A report by ACCA (the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants) and IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants) finds the COVID-19 pandemic is accelerating the shifting of the CFO role.
A report by ACCA (the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants) and IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants) finds the COVID-19 pandemic is accelerating the shifting of the CFO role.
The CFO of the Future
report, with data from global surveys and virtual roundtable
discussions, shows that the CFO role is continuing to evolve with
additional responsibilities and that the global pandemic has brought
these changes on faster than expected.
To evaluate the extent of this evolution, IMA and ACCA developed six
hypotheses for participants to consider for their organisations’ CFO
roles:
- The CFO will become predominantly focused on stakeholder and investor management rather than safeguarding and reporting
- The CFO will have a leading responsibility for business strategy formulation, validation, and execution
- The focus of the role is shifting from principally historic-based cost control to growth optimisation
- The role will encompass measurement of all aspects of the strategic objectives of the organisations
- The CFO will provide the greatest value to the organisation through forward insight rather than retrospective reporting
- CFOs will increasingly have the CEO role as the next progression in their career development
‘The events of the past few months have changed several finance and
accounting fundamentals and will continue to do so, especially as it
relates to the CFO role, said Raef Lawson, Ph.D., CMA, CPA, IMA vice
president of research and policy. ‘Our research concluded that CFOs are
no longer viewed solely as finance leaders. They are being looked to for
governance and risk management, business change, business resilience,
and technology advancement.’
The survey respondents, 1,152 ACCA and IMA members, as well as global
roundtable participants that included CFOs and CEOs, saw most of the
hypotheses already enacted. Respondents most strongly agreed with the
hypothesis that CFOs will play an increasingly important role in
strategy execution. The least supported hypothesis was the career
progression of the CFO towards a CEO role; however, most felt that this
trend would increase.
Additionally, 72 percent of respondents felt that the role of the CFO
will either “increase or increase significantly” in importance over the
next three to five years. With this increased responsibility, finance
and accounting executives must focus on building a talent pipeline in
their organisations that can satisfy the needs of the future.
‘Our CFOs of today are strategic and forward-looking, and no longer
limited by their organisation’s financial agenda,” said Clive Webb, ACCA
head of business management. “They have broad agendas and are
contributing to their organisations in ways that we identified back in
2012, even during this global pandemic. Our CFOs are more well-rounded
than ever and will continue to enhance their skillsets as many take on
more responsibility and possibly become CEOs in the future.’
Other key findings in the report include:
- 82 percent of CEO respondents felt that the role of CFO would increase or significantly increase in importance
- 78 percent of respondents assessed that the ethical lens was a
differentiating factor for the CFO in comparison to other executives
- 68 percent of CEO respondents felt that people highly value the strategic insights of CFOs
© ACCA - Association of Chartered Certified Accountants
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