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Post Info TOPIC: Hello and query about changing career to payroll


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Hello and query about changing career to payroll


Hello

This is my first post and sorry to jump in with a big essay but hoping someone can help and advise me please as I don't have a clue!

I am 42 and have worked in admin (including customer service, billing, team management and quality checking) for 20 years but since I had my son (he is now 7) I switched to working part time during school hours.  We don't really need me to earn a lot of money, just £500 a month or so to top up my husband's earnings and I am happy working just 15-20 hours a week.   I have been lucky to find office jobs with these hours but have been made redundant 3 times when my job no longer existed. The part timer seems to be the easiest person to get rid of in any restructure.

I have an idea for a career change.  I want to be a payroll clerk.  I want a nice little part time job that involves processing the payroll for any smallish local company. I get the idea that I would have responsibility, nobody breathing down my neck all the time, job security, I could work more hours during busy times and less when not.  I am happy to stay at this entry level and don't have ambitions for moving up.  I may also be interested in accounting at the lowest level but payroll seems to stand out to me. I do see a few part time payroll jobs advertised around here and they all want Sage experience. I've never even seen Sage but I don't usually have any problem mastering computer systems.

Would this be an easy switch to make? Do I have the right idea about what a payroll clerk job would be like? I have no experience in payroll so I am planning to do a course. Then hopefully I could use my Admin experience and the new qualifications to get a payroll clerk job. 

The following online course package has been offered to me at £450 including exams and any exam resits, please let me know what you think:

Accounting and Bookkeeping Essential Skills course

Microsoft Excel 2010 online training

Official Sage Computerised Payroll (Level 1 and 2 package)

Sage 2014 - Recognised by IAB and CPD Certified

Sage IAB Computerised Accounting for Business Level 2 (2015)

All this for £450 seems too good to be true but is it worth the paper it is written on and is it going to help me get a payroll clerk job?  Or does anyone have any other suggestions?

I'm not working at the moment so have plenty of time to study and I did a science degree through the Open Uni previously so I know I can do home study.

I would be grateful for any opinions.

Thanks so much for reading

Kazmina  

 



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Hi Karen,

welcome to the forum.

To be honest the only payroll qualifications worth anything are CIPP (Chartered Institute of Payroll Professionals).

The qualifications of any professional body will help you gain an understanding but few of them open any doors.

Sage do training workbooks with a 180 trial version of their software. Its £173 from here shop.sage.co.uk/payrollworkbooks.aspx (I am not recomending it, just telling you where to start your search).

The issue that you are likely to face is that employers generally require experience which is a bit of a catch 22 situation in that you cannot get the experience without a job and you cannot get the job without experience.

If you wanted to offer your services on a self employed basis to get the experience clients tend to expect payroll as part of a bookkeeping service rather than seperate to it.

Its worth noting that Payroll has changed a lot over the past couple of years so older training material should be avoided completely. Only buy courses where the materials are 2015 or later.

Good luck with your career change and don't be a stranger. We want regular reports on your progress.

kindest regards,

Shaun.

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Thank you Shaun for the welcome and for your speedy and helpful reply.

I've just checked out the CIPP site and the course they list is £995 for the Payroll Technician certificate. There is no mention of sage/systems training though. Is that something I would have to do completely separately? and afterwards? I have been quoted £200 just for Sage payroll 1 and 2.
Sadly I can't really afford £1200 for 2 courses at the moment so my plan has stumbled at the first hurdle!
I'm not really interested in being self employed but I am interested in learning bookkeeping.

I wonder if I would be better off doing either the course package I mentioned above or the AAT Level 2 certificate in Accounting which I see advertised everywhere (they run it at my local adult education centre and colleges) and then I could try getting a job or do some temping as an accounts clerk at a small company, maybe I would be happy to stick with that or maybe I could pick up some payroll experience while working (and think about payroll qualification in a couple of years)

Do you think the package listed would get me a basic level accounts job? or does the course sound completely pointless? The salesman from the college is calling me tomorrow to work his sales techniques on me so I need to be clear in my own head about the value of this package.
Thank you again


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Hi

As Shaun says, CIPP is the best.

