Current Openings – Accounting & Finance – dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

  • Financial Reporting Analyst – DT – public accounting required
  • SEC Reporting Analyst – Galleria
  • International Tax Accountant (Staff & Senior)
  • Director of Revenue Cycle – SW
  • AR Staff Accountant – degreed or non degreed – Galleria
  • Internal Audit – Staff & Senior – low travel – Woodlands
  • Financial Analyst – healthcare
  • Accounting Manager – looking for healthcare or insurance background
  • Staff Accountant – Galleria
  • Internal Auditor – NW Houston & Woodlands – low travel
  • Manufacturing Controller – Woodlands
  • International Controller – Westchase
  • Senior Accounting Analyst – NW Houston
  • Internal Audit Manager – West
  • Director of FP&A – West
  • E&P Auditor
  • SAP Controller – SE Houston
  • Senior Accounting Manager – multi location exp. required
  • HR Manager – WEST
  • HR Coordinator – Kirby & 59
  • LEAD SEC Accountant
  • Junior Auditor – west Houston

If you would like more details on any of the above openings, please contact me directly: dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

Staff Accountant – Cost/Inventory – dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

Our client is looking to add a staff accountant to their team. This company is in the oil & gas industry, BUT in a situation where they are not impacted as much by the price of oil & gas!!!!! They offer a generous benefits package, including 401K. The work schedule can also be flexible (7 to 4 or 8 to 5 or 9 to 6). Minimal overtime is required. The last person we placed in this role was promoted to the next level really quickly! We are looking for a go-getter and someone who truly shows initiative. The client is also going to be going through a software implementation in the fall.  Lots of exciting things happening!!!!!

Lastly, my client will look at someone with more experience in lieu of a degree. Please email me for more details. dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

Here are some more details:

JOB SUMMARY

The Staff Accountant is responsible for analyzing the daily inventory reports and monitoring all inventory transactions for all locations. This position also determines the cost of all incoming product, the billing on all sales, and assists the Accounting Managers with monthly closing and preparation of monthly accounting reports.

ESSENTIAL DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

  • Track inventory and costs
  • Process all  billing and reports
  • Assist with month end and accounting reports related to monthly sales, variance analyses, and other reports as needed
  • Complete all other duties and special projects as assigned

Interested, or know someone who might be? Contact me directly: dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

Director of Revenue Cycle – SW Houston – dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

Healthcare experience required. 

KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS AND ABILITIES:

  • Understands commercial insurance payers and provides guidance on maximizing reimbursement
  • Establishes procedures to ensure maximum efficiency and collection of accounts receivable and ensures adherence to standard operating procedures
  • Ability to forge effective working relationships with other members of the leadership team, and with direct reports.
  • Reports reimbursement trends and global concerns to senior management to ensure corrective actions and mitigation of future occurrences.
  • Demonstrates experience in diagnosing, evaluating, and developing corrective action plans for problems within revenue cycle operations.
  • Ability to effectively influence change.
  • Knowledge of all functional areas of the revenue cycle, including charge capture, productivity review, health information management, information systems.
  • Ability to establish and utilize performance measures throughout the revenue cycle process.
  • Ability to communicate effectively in writing and verbally.

JOB FUNCTIONS:

  • Leads/drives effort to collect commercial insurance claims through effective verbal and written communications with payers.
  • Utilizes performance measures to assess the functional areas that impact the revenue cycle.
  • Educates functional areas as to their impact on revenue cycle performance measures.
  • Leads process reviews to improve quality, efficiency, effectiveness of revenue cycle activities.
  • Reviews departmental performance to ensure efficient, proper, complete collection of earned revenues.
  • Provides departmental direction and supervision, including a vision for future direction of the department.
  • Must maintain a high degree of confidentiality at all times due to access to sensitive information.
  • Maximizes use of technology to improve data quality, timely collections, consistency of service and competitive advantage.
  • Develops and implements policies and procedures to improve the functionality of billing and collections functions.
  • Leads the process to systematically evaluate, monitor, and report on regulatory compliance related to the revenue cycle.
  • Establishes and utilizes an account denial process to monitor, and minimize payer denials.
  • Coordinates with all audits/auditors the activities related to the department.
  • Completes timely staff appraisals.

