Accountancy firm appoints new partners
MAJOR CHANGES AS HISTORIC FIRM ENTERS INTO EXCITING TIME OF GROWTH
NINE new partners have been appointed at leading regional accountancy firm Forrester Boyd as it celebrates 85 years in business. With its acquisition and expansion into Hull earlier this year, those at the helm believe the move marks one of the most exciting periods in the independent firm’s history. Headquartered in Grimsby, with offices in Hull, Beverley, Scunthorpe, Louth and Skegness, the 155-strong team is building on its traditional practice strength to embrace endto-end financial needs for clients in business and personal matters.
It follows the incorporation of its corporate finance arm along with the rebranding of its wealth management services. Chairman and partner David Everatt said: “Our objective is to help all our clients to achieve their aims, to meet them, to build relationships with them and to stay with them along their journey.
“We see our role as one which offers strategic advice, which
understands where a business is now and where the client wants that business to be, while assisting them personally. Forrester Boyd is no longer a firm that looks at the historic background, but instead takes its clients forward.”
Stepping into partnership roles in Grimsby are Sian Connolly, Jenny Donnelly, Neal Watford and Maggie Casey, who also works across the firm’s other regional offices. In Scunthorpe, Matthew Priest is welcomed as a new partner. In Beverley new partner Rachel Hay splits her time between the East Yorkshire market town and the newly acquired Graybrowne practice in Hull.
In the Louth office, partnerships have been awarded to Toni Beecroft, Adam Millson and Nicola Hunt with Lee Bradbury taking the role of office chairman upon the retirement of Alan Nesbitt next spring. Supporting the partners, further promotions have been seen with Amy Greensmith appointed as a manager at the Beverley office with Lauren Johnson promoted to assistant manager.
Forrester Boyd is no longer a firm that looks at the historic background
David Everatt