
Published: October 2025
Why Belonging Is Essential for Firm Resilience & Growth
What the profession needs now: clarity, courage, and a future-ready workforce.
The 2025 Accounting MOVE Project arrives at a pivotal moment for the profession.
Accounting is facing one of the most significant talent shortages in its history. Enrollment has declined for more than a decade. Fewer candidates are pursuing the CPA credential. Experienced professionals are leaving public accounting. At the same time, as many as 75% of current firm leaders are expected to retire within the next 15 years — creating an urgent leadership and pipeline challenge.
Yet just as these pressures intensify, many firms are pulling back from the very strategies proven to attract, retain, and engage the next generation.
The MOVE Project exists to confront that reality with data, insight, and action.
This year’s national study explores how culture, belonging, and opportunity directly influence who enters the profession, who stays, who advances, and who leaves. It challenges firms to move beyond surface-level conversations and examine the systems, practices, and assumptions shaping their future workforce.
In This Report You Will Learn About:
The findings in this report provide both a diagnosis of where the profession stands and a roadmap for where it must go next. At its core, this research makes a simple case:
Inclusion and belonging are not “extras.” They are central to the profession’s competitiveness, resilience, and long-term sustainability.
While some organizations have grown more cautious in today’s climate, the firms participating in the 2025 MOVE Project chose a different path — one grounded in clarity, courage, and commitment. Their willingness to engage offers a powerful signal of what leadership looks like when the stakes are high and the future is uncertain.
The question for every firm is no longer whether these challenges exist — but whether they are willing to confront them and build a profession worthy of the next generation.

More Research
External Research
Re-Decoding the Decline
A national survey by the Illinois Society of CPAs of 7,780 students and young professionals reveals what’s driving CPA career decisions. The 2024 report uncovers key perceptions, challenges, and deterrents shaping the pipeline—offering critical insights the profession can’t ignore.
Completed Research
Remote Work Practices and Cybersecurity Risk Research Report
Remote and hybrid work are now standard, offering flexibility but increasing cybersecurity risks. Research by the Center for Accounting Transformation highlights the need for stronger awareness and proactive controls to balance modern work practices with resilient, effective security.
Completed Research
Tax Practitioner’s Guide to Managing Cybersecurity Risk
Cyber threats evolve rapidly, and stolen data remains highly valuable. Tax practitioners play a critical role in protecting client information, as breaches can be devastating. Combating cybercrime requires collective effort across the profession to strengthen defenses and build client trust.
Completed Research
IT Platforms Report
The IT Platforms Report delivers a data-driven look at how accounting firms are selecting, using, and optimizing their technology. It highlights adoption trends, firm-level differences, and practical insights to help benchmark and evolve tech strategies.
Active Research
Staffing Strategies Research
What staffing strategies are actually working in accounting today? Ongoing research from the Center for Accounting Transformation and CPA Trendlines reveals data-driven approaches helping firms navigate the talent crisis. Explore the insights.
Completed Research
Staffing Strategies Research Study Report
Accounting faces ongoing staffing shortages, but what’s actually working? A six-month study by the Center for Accounting Transformation and CPA Trendlines uncovers key challenges and highlights strategies firms are using—and underusing—to address workforce gaps.
External Research
The Cost of Losing Talent
The 2025 Accounting MOVE Project examines how evolving attitudes toward diversity, equity, and inclusion are influencing the accounting profession at a critical moment marked by severe talent shortages and leadership transitions. The report explores how workplace culture, belonging, and equitable advancement practices directly affect firms’ ability to attract, retain, and develop professionals. It highlights the strategic risks of disengagement, shares insights from participating firms, and reinforces inclusion as a practical business imperative essential to the profession’s long-term resilience, competitiveness, and growth.
External Research
Re-Decoding the Decline: An Updated View of the CPA Pipeline Crisis
Using proprietary data from the Illinois CPA Society’s pipeline survey, we explore factors affecting the decision to pursue a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) credential. The survey asked about their intention to pursue a CPA, whether they expected to be a CPA, the value of the CPA, and their intention to pursue credentials other than the CPA. Using 7,780 survey responses from students and young professionals, we find that both intrinsic and external factors affect the decision to pursue a CPA certification. We also find differences in the student and non-student subsamples. We perform textual analysis using responses to open-ended questions and find that participants identify financial concerns, mental health, work-life balance, and perceived value of the credential as factors in their decision. Overall, our results provide insight into why students and young professionals choose to pursue a CPA credential and suggest areas of focus for improving the accounting pipeline.