Interested, or know someone who might be? Contact me directly: dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

#MotivationMonday: 5 Tips To Stay Positive And Motivated While Job Searching

At the start of a job search, you may feel hopeful and excited about what potential opportunities may lie ahead, but many job seekers easily fall into a slump as time passes. Job searching is no quick process — calls don’t necessarily come after you’ve submitted your resume; a second round of interviewing may end there; and even when it’s between you and one other candidate, the job offer may wind up going to the other person.

Any of these scenarios can reasonably bring an individual down, but here’s what you can do to fight through it and keep going with even more empowerment.

Stay positive and motivated during the job search by:

1. Coming up with job search goals.

Treat your job search as a project with tangible goals. Figure out how many hours per week you will be focusing on the job search and assign the hours to specific tasks with related goals. For example, 10 hours will be spent networking with the goal of connecting with five people per week. Having weekly tasks and goals keeps you focused.

2. Not getting lazy.

Just because you don’t have a job to go to doesn’t mean you should lounge around. Aim to make things happen! Treat job searching like your full-time job. Before getting the day started, freshen yourself up as you would for work and stick to a routine for job searching.

You may start the day with checking email, making phone calls, then applying to jobs by lunch and leaving the afternoon to networking with others and researching for other job opportunities. When you stick to a schedule, you work more efficiently and there’s less of a chance for you to get lazy.

3. Re-examining your resume and LinkedIn profile.

If you haven’t updated your resume in a while or it’s not bringing in results you want, it’s time to re-examine it. Same goes with your LinkedIn profile. When you do, you build stronger tools to work with in your job search and you will feel a greater sense of confidence.

4. Networking with others.

Job networking has a greater effectiveness rate at helping you find a job than other methods like the job boards and recruiters. It can also help you stay motivated. When you talk to others in the field asking for advice, it can feel like you’re getting closer to where you want to be because you have connections with insiders. Often, your job network can also share with you similar challenges they may have faced and offer insight to how they went about the situation, which in turn helps you reflect and react appropriately.

5. Doing something on the side while unemployed.

When the job search begins to feel like it’s dragging on, look to do something on the side that may help you maintain your skills or help you build new skills that will be helpful on the next job. Whether it’s volunteering a few hours a week, taking on temp work, or taking a class, it can help give you a lift or inspiration to stay motivated. It also gives you something to add to the resume so it doesn’t look like you did diddly-squat while unemployed.

Finding a new job takes hard work, and finding a new job that you will love will take extra patience. Utilize these tips to help keep you going. Soon before you know it, the right job offer will come through!

Source: Don Goodman, http://www.careerealism.com/positive-motivated-job-searching/

HIRING: Division Controller – Southeast Houston – dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

Clear Lake/League City area

  • SAP a MUST
  • CPA a MUST

Looking for a Controller who is wants to grow! This is going to be a succession plan for the next line in management. In charge of month end close and financial statement prep for international and domestic business units. Travel is estimated at 10 to 20%.

Contact me for details: dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

#Motivation Monday: 6 key elements for motivating your employees

Smart business owners know that there’s a direct link between motivating employees to be successful in their assignments and the success of that business.

Want a good example of why you should be one of these smart managers?

Let’s imagine that your best employee has just resigned. How much time will it cost — directly and indirectly — to find, hire, train and get that replacement up to the productivity level of your former employee?

The answer is: maybe years.

Scary, huh? Now ask yourself if you could be in jeopardy of losing good employees merely because you aren’t motivating them.

There are many ways to successfully motivate employees and all of them require managers to focus on the human beings with whom they work, and who desire to find their own success.

Consider these six motivational elements.

1. Communication

There’s nothing more fundamental to having loyal, productive and engaged employees than good communication. If you’re having problems keeping good employees, the low-hanging fruit for you may be to just start talking with — not to — your people.

2. Professionalism

This is the aggregation of proper business, ethical and interpersonal behavior, and it’s critical to successful employee motivation. Professionalism fosters pride and employee loyalty. Demonstrate your professionalism first and then help employees achieve and value their own professionalism. And don’t forget to recognize their progress.

3. Management style

Check yours. Are you a leader or a driver? Managers who are drivers disregard others, consume people as a means to their end, and are identified by high employee turnover. Leaders value their people and encourage them to be successful. They can be identified by the double-digit numbers representing how many years their employees have been with them, and the multiple black digits to the left of the decimal on their bottom line.

