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Volume XX · No. I Summit Ledger Services An annual report · 2026
Senior-led · Audit-ready · Est. MMVI
An annual report

Focus on your goals, we tend the books.

Twenty years of senior-led accounting across non-profit, private, public and manufacturing — a plain account of the practice, in the form it has always taken.

IssueVol. XX · No. I
IssuedMay, MMXXVI
OfficesPalatine, Illinois
Contents
Six chapters · two schedules

Index of chapters.

Chapter i The state of the practice p. 04 — 08
i.Chapter the first

The state of the practice, in plain prose.

Marginal note The firm has held its ten-day close every month since 2014. Ed.
From the report "What is brief in print is durable in practice."

For two decades this firm has done one kind of work, well: senior-led accounting for organizations whose books actually matter — and the report you are reading is the plainest account of that work we know how to write.

There is, in this profession, a tendency to dress practice up. To advertise capability where one means availability; to advertise breadth where one means hope. The partners of this firm have made a different choice. We have kept the practice narrow on purpose, and we describe it here in the form it has always taken — chapter by chapter, with the schedules attached.

This report is issued each May to clients and prospective clients alike. It supersedes any brochure, deck or sales sheet that may have reached you under our name. Where the report and another document disagree, the report is governing.¹ Where the report is silent, we are not in the business.

The state of the practice, in its twentieth year, is the same as in its first: audit-ready · fund-compliant · senior-led. The work is done by partners, and we sign our names to the working papers we issue.²

We have not added a sales force in twenty years. The partner who quotes the work is the partner who does the work. — M. Ellis, Founding Partner

In the chapters that follow, you will find the work described in the order it is done. Then, in two schedules — sectors served and articles of engagement — you will find the part of the practice we are willing to put in writing. The remainder of the report is correspondence: a journal of the year, and the means by which to write to us.

In figures Audit prep, reduced by 54% on average across active engagements.
Of note We answer the telephone ourselves. Outside hours we return calls within the day.

Footnotes

  1. This convention is set forth in the engagement letter signed by every partner of the firm. It is not aspirational.
  2. Partners' signatures appear on every working paper issued under the firm's name; junior staff do not sign in lieu of partners.
Plate I
A topographic map of the work

The route of the practice, plotted.

BASECAMP CAMP I SUMMIT · 14,400 0 1MI 2MI N ↑

The work, end to end, plotted as a route. Basecamp is the daily ledger — bookkeeping, reconciliations, payroll. Camp I is compliance and strategy — audit liaison held year-round, budgets the board actually uses. The summit is forensic review, systems work and direct partner access on calls with auditors and boards.

Each pitch is owned by a senior partner. The rope is held the whole way.

From the practice manual · rev. ix · prepared by M. Ellis, Founding Partner
Chapter ii The shape of the work p. 09 — 16
ii.Chapter the second

The shape of the work, from operations to forensics.

Cross-reference See Schedule of Sectors, ch. iii, for vertical-specific procedures.

The work of the firm is organized in six departments, each owned by a senior partner. They are described here in the order they are performed, not as items in a catalogue.

Operational support — the daily ledger

The first department holds the books. Bookkeeping, bank and account reconciliations, accounts payable and receivable, payroll administration, expense management, fixed assets and intercompany accounting — performed daily, reconciled monthly, and tied out to a ten-day close. The work is ordinary in name and exacting in practice; it is the foundation on which every other department depends, and it is the work that, when neglected, makes the rest of the firm's effort moot.

Compliance support — the law and the funder

The second department keeps the firm's clients in good standing with the parties to whom they are accountable: the IRS, the state revenue authorities, the granting bodies, the auditors and the lenders. Grant and restricted-fund tracking, audit liaison held year-round rather than in the weeks before, functional-expense allocations defensible at audit, and tax compliance and filings prepared and signed by partners.¹

Strategic guidance — the board and the budget

The third department speaks at board meetings. Budget development and monitoring, cash-flow forecasting on a thirteen-week horizon, board financial presentations prepared by the partner who will present them, and long-term sustainability planning that includes the conversations no other adviser will start. The work is done in close partnership with the executive, never around them.

The audit is not a season. It is a posture. — from the practice manual, rev. ix

Forensic services — the difficult question

The fourth department asks the question the operating team cannot ask itself. Risk-focused forensic review, vendor and payment anomaly testing, internal-control walkthroughs and process-improvement consulting — engaged where a pattern is observed, where a control has weakened, or where management has reason to want a senior set of eyes. The work is confidential and, where required, communicated to the audit committee directly.

Systems work — the architecture

The fifth department changes the plumbing. ERP and ledger implementation, workflow automation, reporting infrastructure and the migrations between them. The firm declines systems engagements where the implementation will not be supported by an accounting practice — our own or another — for a period of at least twelve months after go-live.²

Leadership access — the standing invitation

The sixth department is not a service so much as a posture. A senior partner is named on every engagement and is reachable directly: no queue, no junior, no callback in forty-eight hours. The partner stands on calls with boards, with donors, with lenders and with auditors, and is heard in the room when it matters.

