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March 22, 2016 By Samuel Dergel 1 Comment

A CFO Success Story: Vinay Mehra, CFO of POLITICO

Vinay Mehra

Vinay Mehra – CFO of POLITCO

The following is from an interview with Vinay Mehra. Vinay became CFO of POLITICO in November 2015. Previously, Mehra served as Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of the PBS/NPR media organization WGBH, as announced in CFO Moves. This interview was edited for clarity.

Samuel: You’ve embarked on a new role. Why is this exciting for you?

Vinay: The primary reason I came to Politico is because they have built a new business model. I love going into businesses that are creating and inventing new business models. Politico has redefined how to make money in the media business without just being dependent on the advertising side of it. That’s something that really attracted me– they not only created a new business model, but they are also hugely successful in this new business model, and I want to be part of that.

  • Quick Takes from Vinay Mehra on…

    What makes a good CFO?

    CFOs often forget that we are story tellers. And we need to tell a story with the numbers. We need to overlay the non-financial data with the financial data to complete the picture.

    Underappreciated skillsetThe most underappreciated skillset in finance is the cost-accounting mindset. Once you have a good understanding of true cost, and once you figure out how much of that is the standard cost, it becomes easier to manage and scale a business.

    Not-for-profits

    I find it very fulfilling. One tends to forget, in life, we all have the responsibility to give back to society. Whether it be money, or donating your time and skillset to a needy organization.

    Working with a millennial workforce

    This work force wants constant change and they’re not willing to stay with the status quo. Therefore they are constantly adopting new technologies, or adapting to new way of doing things.

    Importance of good HR

    The biggest assets here are the people. I really feel that HR is probably the most strategic department of this company. And that is where we have to make the investments.

    Something to remember

    The CFO is, in a way, the chief sales person. He is the one who sets the tone of what the organization is doing. He needs to keep providing a positive spin on how the business is doing. To be able to tell people the story even in the worst situation. He not only has to be a fabulous story teller, but also has to be a great sales person.

 

Samuel: You’ve had a good long run from your previous experience, in more of a television environment. And now you’re taking that to a new and exciting “new media” environment. What perspectives are you bringing to this new business from your years at WGBH?

Vinay: The first thing I can think of is that the most underappreciated skillset in finance is the cost-accounting mindset. The media business is heavily capital intensive. Having to understand the cost is really important. And thanks to my experience in accounting for 10 years, I had alot of clients – manufacturing clients, tech clients – one of the things they taught me was the concept of cost-accounting. Once you have a very good understanding of true cost, and once you can figure out how much of that cost is a standard cost, it make it much easier to manage and scale a business – rather than just focusing top line goals which is just the revenue side of it. And I think what TV broadcasting taught me is – that it is a business which is hugely capital intensive. For example, if we had 5 to 10 million dollars to make a TV show, we would have a very robust cost-accounting system. We would knew down to the penny, and down to an invoice, what everything was being spent on. And for which episode. So taking some of that same discipline is what I inherited from my experiences in the broadcast side of things and brought it into the “new media” side of things. And that was pretty hard to do – because you’ll have journalists writing their stories, and then they’re putting up their stories up on websites, or newspapers. And then you have to figure out how that translates to revenue – which are the stories that are actually driving traffic to the website, which are the stories that are driving revenue. And then figuring out the cost allocation system. So I think that going from old media to new media is where I found the benefit of having the ability to build a true-cost evaluating system.

On the revenue side, there is alot more diversity in the revenue field; more in new media than there is in the ‘traditional’ media space. Because the new media companies treat content as information, they don’t treat it as just content. The content that’s on the website should be driven by analytics. And they should decide what really makes sense to put on the website. But more importantly, let’s not just treat it as entertainment, let’s treat it as information. So there’s the mindset of it being an information company instead of being just a media company.

Samuel: What do you think makes you a good CFO?