4. Training

Employee training pays operational and motivational dividends. It fosters knowledge, which fosters self-confidence, which fosters leadership, which fosters employee loyalty, which fosters customer loyalty, which fosters your bank account. How’s that for a straight line to return on investment?

5. Recognition

A robin noticed a turtle sitting on top of a fence post. When the robin stopped to ask how he got there, the turtle replied, “Obviously, not by myself.”

When talking about what your company has done, be sure to manage your pronouns properly. Whenever “I” can be replaced with “we,” do it. This tiny two-letter pronoun is a powerful, verbal high-five that resonates motivational energy throughout your organization.

6. Fun

Fun is very motivational. Make sure your organization finds ways to have fun at work. The people I know who are the most successful and the happiest are those who take their work seriously, but they don’t take themselves very seriously.

Write this on a rock:

Motivating employees to be successful in their assignments is not only good business, it’s also the right thing to do.

Source: Jim Blasingame, Contributing Writer for Houston Business Journal http://www.bizjournals.com/houston/how-to/growth-strategies/2015/08/6-key-elements-for-motivating-your-employees.html

League of Extraordinary Women via www.cfstaffing.blogspot.com BY Caitlin Beausoleil

#MotivationMonday for all you working mothers out there!

Houston's F&A Recruiter and Talent Connector

http://cfstaffing.blogspot.com/2015/08/league-of-extraordinary-women.html

League of Extraordinary Women

Mother Warrior. Child Tamer. Super Mom.

Businesswoman. Manager. Employee.

Both are full time jobs, and neither one is easy. It requires a lot of work, time, and responsibility to be successful at either one. Now combine the two together, and what do you get? A league of extraordinary women.

This is not trying to downplay stay-at-home moms by any means (that’s a very difficult job as well). It’s a commendation for the brave women out there that make the choice every day to not only be a wonderful mom, but a successful woman with a career.

It’s hard, but it’s possible. Creative Financial Staffing is lucky enough to have some rock star moms who shared their own personal triumphs, difficulties, and advice for all the other working moms out there:

How do you balance being a mom and having a career?

Lauren Becker 

Managing Director…

View original post 2,002 more words

Current Accounting & Finance Positions – Houston, TX – dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

– SEC Reporting Manager North

– SEC Reporting Manager Northwest

– SEC Accountant – Clearlake

– Division Controller, POC – Clearlake

– Staff Accountant – Stafford

– FP&A Director – MBA required

– Entry Level AR Accountant with strong EXCEL skills

– HR Supervisor – West Houston

– Staff Accountant – DT – Oil & Gas

– Revenue Accountant – max 3 years of experience – DT

– International Internal Auditor – Rotation program – Ready to live anywhere in the world????

– Senior Accountant – North Houston

– Senior Staff Accountant – DT – max 4 years of experience

Interested? Contact me for details: dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com

#MotivationMonday: 5 Quotes to Get Your Work Week Started Right

Good morning and happy Monday! It’s time to kick off the week with some motivation.

Here are five quotes that will keep you going for the rest of the week:

1. Either you run the day, or the day runs you. –Jim Rohn

2. By recording your dreams and goals on paper, you set in motion the process of becoming the person you most want to be. Put your future in good hands — your own. Mark Victor Hansen

3. Successful and unsuccessful people do not vary greatly in their abilities. They vary in their desires to reach their potential. John Maxwell

4. Desire is the key to motivation, but it’s determination and commitment to an unrelenting pursuit of your goal — a commitment to excellence — that will enable you to attain the success you seek.Mario Andretti

5. “Enter every activity without giving mental recognition to the possibility of defeat. Concentrate on your strengths, instead of your weaknesses… on your powers, instead of your problems.” Paul J. Meyer

Have a fantastic week!

If you currently have accounting & finance staffing needs or are seeking employment, please contact me dvelasquez@cfstaffing.com.

Sources:
Top 100 Inspirational Quotes, Kevin Kruse, http://www.forbes.com/sites/kevinkruse/2013/05/28/inspirational-quotes
50 Motivational Quotes That Will Put Your Motivation on Overdrive, Pawel Reszka, http://www.lifehack.org/articles/productivity/50-motivational-quotes-that-will-put-your-motivation-on-overdrive.html