There are sage courses you can buy direct from them.

You could maybe complete a sage payroll course and use it on your CV to get an interview - mention you plan on completing the CIPP qualification -

It is always tricky to get the first gig - hell, there are qualified chartered accountants waiting for their first chance.

AAT is a great qualification. Nowadays there is a 24+ loan available for those wanting to study levels 3 and 4 (final level) I know that isn't what you asked, but maybe, it is something to at least look at.

If you wanted self employment - again not what you asked - There are bookkeeping institutes out there who offer payroll qualifications.

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Hi again Karen,

AAT level II is only the introductory level and it won't open any doors for you on its own. Employers are looking for level IV qualified.

A better approach for starters may be to look at ACCA-X (quite different to the ACCA professional qualification).

ACCA-X is free to study and its good quality training to get you ready for something like AAT or even to move up to ACCA or CAT qualifications.

If you pass ACCA-X you should find that you will either be exempted from AAT level II or you should sail through the AAT skills check and be able to start at level III.

On the cost front unfortunately with a few exceptions such as ACCA-X anything worth studying will cost and its a three way hit as you need to sign up for student membership, pay for the training and pay for the exams. Even with ACCA-X although the training is free there are still exams and membership to pay for although for that level they are very reasonably priced.

Check out ACCA-X here : www.acca-x.com/global/en.html

I would not like to comment on wheter the course offered by the college is pointless as no training is without merit, but, it does sound as though it is entry level and no matter what training company sales people tell you that will not find you a job. Employers want the following as entry level qualifications :

Bookkeeping - AAT level IV
Payroll - CIPP
Credit Control - CICM
Tax - ATT

When the college calls a few things to watch for are lines such as there being 4.6million businesses all crying out for bookkeepers and only a couple of hundred bookkeepers to service them... Its complete tosh. There is no shortage of bookkeepers or accountants meaning that to stand any chance of getting the interest of the businesses out there you have to make yourself stand out from the crowd and the first step to doing that is having a quality qualification that shows employers what you are capable of achieving.

I wish that I could say that doing all the right things will end up with the job that you want but no qualification in this field will guarantee employment... Just someas mentioned above will put you in a better position than others.

I really wish you the very best of luck as I can hear the enthusiasm in your words.

Your goals are achievable but it will take a long time and a lot of hard work to get to where you want to be. I am not currently convinced that the course on offer is the best one but I could be wrong.

Personally I would first take the free ACCA-X training (you have to pay to sit the exams).

just my opinion and other posters opinions will differ from mine.

Good luck,

Shaun.


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Hi Johnny,

don't think that we disagree with each other at all there but I threw ACCA-X into the mix as well as a pre AAT try before you buy sort of qualification.

Good call on the 24+ loan so Karen could do ACCA-X (sort of free) in order to skip AAT level II and then get a loan to study levels III and IV... Sounds like a sound plan to me.

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Hi Shaun,

I actually read through the beginning chapters of ACCA-X (Free) I thought it was very good, I know the further levels / sections are needing to be paid for - I still may buy those as it more than refreshes the memory bank.

When I began AAT level 3, I was never asked to do a skills test or the like, it may have obviously changed now mind.

Although I will add to that, that without knowing the basics of double entry, level 3 could take longer to complete than level 4.

I would always recommend AAT, I have it, I'm happy with it - Others have a grand opinion of it, even chartered accountants like it, some have even studied it - the organisation seems very proactive, publishes in detail their financial details, annually.

It has QCF status, I know that doesn't mean too much unless you plan to use them as UCAS points, but the option is there - can lead to chartered status through further study. A member of IFAC - Only one main player nay vote (ACCA) against the AAT being a member.

