process Core Service
SOX Control Framework Design Core Service
Non-GAAP Policy & Reg G Core Service
Technical Accounting Memos Core Service
SEC Comment Letter Support Core Service

The accounting advisory firm is the most consistently underestimated hire in an IPO preparation — and the one that most often determines whether the S-1 files on schedule. Unlike your PCAOB auditor, whose job is to audit completed financials, the accounting advisory firm's job is to ensure those financials are prepared correctly in the first place. They are two different roles, and you need both.

Auditor vs. Accounting Advisory — Why You Need Both

A Critical Distinction Most CFOs Learn Too Late

SEC auditor independence rules prohibit your PCAOB auditor from advising you on how to prepare your financial statements. They can tell you if a treatment is wrong — but they cannot tell you how to fix it or redesign your process to prevent it happening again. That is accounting advisory. Companies that conflate the two roles often discover material accounting issues midway through the S-1 drafting process — when it is too late to remediate without delaying the filing.

RolePCAOB AuditorAccounting Advisory Firm
Primary jobAudit completed financial statementsPrepare and improve financial reporting
SEC independence rulesRestricted — cannot advise on preparationNone — can advise freely
Revenue recognition (ASC 606)Audits your policy and applicationDesigns and implements your policy
Financial close processCannot assistCore service
SOX readinessTests controls you have builtDesigns and implements the control framework
Non-GAAP metricsCannot advise on policyAdvises on policy and Reg G reconciliations
SEC comment letter responseCannot draft responsesOften leads response drafting
Technical accounting memosReviews memos you prepareResearches and drafts memos

What Accounting Advisory Covers in an IPO

A full-scope accounting advisory engagement for an IPO typically covers six workstreams:

Revenue Recognition

ASC 606 Policy Design & Implementation

Building the complete revenue recognition policy from the ground up — contract population analysis, performance obligation identification, variable consideration, principal vs. agent, licensing arrangements. Preparing the technical accounting memos that will underpin S-1 disclosures and respond to SEC comments.

Financial Close

Close Process Improvement

Redesigning the financial close process to meet public company standards — typically reducing close time from 20–30+ days to 10 calendar days or fewer. Identifying bottlenecks in reconciliations, accruals, intercompany eliminations, and stock-based compensation calculations.

SOX Readiness

Internal Controls & SOX Advisory

Designing the SOX control framework — scoping, risk-control matrix, process narratives, ITGC design. Preparing the company for the management assessment required in the first 10-K. Distinct from testing (which the auditor performs) — advisory firms build what the auditor tests.

Technical Accounting

Complex Accounting Issues

Researching and documenting treatment for complex areas — stock-based compensation (ASC 718), lease accounting (ASC 842), business combinations, equity instruments, convertible debt, earnouts, and any industry-specific accounting standards.

Non-GAAP Metrics

Non-GAAP Policy & Reg G Compliance

Defining and documenting all non-GAAP metrics used in S-1 and investor materials. Preparing Regulation G reconciliation tables. Advising on which adjustments are defensible to the SEC and which have drawn comment letters from similar companies.

SEC Support

S-1 Review & SEC Comment Response

Reviewing financial disclosures in the S-1 for SEC compliance before filing. Drafting responses to SEC comment letters on accounting matters. Drawing on knowledge of current SEC examination priorities and comment trends for your sector.

Who Provides Accounting Advisory

Accounting advisory for IPO companies is provided by a range of firms — from Big Four advisory practices to independent boutiques. Here is how the landscape looks:

Big Four Advisory Practices

Deloitte Advisory · PwC Consulting · EY Advisory · KPMG Advisory

Each Big Four firm has a separate advisory practice that is independent of their audit practice. Deep resources and sector breadth. Premium pricing — typically $400–700/hour blended. Best for complex, multi-workstream engagements on large IPOs where the advisory and audit relationships need to be carefully managed for independence.

Independent Specialist Firms

CrossCountry Consulting · Cfgi · Danimer · Accordion Partners

Boutique accounting advisory firms founded by former Big Four partners and senior managers. Typically 20–40% lower fees than Big Four advisory, faster staffing, and stronger partner-level engagement on mid-market transactions. Growing market share in the $500M–$3B IPO market.

National Firm Advisory Practices

Grant Thornton Advisory · BDO Advisory · RSM Advisory

Strong for companies already using the national firm as their PCAOB auditor. Fees comparable to independent specialists. Important: ensure the advisory practice is structurally separate from the audit engagement to preserve independence.

When to Engage and What to Expect

Engage your accounting advisory firm at the same time as your PCAOB auditor — 18+ months before your anticipated S-1 filing. The advisory firm's initial work informs the audit scope and helps the audit proceed more efficiently.

  • Month 1–3: IPO readiness diagnostic — identifying gaps across all financial reporting workstreams.
  • Months 3–12: Remediation — implementing the policies, processes, and controls identified in the diagnostic.
  • Months 12–18: S-1 support — reviewing financial disclosures, preparing technical memos, supporting the audit process.
  • Post-filing: SEC comment letter response support, ongoing technical accounting advice.

