The video opens in 1494 Italy. Luca Pacioli, known as the “Father of Accounting,” writes by candlelight with a quill. He explains the double-entry bookkeeping system—debits, credits, and the balance of assets and liabilities. But then he begins describing problems that sound surprisingly modern. He complains about broken spreadsheet formulas, clients who don’t understand accounting basics, and the endless nightmare of bank reconciliations—what he calls “an eternity of bank wrecks.”
The setting changes: Pacioli is now outside, still in monk’s robes, but working on a laptop. He sighs about how little has changed. A voiceover ends the ad by saying: “Pacioli wrote the book on accounting. Rho is helping accountants write the next chapter.”
The Formula (That Works at Any Budget)
Painful truth = Accounting hasn’t evolved fast enough
The ad shows that despite centuries of advancement, accountants still face the same core frustrations—manual work, human error, and poor client communication.
→ Lesson: Show how your product solves long-standing problems the industry has learned to tolerate.
Unexpected contrast = 15th-century monk vs. modern spreadsheet drama
Using a historical figure to express today’s common pains adds contrast and novelty. It makes the problem feel both universal and outdated.
→ Lesson: Use bold, visual metaphors or time-jumping characters to highlight how broken the current status quo feels.
Highly targeted pain points = “Bank wrecks,” broken formulas, clueless clients
These aren’t generic references. They speak directly to accountants who know the pain of reconciliation, client delays, and clunky tools.
→ Lesson: Use insider language to show you’re not just selling to an audience—you understand them.
Humor Breakdown
The humor is subtle and rooted in contrast. A Renaissance monk complaining about Excel sheets and bank feeds is funny because it highlights how little progress has been made. It’s observational, dry, and deeply relatable for finance professionals.
→ Lesson: Use professional in-jokes and era mismatches to create clever, targeted humor that respects your audience’s intelligence.
Final Verdict
Rho nails the balance of smart, specific humor and strong product positioning. By bringing in the “Father of Accounting” to highlight ongoing problems, the ad shows how Rho helps move accounting forward. It’s creative, direct, and clearly aimed at a niche, underserved audience. Memorable and effective.
BRAVE-o-meter
B-8 | R-9 | A-7 | V-8 | E-9
BRAVE – 8.2/10
Watch the full ad & learn more:
Website: rho.co/accountants
LinkedIn: Rho on LinkedIn