Vinay: I think there are 2 kinds of CFO – there are CFOs who are very financial focused, and then there are CFOs like myself – CFOs who blend the financial and the non-financial data. What I have found in my career, what has made me successful is the fact that I am able to overlay the non-financial data with the financial data itself. So I can tell a story around what exactly is happening. And in every financial function I’ve had a small group of people doing data analytics. But they’re putting non-financial data and they’re trying to see if it tells a story. I think very often we CFOs forget that we are story tellers. And we need to tell a story with these numbers. Just by looking at the numbers it’s hard to tell a story, unless you have the non-financial information to overlay to show if there is some kind of a trend; or to show what is driving those financial numbers. So I would say that I am very much one of those people who loves to tell the stories behind the financial and the non-financial data.

Samuel: I also see that in your career you’ve been very involved in not-for-profits. How has that helped you?

Vinay: I think it’s very fulfilling. To be honest with you – one tends to forget, in life, we all have the responsibility to give back to society. And I personally found it very fulfilling to be involved in different causes – to give back to my city, my town, to my local cultural institution. And that’s one thing I would encourage everyone to try to do. It’s less about being on another board, its more about feeling how I’m able to give back. And giving back doesn’t necessarily need to be about giving money – it could be about giving your skillset, and your guidance to these organizations who don’t have allot of sophisticated management skills. They have a mission, and as long as you are in mind with the mission, you can help in many different ways. Helping to make it successful and running it like a business. Even a not-for-profit has to be run like a business and sometimes they lack the skillset. For me it was something very fulfilling, and something I’m glad I got involved with.

Samuel: And how did that benefit you? What impact did it have on you as a professional and as a CFO?

Vinay: Sometimes, as a CFO, you tend to look at things are pretty black and white. Things are just numbers. But when you get involved with a non-profit, the thing that I’ve come to appreciate is – sometimes, when you are making an investment, you don’t have a true ROI, from a financial perspective. But you will have ROI from a human impact. Or from the bigger benefit of the people, or of this country. For example – when I was in WGBH, very often we needed  build TV shows and I would say “hey – no one is ever going to buy this show, no one is ever going to agree to do a big sponsorship for it”. And while that’s true, someone needs to tell the story of lack of diversity, or to tell the story of some other area which nobody else is willing to put the money in to do, because they don’t see the financial ROI on it. But we have a responsibility to tell that story. So we’ll spend money on it because that’s really our core mission is – to educate people. So I would say it’s given me the appreciation to understand that sometimes in business you will make an investment in something that may not have a true ROI, but there will be other ways to measure ROI beyond the financial terms of things.

Samuel: What was most surprising for you when you showed up at Politico?

Vinay: The energy and the passion around their mission of providing political information to their audiences. They are all uniformly passionate about this subject. You know, it’s not often you walk into a business where everybody – from the administrative assistants, to the help in the kitchen – are all uniformly passionate about this stuff. It’s amazing. And it make everything alot easier, because everyone is aligned with the mission. Everybody is very passionate about what difference they want to make.

And the second thing – which came as a bit of a surprise for me – was the millennium demographic, which is a large proportion of our employee base – between 25 to 28. They’re working at a much faster pace than you or I do! And I love working fast and changing things, but this work force wants constant change and they’re not willing to stay with the status quo. Therefore they are constantly adopting new technologies, or adapting to new way of things. And they crave it, and they keep pushing for it. This has been a big surprise for me, coming from big corporations where change is so hard, and it’s so hard to get people on board, or to follow new ways of doing things.

Samuel: It must be a big change, coming from NPR-type of background, where you were truly middle-aged, taking a look at everyone around you. Coming from an environment where you were one of the younger ones, to an environment where you’re one of the older ones.

Vinay: Yes – and the other thing is I think their desire and energy for staying in the forefront of technology and processes – it’s in their DNA. You don’t have to tell these people – they live this every day – how can we do things better. They’re built this way. And I think some of it is maybe because you don’t have the luggage of a traditional media company and all the headaches of running a traditional media company. But this is a company that continues to innovate every day. In every way – from how to come up with new revenue ways, to how can we become more efficient to how to use new technology. It’s just blowing me away. And it’s very refreshing to be an environment like this.

