Cloud Hosting for Tax Season: Performance When It Matters Most
Every accounting firm knows the pattern: January through April, the hosted desktop environment that ran perfectly in August grinds to a halt. Twenty-five people who were using three applications are now using twelve applications simultaneously, with tax software consuming memory and CPU cycles that the standard virtual desktop allocation cannot provide. The hosting provider's response is predictable — upgrade to a higher tier, which means higher per-seat costs that persist all year to accommodate a four-month peak.
EezyCloud's architecture eliminates this trade-off through elastic resource allocation. During off-peak months, each user's virtual desktop runs on standard compute resources at the base rate. When tax season arrives, the system automatically scales CPU, memory, and storage I/O to match actual demand — without requiring tier upgrades, contract amendments, or support tickets. The firm pays peak-season rates only during peak season, and the transition is invisible to users.
Performance is not just about raw compute power. Tax software depends heavily on disk I/O — opening large client files, running calculations across multiple returns, and saving workpapers. EezyCloud uses NVMe storage with caching layers optimized for the access patterns of Drake, UltraTax, Lacerte, and ProSeries. File open times that stretched to 30 seconds on traditional hosted desktops drop to under 3 seconds, which over the course of a tax season translates to hundreds of recovered staff hours.
Security is non-negotiable for firms hosting client financial data. EezyCloud provides encryption at rest and in transit, multi-factor authentication, session timeout policies, and SOC 2 Type II compliance. Each firm's environment is logically isolated, and backup policies meet the IRS's seven-year retention requirement. When a staff member leaves the firm, their access is revoked instantly — no waiting for the hosting provider's support queue.
For firms evaluating a hosting transition, EezyCloud offers parallel operation: run your existing hosted environment alongside EezyCloud for 30 days, migrate users in batches, and decommission the old provider only when you are fully satisfied. The typical migration takes two weeks, not two months.
Automated Client Document Intake: From Email Chaos to Organized Workpapers
The average accounting firm receives client documents through at least five channels: email attachments, client portal uploads, secure file transfer links, physical mail (scanned by staff), and increasingly, text messages with photos of receipts. Each document needs to be identified (W-2, 1099, K-1, bank statement, receipt), associated with the correct client, filed in the correct engagement folder, and flagged if it is a duplicate or if a required document is still missing.
This triage process is performed by the least experienced staff members — administrative assistants or first-year associates — because partners consider it low-value work. But the cost of errors is high: a misfiled document delays the return, a missing document triggers a client follow-up cycle, and a duplicate document wastes the preparer's time when they discover the discrepancy during review.
EezyFinance's document intake engine, powered by EezyAutomation, automates this entire workflow. Documents received through any channel are ingested, OCR'd (if not already text-based), classified by type, and matched to the correct client using identifying information extracted from the document itself — SSN, EIN, client name, or account number. The document is then filed in the appropriate engagement folder in EezyDocs, with metadata tags that make it instantly searchable.
The system maintains a document checklist for each engagement type. As documents arrive, the checklist updates in real-time, showing the preparer exactly which items have been received and which are still outstanding. Automated client reminders can be triggered for missing documents, with escalation rules that increase urgency as the filing deadline approaches.
For firms that process thousands of documents per season, this automation transforms the bottleneck into a throughput engine. Staff that previously spent three hours per day sorting documents now spend thirty minutes reviewing the AI's classifications and handling exceptions. The error rate drops because machine classification is consistent — the same document type is always filed in the same location, unlike human filing where consistency depends on who happens to be working that day.
Practice Management vs. RightWorks: A Cost and Capability Comparison
RightWorks (formerly Right Networks) has been the default cloud hosting and practice management choice for accounting firms for over a decade. The platform is mature, the integrations are extensive, and the sales team is well-practiced at closing deals during conference season. But maturity has a cost: RightWorks pricing has increased every year, the platform's architecture reflects decisions made in 2012, and the feature set has been shaped by enterprise clients whose needs do not align with the typical 10-50 person firm.
The pricing comparison is straightforward but revealing. RightWorks charges per-seat fees that range from $130 to $200 per month depending on the application stack, with additional charges for storage overages, premium support, and add-on modules. A 25-person firm with a standard tax and accounting stack typically pays $50,000-$65,000 annually. EezyCloud hosting for the same firm runs $58.30 per seat per month — $17,490 annually — with elastic scaling, premium storage, and support included.
But cost is only one dimension. The capability comparison matters more for firms that want to modernize their operations. RightWorks provides excellent hosting but minimal practice management: time tracking, billing, and workflow management require separate subscriptions to products like OfficeTools, Karbon, or Canopy. Each additional product adds cost, complexity, and integration risk. EezyFinance bundles document automation, time tracking (via EezyClock), and client management into the same platform that provides hosting, eliminating the multi-vendor integration challenge.
For firms considering a transition, the migration risk is the primary concern. EezyCloud supports the same applications that run on RightWorks — Drake, UltraTax, Lacerte, ProSeries, QuickBooks Desktop, and Sage — with the same licensing (BYOL). The user experience is virtually identical: staff log into a virtual desktop, open their applications, and work. The difference is in the performance (NVMe storage vs. spinning disk), the cost (40-60% lower), and the integrated capabilities (document automation and practice management included).
The bottom line for managing partners: if your firm is paying $50,000+ annually for cloud hosting and spending additional budget on practice management subscriptions, you can consolidate to a single platform at lower total cost while gaining document automation capabilities that your current stack does not provide.