Has government approval as one of their recognised tech level qualifications.

Added to the approved list of bodies who can verify certain financials for the home office - which I was very happy to see.

And breathe lol - I don't actually work for the AAT may I add!

There is more, but i'll stop there :)





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Concur completely.

I have a few AAT study texts myself (BPP, Kaplan and Osbourne) and they are basically cut down ACCA texts plus they have some excellent practical advice (I like that the tax texts use actual HMRC forms).

Speaking with accountant freinds AAT is always spoken of well and a good many of them started with AAT before progressing to ICAEW (I see that less with ACCA where people tend to be with that qualification right from the off).

I don't think that it can be overplayed that if one takes the same qualification as the person looking to employ someone then you already have an advantage over your competitors.

To a certain extent I think that is also true where one is looking to subcontract work from accountants.

To my mind it is the best all round qualification that can be used for employyment or self employment. Its both a bookkeeping qualification and an accountancy qualification for those looking to service the micro and SME sectors.

All in all, definitely a qualification to be proud to have on your CV.

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Thanks so much Shaun and Johnny, you have both been a great help.

The ACCA-X sounds an excellent starting point, I will have a good look at that. I can't believe there is something available that is almost free.
The 24+ loan is also a brilliant suggestion to help me complete the level 3 and 4. I didn't think I would be eligible for any loans or help due to already having a degree but the info I found says existing qualifications don't matter. Bonus that it doesn't have to be paid back until earning over 21k which I will likely never ever reach as it is quite likely I would wish to work part time forever!
Thank you for clarifying that I would need AAT level 3 and 4 in order for the qualification to be useful for getting a job. I was thinking that level 2 would be enough.
I must say my idea of being a payroll clerk or accounts clerk seems to be a lot more trouble and likely to take a lot longer than I expected. I have certainly underestimated what would be required. I will try the ACCA-X and see if I get hooked but I may have to forget the change of career and stick with the random admin jobs for the time being. They pay ok and allow me to do the school run and that is what is important to me at the moment.

I'll let you know how I get on.

Thanks again
Karen



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I agree with you.

I can honestly say I don't think I've ever heard anyone moan about the AAT - I could be wrong. With other qualifications, especially at the same level, there are many moans.

It does give great knowledge, as you say, the HMRC forms are very useful.

If you want to work with small companies it is ideal.

After completing the qualification you know you need to keep up the research in all areas - you also learn to know where to look, especially for self employment.

People put a great deal of emphasis upon experience, there is obviously an advantage to having experience, but I think it is about delivery.

Can we put together and deliver what we have learned? If we can, we succeed.

If we remain alert, and proactive I believe we can make a success of ourselves, even without experience - it is scary, very scary, and very ballsy.

It isn't for everybody, yet neither is business.

You've got to want it so bad that it stops you from sleeping, and as for worry, well that makes you read more, and more.

If we make a mistake, we have to be big enough to admit so, no sweeping it under the rug. I don't fancy a knock on the door if I do.

This wasn't supposed to sound dark btw lol.









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Hi Johnny,

I assume by at the same level as AAT you would be referring to bodies such as AIA, CAT and IFA. I've promoted AIA above AAT purely on the grounds that AIA is recognised by the FRC as an accountancy body. Although IFA is recognised by IFAC it is not recognised in the FRCs annual report on trends in acountancy plus the IFA's merger with the Australian institute was a bit of a debarcle and a real disappointment.

My personal view of the pecking order (top to bottom, left to right (some at same level as organisation to their side)) is :

ACA (ICAEW/ICAS/CAI), CIOT
ACCA, CIMA
AIA
AAT, ATT, CAT, IFA
Open University (B680/B290/B291), ACCA-X, IAB, ICB, Pitmans, City & Guilds.

I know that I have not included all of them such as Cipfa, CIPP and CICM. Quite open to arguements to suggest that I have the pecking order wrong.