Samuel: And how does that translate for your finance team?

Vinay: That’s where I would say I have work to do. Because the rest of the organization is so forward thinking that my finance team hasn’t kept pace, with their level of change. In some ways I think the finance team got comfortable with the old ways of doing things. As if it’s the only way to be doing things

Samuel: So what are you doing to put change into a finance group that needs to be changed a little bit?

Vinay: The first thing I’ve done is to physically relocate people from my finance team into business groups. The people who do invoicing and billings and collection for my ad business used to sit in finance, in a central location, and I’ve taken them out of there and said go sit in the unit. Go sit in the business. Go see what they do every day and be part of their workflow, instead of sitting separated on a different floor and communicating through emails. I think that’s given them a sense of appreciation how the business operated, that they never knew before.

Secondly, substituting some of the skill sets that are lacking on the team, I bring in new people. For instance, somebody with more experience and or somebody who is an expert in certain areas is going to have expertise in their DNA of the finance function and will be able to figure it out as they go along. Which works to a certain point, but then a lack of knowledge and a lack of expertise because of the hindrance.

And the third thing is technology. They are very advanced with leveraging and using technology here. And because of that, the business units have gone off and made selections of technology products to streamline their operations and their processes. And on the back end of things you have finance working on QuickBooks because they haven’t kept pace with the evolution and change that has happened in the business.

Samuel: What are you ultimately responsible for, at Politico?

Vinay: I have Finance, I have HR, and I have Operations. I have pretty much ALL the business operations of the business. Basically all the non-editorial side of things.

Samuel: Have you always had HR responsibility?

Vinay: I have. In different forms. In WGBH I had business managers in HRO sitting in the business units, who reported to me. So yes, I’ve always had some HR responsibility. Planning, strategy, all those groups reported up to me

Samuel: How does it feel to be responsible for human resources in an environment that’s growing, dynamic and where culture is a key part of the talent pool?

Vinay: To be honest – the biggest assets here are the people. They don’t really have any physical assets here. And so preserving that asset base is extremely critical, for the organization. And we are thinking about additional approaches – until now we took for granted that we’ll have 20-30% turnover and keep hiring new people. My philosophy is we need to find a better way of keeping this from happening instead of constantly dealing with this turnover. And I get excited about the fact that I can help influence and be a caretaker of the culture of the organization. I feel that it’s a great opportunity for the organization to be able get what they are looking for, from a cultural perspective. Sometimes I feel that an HR reports directly to the CEO of an organization, and they tend to take a more of an administrative function. I really feel that HR is very strategic and probably is the most strategic department of this company. And we have to make the investments here. This is where we need to put the most focus – to help make sure that we can keep our employees.

Samuel: What advice would you give to someone in finance that’s trying to work their way up and wants to become successful in their career? Advice that you wish someone would have told you?

Vinay: I would say that having an understanding of the numbers and the context of the business, the strategy of the business is extremely critical in this day and age to be a successful CFO. Early in my career, when I was in accounting, I think the reason why I was so successful with my clients is because I was able to focus on their business problems, not just their financial problems. Additionally, in some ways the CFO is also kind of the chief sales person. He is the one who sets the tone of what the organization is doing. He needs to keep providing a positive spin on how the business is doing. To be able to tell people the story even in the worst situation. And so what tends to sometimes happen is that we forget that we have the DNA of a sales-person. We need to use that. Whether we are talking to our salary employees, or if we’re talking in external shareholders or investors. And I feel that anyone who wants to grow their career in a finance perspective, not only has to be a fabulous story teller, but also has to be a sales person.

+++++++

A CFO Success Story is a feature of Samuel’s CFO Blog, where Samuel Dergel follows up on his book, Guide to CFO Success, speaking with CFOs featured in CFO Moves and CFO Moves Canada, Samuel’s popular and comprehensive weekly report on CFO Movement across the USA and Canada.

