The Playbook
Document Your Work Like You Are Going to Leave Tomorrow
Meghan Garcia, CPA · 3 minute read
What's Working
- Strong, contrarian opening that flips conventional wisdom about job security
- Clear PowerCPA voice with direct statements and hard stops
- The "liability vs valuable" distinction is sharp and memorable
- Practical AI documentation advice is actionable and time-saving
- "Build your case" ending lands with impact
- Good use of concrete examples (Power BI, Claude/ChatGPT)
What Needs Work
- "Some people refuse" opening feels soft - needs more punch
- "It is the opposite" could be stronger
- Middle section gets a bit generic with "process-oriented, organized" language
- "Not by everyone. But by the right people" feels hedged
- "One more thing" section header is weak
- Could use more specific examples of what good documentation looks like
- Missing the signature PowerCPA bite in a few spots
Redraft
Document Your Work Like You Are Going to Leave Tomorrow
Not because you are. Because the next person deserves better than what you inherited.
Most accountants hoard their work like trade secrets. They think complexity equals job security.
Wrong.
The person who cannot be replaced is not valuable. They are a liability. Leadership will not promote someone whose departure breaks critical processes. They will not give more responsibility to someone who creates single points of failure. They keep you exactly where you are because moving you would be catastrophic.
Documentation is not career suicide. It is the fastest promotion track in finance.
When you document processes, you prove something rare in accounting: you understand your work well enough to teach it. That separates managers from individual contributors. That separates people who advance from people who get stuck doing month-end close for the next decade.
Good documentation shows you think systemically. You see beyond your task list. You build scalable processes instead of personal kingdoms. Leadership notices this immediately.
Here is how to do it without destroying your work-life balance.
Use AI for first drafts. Open Claude or ChatGPT. Describe your process. Paste your formulas or workflow screenshots. Ask for an SOP. You get a solid first draft in two minutes instead of spending an hour staring at a blank document. Review it. Fix the specifics. Save it. Done.
For Power BI models, use the data dictionary feature. Document every measure and table inside the file itself. What it calculates. Source data. When to use it. The next person opens your model and immediately understands your logic instead of reverse-engineering your formulas.
The best documentation tool is the one you actually use. Pick one. Start today.
Control your narrative.
When you document your work, you own the story. Nobody can claim your model is broken if you documented why every step exists. Nobody can misrepresent your process if you wrote down exactly what it does and why.
Documentation is not busywork. It is evidence that your work is sound, your thinking is clear, and your processes can scale.
Build your case.
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