... But don't tell my chartered freinds about the above as I work dilligently to convince them that ACCA people are obviously the top of the tree as we have to memorise everything rather than getting to take books into exams with us! Lol, even if we did get to take the books in with us I suspect that anyone who needed to refer to them will run out of time and fail anyway. Pretty sure that ICAEW is the same in that they may have the books but I would have money on it that there isn't the time in the exam to refer to them.

You're right on the not sleeping. What a waste of study time that is when there already aren't enough hours in the week.

People new to this think that you can compartmentalise accountancy studies but it doesn't work that way. It takes over your entire life. The reality is that its more a life style choice than merely a career with constant learning well beyond the requirements of CPD.

Even now there is never a time that I do not have a deck on index cards in my pocket for that odd few minutes such as when I'm waiting for my boy to come out of school.

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Hey. I think I'd have ACCA at the top, together with the other two. It is scary to think that, hopefully a small group of folk believe completing level 1 / 2 of a qualification is enough - I think I've spent 10 times the amount of time studying things which weren't in the books, elsewhere. I've never sold, nor disposed of an old textbook either. Worth their weight in gold. I like the deck of cards idea. I have some of Kaplans small revision books, they are good for a refresh. And speaking of books, there is always one more you want to buy ha ha!!

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Tell me about it Johnny.

I've got seven of those full size Ikea Billy bookcases stuffed floor to ceiling with accountancy books... Sometimes my place feels like a retirement home for old study texts.

Besides ACCA I also buy the study texts of other professonal bodies (ICAEW, CIMA and AAT).

The other day you were talking about your preference for BPP texts as opposed to my preference for Kaplan. Pre 2007 it used to be the other way around for me but I've never taken the the BPP changes that emphasised paragraphs, have trendy formatting with emphasis boxes and in ruining the text they also greatly reduced the number of examples.

Some of the best and most used texts that I have are a collection of the ACCA BPP study texts from 2002. I still use those on accounting theory, bookkeeping, management accounting, strategy and performance management today although those covering financial reporting standards, tax and even Audit are now long out of date... But still they get a home for life.

On the cards front, if you decide to adopt that as a starter my most used deck of cards is one that has the id of standards on one side of the card (with no indication as to what it refers to) and its full name on the other. The full set of accounting, audit and ethical standards runs to 108 cards. The good thing about knowing that deck inside out is that no matter what the question you may not know the answer but you should have a good idea of exactly where to look.

Other frequently used decks are ratio's and formulae, and another on key words, phrases and clauses. With so many items that could be regarded as key you have to be pretty brutal in keeping that deck down to around a hundred cards. My restricting factor on deck size is the largest available bulldog clip rather than the number of cards per se.

Personally I never took to those pocket books as they cover too much on a single page where the cards will only ever cover one thing per card... Ok, some of those things can be quite long such as pointers to all of the various criteria to look for when doing an inintial review of a business or signs that a business is in trouble.

Another handy hint that I find useful is a white board in the bathroom.

I have a list of about fifty acronyms on the board and when lying in the bath I try to go through all of them.... On occassion though it works better than counting sheep!

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The reason I have the F6 and P6 from BPP is because I wanted digital copies, kaplan didn't have that option at the time, no sure if they do now? As a side note, I very much doubt I'll ever buy digital again - can't beat a true book. They were at a slight discount, with instant delivery, Soooo.....I do enjoy the format of Kaplan, as you know I used them throughout AAT. For ATT, released July for May Nov 2017 sittings so I'm told - I'm torn between kaplan, bpp, and tolleys. Each of the three cost around the same price per level (Distance learning) I'm thinking for this, maybe tolleys have the edge? I've never owned any of tolleys text to pass judgement mind.

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In regards to tax, as it changes every year - is to learn to know where to look. (That is directed to the readers) Subscribe to popular tax magazines, remain active on forums - and never be afraid to ask questions. It's impossible to know it all of the top of your head.