Filed Under: CFO Moves, CFO Success Story, Great CFO, New CFO, POLITICO, The Fresh CFO, Vinay Mehra

January 28, 2015 By Samuel Dergel 1 Comment

Analytics, Shmanalytics? Why the CFO should care

The office and the role of the Chief Financial Officer continues to evolve.

This evolution may cause apprehension in some seasoned CFOs. These experienced financial executives feel this way because, in part, they have worked very hard to get to where they are. They believe that their past experience and success should speak to their future opportunities.

Yet for any executive, especially one in the finance side of the business, resting on your laurels is so 1980s.

The world is changing at a rapid pace, and the business world is either leading this change or trying hard to stay ahead. Organizations that do not continue to stay relevant wither up and disappear into obscurity. Ditto for CFOs.

Cindy Kraft, a CFO career coach, works with CFOs who want to stay ahead of the curve in their career. I like her work, and am always happy to refer senior finance executives to her. As a fellow blogger, she and I agree most of the time. In recent posts (here and here) she discusses technology and its relevance to CFO careers.

The statistics from Cindy’s questions on whether technology should be in the domain of Finance is interesting. I believe the results would be more telling if there was corresponding information on company size. From my experience, companies of a smaller size have CFOs responsible for IT, while larger companies have an executive in charge of Technology.

From my vantage point, CFOs who are able to stay ahead of the changes in the business world, including technology, are able to continue to stay relevant and add value.

So why does Analytics matter to the CFO?

In my book, Guide to CFO Success, I ask and answer “What is a Chief Financial Officer?” in the first chapter (you can preview a copy of Chapter One here). To summarize, I say that a CFO is a Strategist, Leader and Advisor.

Corporate value comes from making great decisions. Decisions based on analysis rather than gut is where Finance and the CFO have the ability to make a difference at the executive table. Technology is just a tool that helps intelligent people make great decisions.

CFOs need to be a Strategists, Leaders and Advisors to their businesses. If a CFO is not helping the company make decisions and adding value to the organization, they are not a Strategist, not a Leader and not an Advisor. In essence, they are not a real CFO.

To continue to be a real Chief Financial Officer today, you need to be able to help your organization make the best decisions possible.

The term Big Data has been bandied about as the cure-all for corporations. Technology vendors are very happy to use the term to get attention and their portion of corporate spending. But data itself is not enough, no matter how big the data is.

The Data Value Chain illustrates that data is only the beginning. It is the usable information that is pulled from this data, viewed through the lens of intelligence, either human or artificial (or both), that wisdom can be obtained.

As CFO, it is your duty to provide wisdom to your organization. This wisdom will lead to the creation of corporate value. Analytics is the point where you turn all that data into valuable decisions.

If you’re not providing the wisdom you would like (or think that you should) to the rest of the business, understand why that is.

Is it because…

  • You do not have the tools?
  • You do not have the people? Or,
  • You do not know where to start?

As CFO, no one expects you to be intimately aware of the available tools and be able to analyse this yourself. However, as CFO, you are only as good as your finance team allows you to be.

As CFO, no one expects you to choose the right analytical tools by yourself. As CFO, no one expects you alone to do the analysis necessary to come to great decisions. However, as CFO, you need to make sure your team can support you in this value added activity. As CFO, understand the power of these tools and information yourself of what they can do. Then you need to guide, lead and develop the team necessary to do so.

I had the pleasure of meeting RK Paleru at the AICPA CFO Conference last May. RK is the Analytics guru (Executive Director, Systems Analytics and Insights Group) to the CFO at George Washington University.

RK blogged about an article I shared with him about the idea of companies hiring a Chief Analytics Officer. While I do not think that most companies are ready to create another seat at the executive table, I do think that Analytics can add tremendous value to the executive table. I am certain that the CFO of GWU thinks that the analytics that RK does bring tremendous value to the CFO, as well as adding significant value to the institution and its mission.

Anders Liu-Lindberg wrote recently about his take on Analytics within the finance function. Anders, from where he sits in his role as Regional Finance Business Partner at Maersk Line, sees corporate value ONLY IF the talent team is built properly within finance is able to partner with the generalist functions. Finance should act as a true business partner to the business, helping make decisions at all levels of the business.

