Evaluation checklist: What to ask before you choose
Can your team retrieve documents using metadata?
Including client, entity, tax year, document type — so they don’t waste time browsing disorganized folders?
Is there airtight approval traceability?
Can you see who approved which version, when, and what changes have been made?
Are workflow stages and ownership visible?
Everyone needs to see where a document is located, who owns the next step, and the reason for any delays.
Can you create role-based permissions?
These should be adaptable over time to accommodate things like staff changes, team restructuring and define substitution rules when a workflow participant is unavailable.
Can you roll the software out during a normal business cycle without compromising your team's capacity?
Even if it’s month-end or tax season?
Will it scale?
At twice your current document volume, with more entities and offices, will the system still work without your team inventing workarounds?
"With DocuWare, I can be sure that all the proper approvals are in place. This doesn’t just apply to invoices. For example, auditors check the approval and support for journal entries for cash transactions. If there’s no audit trail, they can’t confirm that journal entries have been approved by a manager or that the entries took place within the required timeframe. It would indicate that the auditors can’t rely on our corporate controls, resulting in additional testing and possibly further disclosures of the financial statements."
Courtney Pozzi
DocuWare Chief Financial Officer
How to plan a disruption-free rollout
1. Start with workflows causing the most pain
AP invoice approvals, client document intake, tax return review and sign-off; pick a high-friction workflow as your pilot. Get one process running well and you'll have the proof and the learnings you need to deploy the software in other business areas.
2. Map each workflow stage and name the owner
Nothing kills momentum faster than a document stuck in a queue because someone's on PTO and no one else was set up to act on it. Every workflow stage needs an owner — and a backup for when that person is on vacation.
3. Get permission rules in place early
Client confidentiality and segregation of duties (SoDs) aren't something you want to retrofit. Bake them into your workflows from day one.
4. Measure and learn
Use your first workflows to test what's working and what's not, so you can identify and solve problems before scaling use of your document management system.
How Smile Train improved accounting workflows with DocuWare
Smile Train is a global nonprofit focused on cleft treatment. To run its programs, Smile Train partners with a wide range of suppliers to source brochures, t-shirts, software solutions, and IT infrastructure services. Their finance team was stuck in paper-based invoicing and manual approvals. Nobody had a reliable way to check where a document sat in the approval process.
Introducing DocuWare alongside their accounting platform allowed them to modernize by introducing AI-based Intelligent Invoicing to speed up invoice processing, with trackable approvals and an accurate audit trail.
“If I didn't have Intelligent Indexing, I would be doing invoices for a much longer time. It makes invoice processing easier. When an invoice is imported, the majority of the fields are already filled out for me so I can send it for approval faster.”
Jennifer Rodriguez
Manager, IT & Administration
Take control of your documents
Firms that embrace document management software for accountants spend less time searching for files, eliminate the mystery surrounding approval status, and significantly reduce the burden of audit prep.
If your firm is still running on shared drives, email chains and manual tracking, it’s time for an upgrade. Well-organized document management will bring better visibility, accountability and review readiness to your accounting workflows.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should CPA document management software include?
At a minimum: secure storage with role-based permissions, metadata-based organization by client, year and engagement, workflow routing for reviews and approvals, version control across the document lifecycle, and audit trail logging that captures actions automatically.
How is accounting document management different from file storage?
File storage lets you save and find documents — that's where it ends. Document management adds consistency, automated workflow, version traceability and an audit-ready history.
Do small accounting firms need workflow automation?
Yes, and sooner than most expect. Once your client base hits a certain size, manual follow-up and informal handoffs start taking up time that could go toward billable work. Automation makes ownership visible and builds repeatable processes early, before your firm hits a wall.
What should an accounting document management system capture in its audit trail?
User identity, timestamps for every action, approval decisions, document version changes, version history and access logs. That combination makes the status defensible during reviews, disputes and audits.
How long does implementation typically take?
Scope drives the timeline. Most businesses start with one workflow and build out over weeks or months. Phased rollouts tend to land better than major launches because teams get time to adapt before the next wave of documentation comes online.