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Hi Johnny,

actually, I think that Kaplan had digital versions before BPP but you don't buy them in the same way.

you buy the paper copy of the book and inside the front cover there is a bit of silver to scratch off which gives you access to an online version of the book (plus any amendments to the book, plus additional questions, etc.).

The downsid is that tto get access to the online materials you still need to have the paper version delivered first and pnce it is it takes up to 24 hours to gain access to the online version of the bokk... But then, you have the paper version to keep you going during that period.

I feel that the electronic versions are aimed more at the tablet than PC market although they are still quite viewable on the PC.

Also with Kaplan the electronic versions expire at the end of the sitting of that variant of the paper (but you still have the paper copy). Handy hint, print any corrections published online and staple them into the paper version... My P2 text looked like an over stuffed 90's filofax by the time that I had finished added bits and corrections.



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Makes sense! I think of del boy when I think of a filo fax lol! Have you any of the yellow / orange or red / green books from CCH? I just wondered if there is any difference? I mean for what I know they may just contain purely the acts? Or is there some plain speaking interpretations within? They carry a hefty price tag, yet students can grab the lot for £80.

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Shaun do the cards work for remembering formulas? There are a fair few to CIMA. I've always been of the opinion, if you don't use it, you lose it. There is a need to remember them for the future, also the need to remember them for passing the exam, plus passing the case study exams at the end of each CIMA level. (You know this I know) I've been reading F1, along with C4 - Economics. Even the C4 is a very serious book, the amount you have to remember is quiet shocking. I wouldn't need to sit C4, but still. The small amount I've read, not only advances ones knowledge, but seems to open the mind entirely, if that makes sense?

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Hi Johnny,

yes, the cards will work for anything.

with some things though rather than recite what you expect to be on the other side of the card you need to write it down. Formulas are a good example of that.

Also I find that when using formulae its handy to have to little example of it on the card (With formulae where you need to include an example of usage you may need to use the larger sized cards).

I understand exactly what you mean about opening your mind. You will also over time start thinking things like "thats just a silly idea" or "They're just copying the ideas of Michael Porter" (Yep, I'm talking about you Johnson, Scholes and Whittington).

I think that everyone will come accross an idea that fundamentally changes the way that they look at business. My epiphany was Porters five forces analysis. As simple in concept as SWOT analysis yet absolutely the way that one needs to look at any and every business idea to determin its viability.









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I'll definitely be getting some cards written up.

I'm looking forward to learning, and digesting the various business philosophies. I hope I can remember them.

Aside from reading the tax elements of ACCA, I haven't read any of the other texts to make a fair opinion of the differences, but with CIMA I like how it sort of puts you in the middle of the business, as an oppose to seeing things from the outside.

It's easy to ask which is better ACCA/CIMA - It is however a different ball game, actually passing the exams!!!

If I feel happy after having a good read of F1, and sort of gauging what I will be facing, along with what I am signing up to, I'll then pay the >£350 exemptions / registration fees.

The plan at the minute...to study each module for 3-4 months, I managed 1 month per AAT module, now I'm not sure if I rushed, or have reasonable memory retention.



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I don't know too much about sitting CIMA exams. Thinking about the ACCA papers for the most part you are right, it's geared towards you being either a consultant or a principle in general practice rather than actually being an employee of the business concerned. I feel that is in part to test one's ethics over how you balance ethical duty to the profession against commercial considerations such as the risk of losing an important client by needing to refuse a clean audit report.

That is of course not to say that ACCA does not give you the tools to work within the businesses rather than only looking at the business from the outside.

Certainly working in corporate I worked with (many) more management accountants that were ACCA than were CIMA although that may have simply been down to the types of business (financial institutions) as a couple of years ago I went for an interview with a telecoms company and all of their management accountants were CIMA and seemed to assumed that ACCA people were purely geared towards practice.