CFOs who do not continue to improve, change and learn will, as mentioned earlier, wither. Resting on laurels is career limiting.

If, as CFO, your response to “Analytics” is “Analytics, Shmanalytics”, you’re not only missing the boat, you’re doing a disservice to your employer and your team.

To remain CFO, both today and tomorrow, both within your company and at your next employer, understand the power of Analytics. Then, ensure you develop and nurture a finance team that can give you the wisdom to help your company make great decisions.

Filed Under: Anders Liu-Lindberg, Books, Books, books for CFOs, books for CFOs, Build your Finance Team, Build your Finance Team, Career Management, CFO Poll, Chief Financial Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Cindy Kraft, CIO, Financial Executive Coaching, Guide to CFO Success, Guide to CFO Success, How Samuel Helps, How Samuel Helps, Leadership, Personal Branding, RK Paleru, Speaking and Training, Speaking and Training, Talent Management, Talent Management, Wiley, Wiley

October 5, 2011 By Samuel Dergel 4 Comments

New CFOs and the Entrepreneurial CEO – How to make it work

I have been privy to viewing (from near and far) many successful entrepreneurial businesses over the last 20 years. I have always been fascinated by how one person (or a small group of people) can create an amazing business out of nothing. It takes a certain type of individual to have the motivation, drive and skills to be a successful entrepreneur.

I have also seen many entrepreneurial companies reach a ceiling on their growth potential. The management structure and style that has made them the success they have become can no longer support continued growth without a radical change in how the company is run.

This inflection point is where it can continue its growth and success.

Or it can all fall apart.

It is at this time that the Entrepreneurial CEO, driven by his or her own logic or by outside forces (usually external investors), understands that he or she needs to hire a Real CFO.

I have been called in to situations like this to help with the CFO Search. The biggest challenge CEOs face at this inflection point is emotional, not logical.

A recent article by Alix Stuart in CFO.com called How to Avoid Power-Hungry Bosses discusses this issue, and provides a 7 point check list on how to avoid a “Control Freak CEO.”

From my vantage point, the challenge for CFOs as they assess new and exciting opportunities is more than just avoiding difficult situations. The challenge is: How does a new CFO “make it work” with an Entrepreneurial CEO on the cusp of major change?

In essence, the company needs to be ready for a Real CFO. For an outside CFO candidate on the verge of accepting an offer from a growing company, this is difficult to assess.

The Question for the incoming CFO is: Are they ready for a Real CFO?

The Question for the Entrepreneurial CEO is: Are we ready for a Real CFO?

For companies facing this important point in their growth, I always recommend our CFO Readiness Program.

You can learn more about our CFO Readiness Program by reading our blog – CEO and Investors: Are you ready for your First CFO?

If you are a New CFO getting ready for (or having just started) a new role in a growth company with an Entrepreneurial CEO at the helm, you need to learn more about how this CFO Readiness Program will help you help your new company.

If you are an Entrepreneurial CEO that knows you will be facing an uphill battle in the move towards a more corporate structure, our CFO Readiness Program will equip you and your entire team to make the shift with more impact and less pain.

If you are an Investor in (or on the Board of) an Entrepreneurial Growth Company on the cusp of change, investing in CFO Readiness will take the guessing out of making the shift to the more corporate environment that will make you sleep better at night.

So, how does a New CFO “make it work” with an Entrepreneurial CEO on the cusp of major change? With the CFO Readiness Program.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

September 9, 2011 By Samuel Dergel Leave a Comment

Become a Better CFO: Be on Trend. Create your own Luck.

I received this video in my email yesterday, and I wanted to share it with you. I was fortunate to be attending a conference in May 2010 where Mike Lipkin was the keynote speaker.

[Sidenote: I have always been skeptical of Motivational Speakers. It was never my style. But I ended up in a room with Mike Lipkin and he is one person I thank for making the changes in my life and career that has brought me here today].

