Working Theory Podcast

Max & Brooks

The Working Theory Podcast is the unofficial podcast for accounting firms that are serious about getting the most out of Karbon. Hosted by Max (Navica Consulting) and Brooks (Framework Solutions), two consultants who spent years using Karbon inside accounting firms before ever moving into implementation — this show is built on real experience, not theory. We're not here to walk you through onboarding. We're here for what comes after — the applied side of the platform. How do you make Karbon work for your specific firm? What are the tradeoffs? What are the workarounds? Where does it shine, and where do you need to look elsewhere? If you're a firm owner or operations manager trying to scale and you need your practice management platform to actually keep up — this one's for you.

Episódios

  1. 21 de jun.

    OFFLOADING ≠ DELEGATION

    Delegation is one of those leadership topics that sounds simple until you actually have to do it. In this episode of The Working Theory Podcast, Max and Brooks talk about why delegation often fails in accounting firms, especially when leaders wait until they are already overloaded. They dig into the difference between simply offloading tasks and actually delegating responsibility, and why real delegation is less about getting work off your plate and more about developing people who can own outcomes. They also bring the conversation into Karbon, SOPs, firm workflows, busy season, AI, and the fear that holds leaders back from letting others make decisions. The big idea: if everything depends on you, your firm cannot grow beyond you. In this episode: Why delegation breaks down when it starts from urgencyThe difference between task delegation and responsibility delegationHow Karbon workflows can either support ownership or reinforce bottlenecksWhy mistakes are part of leadership developmentHow to set expectations without over-prescribing every stepWhy firm owners need to multiply decision-making across the teamWhat delegation has in common with using AI effectivelyWhy training someone to “replace you” may be the best thing for your career Books mentioned: The One Minute Manager by Ken Blanchard and Spencer JohnsonTurn the Ship Around! by David MarquetThe 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership by John C. MaxwellDeath by Meeting by Patrick Lencioni Question for the comments: What’s one thing in your firm that you’ve been offloading, but should probably be delegating as real ownership? 00:00 Delegation is more than getting work off your plate 01:19 Delegation as team development 02:12 Why urgent delegation usually fails 04:10 Delegate before busy season hits 05:06 Task delegation vs. responsibility delegation 07:44 What this looks like inside Karbon 10:43 Setting expectations without over-directing 13:20 The fear of mistakes, cost, and client risk 14:07 SOPs, standards, and ownership 15:06 Letting your team improve the process 17:14 Turn the Ship Around and leader-led bottlenecks 18:58 From giving orders to approving ownership 21:52 Why everyone keeps coming to you with questions 22:52 Accounting leaders need space for AI and strategy 25:39 Training your replacement does not make you irrelevant 27:29 Delegation and AI use the same leadership muscle 29:19 Final thoughts on growth, oversight, and mistakes 30:18 Books, memory, and Brooks being Brooks

    31 min
  2. 15 de mai.

    Release Party: April 27, 2025 — Timesheet Periods, Engagements That Create Work, and more!

    Karbon Release Party: April 27, 2025 — Timesheet Periods, Engagements That Create Work, and the Gusto IntegrationKarbon's April 27 release is one of the biggest in recent memory — long-requested features like customizable timesheet periods, engagements that finally create work for you, and a Gusto integration that handles shifting payroll dates. Max and Brooks Wheatley walk through every change, what's actually useful, and where the gotchas still are. This is the Karbon Release Party — a recurring segment on The Working Theory Podcast where two Karbon implementation consultants break down each Karbon release from a practitioner perspective. Between them, Max and Brooks have helped hundreds of firms get more out of Karbon. Chapters00:00 Intro 00:53 Aider integration goes live 02:46 Engagements can now create work items 06:42 Gusto integration — payroll work items that handle shifting dates 09:50 Karbon API updates: time entries endpoint + self-service keys 12:20 E-signature expiration extensions (no more restarting) 13:50 Suspicious email warnings 15:29 Exact email send timestamps 16:30 Filing deadlines on repeat work 17:09 Customizable timesheet periods (finally) 19:56 Edit time entries directly in draft invoices 21:41 Wrap-up HighlightsEngagements create work — sign an engagement and Karbon generates the work items, with better control than Ignition or GoProposal. Still in open beta, but shipping fast.Gusto integration reads upcoming payroll dates and adjusts your next work item's due date — solving holiday-shifted paydays breaking your schedule.Customizable timesheet periods — change Karbon from Monday–Sunday to Sunday–Saturday, 1st–15th, monthly, or multi-week. Found under Settings → Workflow.Self-service API keys in Connected Apps. No more waiting on the Karbon team to activate.In-invoice time entry edits — fix mis-coded entries without leaving the invoice.About the showThe Working Theory Podcast is for accounting firms that are already on Karbon and want to actually optimize how they use it. Optimization, not onboarding. Hosted by Max (Navica Consulting) and Brooks Wheatley (Framework Solutions) — two Karbon implementation consultants who spent years inside accounting firms before going independent. 🎧 New episodes on YouTube and Spotify ConnectMax — Navica Consulting Brooks — Framework Solutions #Karbon #AccountingTech #PracticeManagement #AccountingFirms #KarbonHQ #AccountingPodcast #FirmOperations #AccountingWorkflow

    22 min

Sobre

The Working Theory Podcast is the unofficial podcast for accounting firms that are serious about getting the most out of Karbon. Hosted by Max (Navica Consulting) and Brooks (Framework Solutions), two consultants who spent years using Karbon inside accounting firms before ever moving into implementation — this show is built on real experience, not theory. We're not here to walk you through onboarding. We're here for what comes after — the applied side of the platform. How do you make Karbon work for your specific firm? What are the tradeoffs? What are the workarounds? Where does it shine, and where do you need to look elsewhere? If you're a firm owner or operations manager trying to scale and you need your practice management platform to actually keep up — this one's for you.