Got to third interview stage before they decided that they wanted a CIMA qualified bod on board... And a few weeks later the company went belly up (serves them right for not employing more ACCA people).

With the ACCA exams I pretty much got them down to a study formula by the end.

I used to start off with the BPP I-Learn course over two weeks which would aclimatise me to the paper that I was about to study. The I'Learn courses on CD are no longer available (do not buy them off Ebay as they are single user licenses and once used the CD's are coffee mats!)

This can however be replaced with spending the same time sitting through the lectures on OpenTuition in order to get a feel for the subject.

Next do the study text.

Do one chapter per day of the text including doing all of the examples and tests in that chapter.

Depending on the paper that ends up between 28 and 35 days.

I do not say one month as you need to factor in one day per week where you do no study otherwise you just end up burnt out by the exams.

Next do buy both the BPP and KAPLAN revision texts for the paper that you will be doing.

Some people work through the questions sequentially. Personally I create a spreadsheet matching the questions to the sitting where they were originally sat and then working through them one paper per day doing the questions that came in the same real exam sitting.

For the first month of doing exam questions just try to get the answers right. If it transpires that there is an area that you do not perform well at redo that chapter in the study text.

For the second month of doing exams try to do them under timed conditions.

More ACCA people fail because they run out of time than because they did not know the material.

On the run up to the exams you should be doing one paper per day five or six days a week without referring to the study texts.

Your speed will improve as will your ability to read twists in questions that many other people may miss.

There you go, four months (with a bit of contingency built in) per paper planned. Two weeks intro. Five weeks study, four weeks untimed exam practice, four weeks timed exam practice. Then the exam.

I know that you are talking about going the CIMA route but I just figure that any study system that works in studying ACCA would also work with CIMA and ACA.

I would say that no matter how good your memory retention when you are looking at the sheer volume of stuff that you need to remember with the higher qualification it will be tested to the limit. The key to passing is practice, practice, practice.






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Hi Shaun

I think I shall use your study methods on this one. The idea to buy both Kaplan and BPP question texts is a good idea also.

The four months per paper is in an ideal world, things as we know, rarely ever go to plan!

So I figure four months each paper, plus 2 months of cramming what I'd have already learned, to get past the case study, at the end of each pillar.

The CIMA exam systems were changed in 2015 (I believe) previous to this, there were no end of level case studies, but one at the very end.

(AAT is switching to end of level case studies also when they implement the 2016 syllabus)

One of the major stand out features in the ACCA / CIMA difference is the exam pass score needed to be successful, 50% VS 70%.

Now that doesn't mean ACCA is easier to pass, the questions could need a more comprehensive answer to get a mark in ACCA, than in CIMA.

It is hard to truly know the difference, unless the guy you're asking has sat both CIMA and ACCA.

With all the changes, both current and expected - I have started to see the huge benefit CIMA can / could offer.

Not only will it make me valuable to a business (Not intentionally trying to sound big headed) from a financial accounts point of view, but also from the perspective of how a business should run, how it shouldn't be run, how assets should be utilised to their true potential, noticing when things are going wrong in a business, in a more comprehensive way than now, etc etc - to also bring true value to the table.





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A man who can read, yet doesn't, is in no way wiser than a man who can't.

 



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The 50% vs 70% is really comparing apples and carrots. When mentioned to anyone the assumption is that CIMA people score higher which I believe is CIMA's intent.

Taking the top level CIMA papers from their top level and considering that they needed to get 70% to score a pass their scores were

E3 - 75%
P3 - 64%
F3 - 64%


Now compare that to the ACCA Options paper which have a 50% pass rate :

P4 - 35%
P5 - 29%
P6 - 42%
P7 - 39%

Now is that a reflection of ACCA people are worse than CIMA one's? Is CIMA an easier qualification? Are Cima markers more lenient? Is the scope of the CIMA syllabus is smaller?

