This Week in Accounting AI

Rillet Recon Takeaways: Why Is Your Accounting Always an Afterthought?

54 min · 4. maj 2026
episode Rillet Recon Takeaways: Why Is Your Accounting Always an Afterthought? cover

Beskrivelse

For 30 years, ERPs have been built for operations, and the general ledger got bolted on as an afterthought. Paul Peterson and Matt Barbieri argue that's exactly why so many finance leaders say "the accounting blows", and why it was never an accountant problem in the first place. Fresh off Rillet Recon 2026, Matt shares what he saw in the room: a community that feels more like an apprenticeship than a conference, a live moment where 100 Claude licenses got handed out on the spot to attendees who'd never logged in, and an AI adoption gap in finance that's now an either-or, with very few in the middle. From there, Paul and Matt dig into the harder questions. Why are companies hiring FP&A teams to do work their accountants are already trained to do? When a growing company outgrows QuickBooks, what's the right way to evaluate an ERP, without starting with the tool? And what does it actually look like to put accounting back at the center of the system, instead of bolted on at the end? A candid conversation about what's broken in accounting systems, what Rillet is getting right, and what every finance leader should be asking before their next system decision.

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episode The ERP Is Broken by Design — And Accountants Are Paying the Price | ft. Adam Riches, Netgain CEO cover

The ERP Is Broken by Design — And Accountants Are Paying the Price | ft. Adam Riches, Netgain CEO

Netgain CEO Adam Riches joins Paul Peterson to expose why ERP systems deprioritized accounting decades ago — and why CFOs are still paying the price. They cover the history of accounting as a competitive advantage (from the Medici to Carnegie to the IBM mainframe era), how the spreadsheet became a 40-year Band-Aid, and what modern accounting infrastructure actually needs to look like. Adam breaks down Netgain's three-layer close framework (cash, simple accrual, GAAP), the case for rules over AI in bank reconciliation, Benford analysis for anomaly detection, and why AI risks repeating the same mistake as ERP if the profession isn't deliberate. A must-listen for CFOs, controllers, and finance leaders navigating the next wave of accounting technology. This Week in Accounting AI is produced by Wiss, an AI-optimized CPA and advisory firm serving privately-held and venture-backed businesses.

I går1 h 6 min
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Are Accountants Being Left Out of Their Own AI Revolution?

Fresh off the BDO Annual Conference and meetings in San Francisco, Paul Peterson and Matt Barbieri get real about what's actually happening with AI adoption in accounting, and what's not. Drawing on candid feedback from Wiss staff who piloted AI tools through busy season, they dispel two big myths: that AI means fewer accountants, and that AI tools can be distributed like traditional software. In this episode: * Why "max your tokens" mandates are killing AI adoption * The hidden cost of implementation that VCs and founders keep missing * Why mandated AI is the case most easily headed for failure * How accounting is shifting from a back office to a front office function * A direct message to startups and VCs: stop treating this like a SaaS rollout A candid, unrehearsed conversation about why the profession has been undervalued, and why the path forward requires real partnership between accountants, founders, and investors.

12. maj 202637 min
episode Rillet Recon Takeaways: Why Is Your Accounting Always an Afterthought? cover

Rillet Recon Takeaways: Why Is Your Accounting Always an Afterthought?

For 30 years, ERPs have been built for operations, and the general ledger got bolted on as an afterthought. Paul Peterson and Matt Barbieri argue that's exactly why so many finance leaders say "the accounting blows", and why it was never an accountant problem in the first place. Fresh off Rillet Recon 2026, Matt shares what he saw in the room: a community that feels more like an apprenticeship than a conference, a live moment where 100 Claude licenses got handed out on the spot to attendees who'd never logged in, and an AI adoption gap in finance that's now an either-or, with very few in the middle. From there, Paul and Matt dig into the harder questions. Why are companies hiring FP&A teams to do work their accountants are already trained to do? When a growing company outgrows QuickBooks, what's the right way to evaluate an ERP, without starting with the tool? And what does it actually look like to put accounting back at the center of the system, instead of bolted on at the end? A candid conversation about what's broken in accounting systems, what Rillet is getting right, and what every finance leader should be asking before their next system decision.

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