If you are the kind of person that does not like motivational speakers – do not watch the video.

If you are the kind of person that likes to hear new ideas, be current, and are open to change and improvement, go ahead and listen.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NT1Y8hed0K4]

Based on the research done by Mr. Lipkin’s company, Environics Lipkin, Mike explains these seven powerful and current trends that have the ability to make you a Better CFO.

    1. Instrospection and empathy.
    2. New social responsibility and community involvement
    3. Social learning and cultural fusion.
    4. Vitality and effort for health.
    5. Rejection of authority and support for government.
    6. Equality of the sexes.
    7. Pursuit of originality.

If any of these trends interest you and you would like to understand them better, watch the video.

Do any of these apply to you?

Can you be on Trend?

Will following any of these trends help make you a Better CFO?

As Mike says “You may be the one that others have been waiting for.”

Filed Under: Better CFO, Better CFO, Better CFO, Board, Board, Board, Board, CEO, CEO, CEO, CEO, CFO Coach, CFO Coach, CFO Coach, CFO Coaching, CFO Coaching, CFO Coaching, Courage, Courage, Courage, Executive Coaching, Executive Coaching, Executive Coaching, Mike Lipkin, Motivation, Training and Development, Training and Development, Training and Development, Training and Development, Trends, Youtube

September 7, 2011 By Samuel Dergel 6 Comments

CEO and Investors: Are you ready for your First CFO?

Companies in growth mode face great challenges. One of the biggest challenges a growing company faces is bringing in their first Real CFO.

In a previous post we reviewed an article written by Emily Chasen in the WSJ CFO Journal about how More Companies are Ready for their First CFO.

A growing company built on entrepreneurial spirit can only continue to grow so far on that spirit alone. At a critical juncture in the life of a growing business, it needs to make a transition from decisions made by the entrepreneur alone to a dynamic team that works on a business model of delegation of responsibility and co-operation between interests within the company.

This is an inflection point for many successful growth companies — when a CFO is recruited because the management disciplines that grew the enterprise to its current state will not be enough to take it to the next level.

Intellectually, the CEO and other key managers may know things need to change.  But that doesn’t mean they’ll be comfortable with a CFO who asks tougher questions, instills new disciplines or has a fiduciary responsibility to the investors as well as a loyalty to the management team.

So, what is the answer?  How do you strengthen CFO readiness when the next level of success takes people out of their comfort zones?  Courage.

That’s why we developed our CFO Readiness Program in conjunction with Dr. Merom Klein & Dr. Louise Klein, leaders of the Courage Institute.

The Courage Institute wrote the book on The Courage to Act — about 5 Courage Factors that equip effective leaders to challenge the status quo, champion new possibilities and get traction on breakthrough ideas and improvements. This is the foundation of the CFO Readiness Program.

The CFO Readiness Program is an assessment, feedback and action planning program that works to equip  the entire executive team to:

    • Strengthen and align your veteran executives — so they have the courage to welcome new thought-leadership and collaboration
    • Clarify your wish-list of expectations and priorities for the new CFO
    • Prepare for healthy debates and challenges to “the way we have done things here” as the new CFO identifies new opportunities
    • Equip the new CFO to conduct an independent assessment of your enterprise’s infrastructure, financial well-being and resources
    • Ensure career paths and mentoring opportunities for the finance executives who brought the enterprise to its current level
    • Identify fears, sensitivities and bridge-building that the new CFO could face — and ways to build courage to lift performance
    • Lift courage to embrace and accelerate change to get traction on new metrics, new ways of working and new ways to ensure regulatory compliance and good investor/board relations
    • Identify debates, deferred decisions and risk factors that the new CFO will face — and the input desired from the new CFO
    • See how to move past rivalries, turf-issues, personality clashes and other fear-inducing courage inhibitors that can reduce luminary efficiency at the executive and middle management levels
    • Invite scrutiny and transparency to sharpen up team thinking
    • Navigate matrix structures, networks and alliances — where it is not clear “who is in charge” or “who settles which debates”
    • Overcome fear and reluctance — as veteran members of the executive team are asked for courage to share decision-making discretion and authority with a new CFO