Questions to Ask Every Accounting Advisory Firm

  • Who are the specific professionals — partner, manager, senior — who will be staffed on our engagement day-to-day?
  • How many IPO-stage accounting advisory engagements has your team completed in the past 24 months?
  • Walk us through how you would approach an ASC 606 implementation for a company with our contract structure.
  • What is your typical close process improvement timeline, and what are the most common bottlenecks you encounter?
  • How do you coordinate with the PCAOB auditor to ensure your advisory work is independent and does not impair audit independence?
  • Describe a recent SEC comment letter you helped respond to on a technical accounting matter — what was the issue, how was it resolved?
  • What is your fee structure — hourly, fixed project, or retainer? What are the primary drivers of scope creep?
  • What post-S-1 support do you provide — ongoing technical accounting, earnings release review, 10-Q disclosure review?
Corviniti

Corviniti — Accounting Advisory for IPO-Stage Companies

Big Four methodology and experience. Boutique responsiveness, senior-led engagement, and transparent economics. Corviniti works with CFOs and finance teams preparing for public markets — from initial readiness assessments through S-1 filing and post-IPO compliance.

Talk to a Corviniti Advisor →

Full Scope of Accounting Advisory Services for IPO Companies

The scope of work for an accounting advisory firm in a typical IPO engagement spans six to eight workstreams, each with its own timeline and deliverable:

WorkstreamWhat the Advisory Firm DoesTiming
ASC 606 implementationDesign the five-step model for each contract type; prepare SSP documentation; write the technical accounting memo; test the implementation in the financial close process12–18 months pre-IPO
ASC 842 lease accountingIdentify all leases; determine IBR rates; calculate ROU assets and lease liabilities; build the lease schedule; prepare adoption entry and footnote disclosure12–18 months pre-IPO
Close process improvementAssess the current close timeline; identify bottlenecks; implement faster reconciliation workflows; design the SEC reporting calendar; establish the disclosure committee process12–18 months pre-IPO
Non-GAAP policy designDefine which adjustments to include; prepare the reconciliation table formats; ensure Reg G and Item 10(e) compliance; review earnings release structure9–12 months pre-IPO
SOX 404 readinessDesign the risk-control matrix; document key controls; test controls; identify and track remediation of deficiencies; support management assessment18 months pre-required compliance date
Technical accounting memosWrite defensible positions on judgment-intensive accounting questions — revenue recognition edge cases, equity instrument classification, business combination purchase accounting, stock-based compensation modificationsAs needed throughout the pre-IPO period
S-1 financial statement preparationPrepare or review the S-1 financial statements; ensure consistency between financial statements and MD&A; support the auditor's review process6–12 months pre-S-1 filing
SEC comment letter responseDraft management responses to SEC staff comments on accounting and disclosure questions; coordinate with auditors and IPO counsel on response strategyDuring S-1 review process

Why the PCAOB Auditor Cannot Do This Work

Many first-time CFOs are surprised to learn that the PCAOB-registered audit firm handling the IPO audit cannot perform most of these advisory services — despite having the technical expertise to do so. SEC auditor independence rules (Regulation S-X Rule 2-01) prohibit audit firms from providing certain non-audit services to their audit clients, including:

  • Bookkeeping and financial statement preparation services
  • Financial information systems design and implementation
  • Appraisal or valuation services (including 409A valuations)
  • Internal audit outsourcing services
  • Management or human resources functions

The auditor's role is to audit the completed financial statements — not to help prepare them. This is the core reason an accounting advisory firm is necessary: the advisory firm does the preparation work that the auditor will subsequently audit. Companies that try to use the auditor as the accounting advisor, or that expect the auditor to catch preparation errors, regularly encounter independence issues or discover problems too late in the filing process to remediate without delay.

Fee Structure and What to Expect

Accounting advisory fees for IPO preparation are typically structured as time-and-materials arrangements (hourly rates for staff at various levels) or fixed-fee project agreements for specific deliverables. Indicative ranges:

  • Full pre-IPO engagement (ASC 606 + 842 + close process + SOX): $600K–$2.5M over 18 months, depending on company size and complexity
  • SOX readiness only (12-month program): $300K–$1.2M
  • Technical memo only (single complex accounting issue): $20K–$100K
  • S-1 financial statement support (4–6 months): $150K–$500K

Costs are meaningfully lower at national accounting advisory firms (Corviniti, FTI Consulting, Aon's accounting advisory practice, Protiviti, Huron) than at Big Four advisory divisions — often 30–50% lower for equivalent work quality. For companies where the Big Four audit relationship does not require advisory consistency, evaluating national advisory firms for the advisory scope is a straightforward way to reduce IPO preparation costs.

Download the IPO Readiness Checklist

Covers all six readiness workstreams — including the accounting advisory milestones needed before filing.

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