Department Op'l · Comp. · Str. · For. · Sys. · Ldr.
Stamp Each department reports to a named partner. Names on request.

Footnotes

  1. The firm signs all federal returns it prepares; engagements in which the firm prepares but does not sign returns are not undertaken.
  2. This restriction was introduced in 2018 following the firm's experience with two abandoned implementations the firm did not staff post-go-live.
Chapter iii Schedule of sectors served p. 17 — 21
iii.Chapter the third

A schedule of sectors served.

The firm has elected to remain narrow in its sector coverage. Four faces, twenty years; sectors in which the partners have themselves stood up the controls and walked the floor. A reasonable test of whether to engage us is whether your work appears below.

i.
Non-Profit
Restricted-fund tracking, Form 990 preparation, functional-expense allocations defensible at audit, and donor-ready financials that unlock future giving.
142Organizations
ii.
Private
Owner-operator reporting, tax planning, distribution rhythms and family-office governance, calibrated to a closely-held balance sheet.
86Engagements
iii.
Public
SOX-aware controls, quarterly disclosure cadence and audit-readiness held throughout the year — not assembled in the weeks before filing.
38Engagements
iv.
Manufacturing
Standard costing, inventory reconciliation, intercompany flows and capital-expenditure tracking for operations with real things moving through them.
54Engagements

Figures as of 31 March MMXXVI · totals include active and closed engagements.

Chapter iv Articles of engagement p. 22 — 26
iv.Chapter the fourth

Articles of engagement, bound in writing.

Three articles appear, in the same language, in every engagement letter the firm signs. They are not aspirations; they are obligations. The remedy stated against each article is the remedy you receive should the firm fall short.

i.
A ninety-day reviewIf, in the first three months, the engagement is not the right fit, the firm shall put a corrective plan in writing — or, at the client's election, conclude the engagement at no cost.
RemedyNo exit fee. No penalty. No further obligation, on either side.
ii.
A ten-day closeThe firm shall deliver financial statements, tied out and partner-reviewed, within ten business days of each month-end, for the term of the engagement.
RemedyShould a month's close miss the deadline, that month's fee shall be waived.
iii.
Leadership accessA senior partner shall be named on the engagement and reachable directly throughout — no queue, no junior, no callback in forty-eight hours.
RemedyReassignment to a partner of the client's choosing, at no cost, on written request.
Chapter v Notes on the year p. 27 — 30
v.Chapter the fifth

Notes on the year just past.

A short journal of representative matters. Names omitted; the work is otherwise as described.

14 Apr
Period 03, closed
A regional food bank's third period closed on the eighth business day. Restricted-fund variance against grant restrictions reconciled to the dollar.
8 dTo close
28 Mar
Standard costing, stood up
A precision manufacturer's standard-costing system stood up; first-month variance against expected runs came in below 2%, within the lender's threshold.
−2%Variance
17 Feb
Vendor pattern, flagged
A vendor payment pattern at a public-company client was surfaced during routine review and brought to the audit committee within forty-eight hours.
48 hTo committee
Chapter vi Correspondence p. 31

To write to the firm.

By post

220 N. Smith St., Suite 402
Palatine, Illinois 60067

By electronic mail

support@sls.com

By telephone

847.454.4725

Office hours

Monday – Friday, 7:30am – 6:00pm CT. Senior partners are available outside hours during audit and close.

Index — terms in this report

Articles of engagementch. iv
Audit liaison, year-roundch. ii.ii
Audit prep, reduction inch. i
Basecamp · Camp I · SummitPlate I
Bookkeepingch. ii.i
Budgets, board-facingch. ii.iii
Cash-flow forecastingch. ii.iii
Close, ten-daych. iv.ii
Compliance, federalch. ii.ii
Correspondencech. vi
ERP implementationch. ii.v
Forensic reviewch. ii.iv
Form 990ch. iii.i
Functional expensesch. ii.ii
Grant trackingch. ii.ii
Inventory reconciliationch. iii.iv
Leadership accessch. iv.iii
Manufacturingch. iii.iv
Non-profitch. iii.i
Operations, dailych. ii.i
Partners' signature, working papersch. i
Payrollch. ii.i
Private companiesch. iii.ii
Public companiesch. iii.iii
Reconciliationsch. ii.i
Remedy, articlesch. iv
Route, of the practicePlate I
Sectors served, schedule ofch. iii
SOX controlsch. iii.iii
Standard costingch. iii.iv, ch. v
Strategic guidancech. ii.iii
Systems workch. ii.v
Tax compliancech. ii.ii
Vendor anomalych. v