- Disrupting the talent and skills mix
CFOs and finance leaders surveyed say they are willing to actively disrupt the finance function’s skills mix. While core finance skills may continue to provide the foundations of the function, the research asked leaders to identify the other top two roles and skills areas that may be required for the future.
More than a quarter of respondents (27%) see a requirement for operating officers with experience in shared services, outsourcing and managed services, and close to one in five respondents (18%) see a requirement for “futurists,” including digital strategists — futurists are defined as professionals who can present scenarios of the future based on how digital technologies will develop and affect organizations and the economy.
However, building a team with diverse skills – including financial analysis, data science, and data storytelling expertise – will likely require greater focus on the talent agenda. The Global EY DNA of the CFO study found that while finance leaders see technology and data analytics as critical priorities for finance transformation, talent was seen as the least important (selected by 19% of respondents as a priority). Implementing the tools and technologies for advanced analytics may not deliver value if a finance team does not have the people who can interpret the output and translate it into insight for business leaders or external stakeholders.
At the same time, finance teams may struggle to drive value from data analytics technologies if legacy, back-office mindsets continue to dominate how people think and behave. Driving value from data analytics will likely require a willingness to experiment and collaborate. This can also require a culture that strikes a balance between risk awareness and granting the freedom and permission for finance teams to innovate and experiment with data analytics.
Finally, the ongoing skills strategy should also tackle how people keep their skills refreshed and relevant, which can be particularly important given how fast demands can change. More than half of CFOs and finance leaders (55%) say that finance people “will need to do more to embrace self-learning and continuous improvement,” if they are to keep their skills relevant.
- A more fluid operating model
CFOs and finance leaders could find it difficult to meet changing reporting demands and other expectations if their function’s operating model is too complex and fragmented, or slow to react. The research shows that CFOs and finance leaders face a range of operational delivery challenges. For example, in the Americas, the most significant issue is “we invest significant time in responding to information requests as we have no capacity for self-service reporting.”
Thinking about the ability of your finance team to respond with agility to financial and ESG information requests, what are the main operating model challenges you face?