To receive a copy of our brochure and find out more about how our CFO Readiness Program can help your company, please complete this form:

[contact-form subject=”CFO Readiness Program” to=”[email protected]”] [contact-field label=”Name” type=”name” required=”true” /] [contact-field label=”Email” type=”email” required=”true” /] [contact-field label=”Position” type=”text” required=”true” /] [contact-field label=”Company” type=”text” required=”true” /] [contact-field label=”City” type=”text” required=”true” /] [contact-field label=”State / Province” type=”text” /] [contact-field label=”Country” type=”text” required=”true” /] [contact-field label=”Phone Number” type=”text” required=”true” /] [/contact-form]

Filed Under: Assessment, Assessment, CFO Compensation, CFO Readiness Program, CFO Readiness Program, Finance Team, Finance Team, Finance Team, First CFO, First CFO, Hire your Next CFO, Hire your Next CFO, Hire your Next CFO, Hire your Next CFO, Investors, Investors, IPO, IPO, LinkedIn, OnBoarding, Onboarding, Onboarding, PE, PE, Private Equity, Private Equity, Public Company, Public Company, Team Structuring, Team Structuring, Team Structuring, VC, VC, Venture Capital, Venture Capital

September 6, 2011 By Samuel Dergel Leave a Comment

New Survey: CFOs and their relationship with Sales

The Roadmap to Successful CFO Relationships shows the relationships that a CFO needs to manage well to ensure their success.

One relationship that CFOs have that has the potential for differences and difficulties is the relationship between Finance and Sales.

The Sales Department is the lifeblood of a company (no Revenue = no business) and Finance is a support function (albeit an important one). A Strong and Successful company needs to have Finance and Sales working together well.

With this context in mind, our new survey for CFOs: Your Relationship with the Sales Department is now ready for your input.

Go ahead, answer our survey and share your point of view on the subject.

I’m looking forward to sharing insights from these results with you soon.

Samuel

Filed Under: All of Samuel's Blogs, All of Samuel's Blogs, All of Samuel's Blogs, All of Samuel's Blogs, All of Samuel's Blogs, All of Samuel's Blogs, All of Samuel's Blogs, CFO, CFO, CFO, CFO, CFO, CFO, CFO, CFO Consulting, CFO Consulting, CFO Consulting, CFO Consulting, CFO Relationships, CFO Relationships, CFO Relationships, CFO Relationships, CFO Search, CFO Search, CFO Search, CFO Search, Sales Department, Successful CFO, Successful CFO, Successful CFO, Successful CFO, Successful CFO, Survey

August 3, 2011 By Samuel Dergel Leave a Comment

How you answer this question defines whether you are a Real CFO.

I’m about to upset some of you. It’s not intentional – I am trying to make a point.

The word CFO is overused by many people – by business owners, CEOs, boards, and recruiters. In too many instances, the position that many people call CFO is nothing more than a Controller or Chief Accountant.

CFOs are senior financial managers who work with the CEO and other executives within the company to make business decisions. CFOs do this with information provided to them by the team that they lead.

I have heard the argument that smaller businesses do not have the depth or resources for such a CFO, and their most senior financial person is designated as the CFO. I’m not saying every business needs a Real CFO, but a person doing the accounting as a part of their required tasks is NOT a CFO. Smaller businesses may need a CFO, and there are businesses and professionals that provide excellent Part-Time CFO services to these companies.

So, what is the one question that defines whether you are a Real CFO or not?

Answer this question in the affirmative, and it’s a good chance you’re a Real CFO.

Do you earn more than a $250,000 package annually?

(Caveat: This amount applies in the USA and Canada and may need to be adjusted lower or higher based on cost of living situations which vary from place to place. This amount is a number chosen to reflect my general statement. It does not mean you are making too little, or too much.)

Are you a Real CFO? Do you have a Real CFO working for you?

Filed Under: The Strong CFO, The Strong CFO

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