Considering the considerable variances in pass rates I've just had a glance at some old CIMA papers (here : www.cimaglobal.com/Students/Exam-resources-and-information/Exam-preparation/Strategic-level/)

Looking at a couple of old papers at the highest level I notice immediately a glaring difference in that CIMA will set a scenario and then tell you to (say) use Ansoff to evaluate the scenario. Or another question asks the candidate to use Fitzgerald and Moon to structure their answer.

For similar questions with ACCA you would be given no clues about how to approach an answer and the examiners will be looking for those who adopted the better approach as much as getting the right answer.

I also note that more seems to be written into the exam questions where with ACCA there is a lot more getting inside the psycology of the client firms management as to why they are adopting certain approaches rather than asking whether the approaches adopted by management have been applied correctly which appears to be CIMA's approach (The old difference between are we calculating something correctly rather than are we calculating the right thing).

Despite their differences, both qualifications need people to have very similar skillsets. They are both great qualifications that anyone who has either should be rightly proud of.

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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.



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Hi Shaun, Yes I did wonder, as per my previous post whether the questions were, in effect more complicated within the ACCA paper, than CIMA - as you mention, CIMA points you in the direct, of sorts, in how they want you to answer the question. I wasn't having a dig with the 50 vs 70 - it was a genuine question. I'm of no doubt, nor of no illusion, of how grand ACCA is.

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Johnny  - Owner of an overly-active keyboard. 

A man who can read, yet doesn't, is in no way wiser than a man who can't.

 



Expert

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Hi Karen,

I'm going to disagree a little with the advice given regarding qualification for being a payroll clerk. I personally believe that Sage is fine (so long as you know what the software is doing and why). I am CIPP qualified and it is a great qualification for someone who is a payroll professional, running a large team of payroll clerks but is over kill for your purposes (looking to earn £500 per month part time). I have had people work for me who I have trained on sage payroll from scratch and they have gone on to get other jobs within payroll and never taken any further training. I think your biggest hurdle is getting experience, because different scenarios come up all the time (Although Sage have an excellent help line to assist when you get stuck).

From time to time I believe you can pick up Sage courses from 'Groupon' for around £20 or so which would be worth looking out for. Read around the subject a bit and brush up on auto enrollment. But like I said before, it is getting experience with real life payroll that you need before someone will let you loose on their wages.

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Rob
www.accounts-solutions.com


Master Book-keeper

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I would agree with you Rob.  My first foray into payroll was in 2006, using Sage.  No experience and no training.  I started using the 10 user Sage Payroll and in 2007 when the firm went bust, I signed up with Hays.  That was enough for me to get a temp job with Ceridian, one of the largest payroll outsourcing firms in Britain   I wasn't there long because most of the time I was sat there twiddling my thumbs and begging for work so packed it in.

Hays then offered me a job at a large Chamber of Commerce in charge of payroll for 240 staff.  I was like, wow, have I bitten off more than I can chew?, It was a system called Earnie (part of Iris) and I found it easy to learn.  I did that for a year and a half before moving back to Ripon.



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John 

 

 

 Any advice given is for general guidance and professional advice should be sought applicable to your circumstances.



Expert

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That was good going John, self taught doing a small payroll to the worries of a 240 strong payroll. 90% of the time I would say you can just enter the numbers and let the software do the rest, the other 10% you have to study or learn on the job. Learning on the job has to be quick though as you run the risk of a bunch of maruading employees baying for your blood...there's no better incentive for getting it right!

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Rob
www.accounts-solutions.com


Master Book-keeper

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It was a job I thoroughly enjoyed. Fortunately the colleague sat opposite me had done the payroll previously so if I ever got stuck, help was at hand.  From memory I only ever upset one colleague, who claimed I'd underpaid her following a contract review.  Turned out I was correct, which was a relief.



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John 

 

 

 Any advice given is for general guidance and professional advice should be sought applicable to your circumstances.

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