As Preferred CFO performs speaking engagements and advisory with CEOs around the country, one of the topics we’re continually asked to address is how to evaluate the quality of a financial team. Among these is answering the question, “What makes a great CFO?”
We’ve been surprised how many companies promote a controller to the CFO title without the experience, coaching, or training that would make them great in that role. (In fact, many CEOs tell us that they’re not confident that they understand the difference between a controller and CFO).
A job title—or even a large salary—does not make a CFO great. It is the skills, experience, and tools that set a CFO apart.
Qualities & Characteristics of a Good CFO
A great CFO is distinguished by his or her experience in the field. A CFO will have high-level operational experience as well as finance experience. They will also have finely tuned skills in forward-looking strategies, modeling, leadership, and more.
Below are 9 qualities of a great CFO.
1. Forward-Looking Strategy
One of the main qualities of a great CFO is a forward-looking strategy. Accountants, bookkeepers, and controllers are tasked with record keeping. They keep the books clean and accurate while producing reports that show performance. They may also help create budgets based on historical data, but it’s important to understand that their roles are backward-facing.
Conversely, a CFO is skilled in forward-looking strategy. One of the primary tools of a CFO is a forecast. A forecast uses historical numbers, industry trends, competitor analysis, and strategic modeling to design a blueprint to help a company achieve its financial goals. It is exceptionally forward-looking, aiming to actively and strategically progress a company forward in its goals rather than to only predict and/or document that progress.
2. Acts as a Strategic Partner
More than almost any quality, a great CFO will have the ability to act as a strategic partner. This means not only providing financial data and reporting but also to be able to advise actions that will “move the needle” in a company’s progress toward its goals.
A great CFO has a well-rounded view of the company, with monitoring, insights, and strategy that reach from sales to customer service, R&D to vendor relationships. They are an integral asset to each arm of the business, helping to optimize performance and make strategic adjustments to achieve growth and optimal profitability.
As an example, a CFO will help to perform an in-depth product line analysis. For those underperforming products, they will be able to determine whether an adjustment in vendor agreements, pricing, or sales and marketing may help to improve performance, or if the product should be cut altogether.
3. Real-World Operations Experience
Unlike many financial professionals, a great CFO has real-world operations experience. This may be either in a COO role or in a mentored CFO role. This is an important distinction between inexperienced and experienced CFOs, as it allows the CFO to provide realistic strategic advisory beyond budgeting and cost cuts.
4. Significant High-Level Financial Experience
Many CFOs come into their role after being promoted from Controller to CFO in a previous company. However, in many cases, this promotion does not include a change in expertise, coaching, or mentorship. If your CFO made this transition long ago, they would likely have developed this high-level financial experience over time. However, if your CFO is relatively new to the financial industry, has only recently been promoted to CFO, or—worse—if you have promoted a previous controller to CFO, you may be missing out on much-needed experience.
Not all CFOs are created equally. If you do have a new or inexperienced CFO, mentorship from a highly qualified CFO can help your new CFO increase their competencies. However, if you’re deciding between an inexperienced full-time CFO and a highly experienced part-time CFO, it is in almost every instance more beneficial to rely on the latter.
5. Advanced Modeling Tools
There are many financial tools used by financial experts, including balance sheets, income statements, cash flow, profit margins, and EBITDA. Most also include budget-to-actual reporting. However, a great CFO has many more modeling tools to use. This includes short-term (3-month), mid-term (12-month rolling), and long-term (5-year) forecasts. It should also include tools such as:
- Contribution margin analysis
- Breakeven analysis
- Product line analysis
- Revenue bridge analysis
- Pro forma cap table & liquidation
These documents help to advise more advanced financial strategies.
6. High-Quality Relationships
Another quality great CFOs bring to the table is a network of high-quality relationships. In the financial world, relationships can have a big impact on the success of the company. This is true in situations such as lending, investing, improving vendor relationships and contracts, etc.
In recent months, we’ve also seen how these relationships affected a company’s ability to get COVID-19 stimulus funding faster and more successfully than less-connected finance and business professionals.
A good network is a sign of an experienced CFO, while a weak or nonexistent network is often a sign of a less experienced one.
7. Strong Leadership
A great CFO will not only have strong financial skills but will also have excellent leadership skills. Many finance professionals have a reputation for being soft-spoken. However, a CFO should be able to lead their financial team as well as to provide guidance to the operations team.
A great CFO should be able to make data-backed strategic suggestions and to be able to carry those strategies out.
8. Well-Rounded Industry Insights
While it’s not imperative that a CFO have direct industry experience in your field, it is certainly helpful. This helps the CFO have a frame of reference when comparing analytics. It also often means the CFO is more likely to have industry contacts, competitive analysis, industry benchmarks, and more.
9. Expert Financial Team
One of the final important qualities of a great CFO is to have an expert financial team supporting them. CFOs are expensive—and for good reason. They should not be performing lower-level tasks like payroll, end-of-month close, or preparing financial statements. If they are, the company is wasting time and money.
A great CFO should have an expert financial team behind them. This team should be producing financial reports and functions in a timely, accurate manner—supervised by the CFO. The CFO will be able to use these reports as a base for developing financial strategies, assessing risk, progressing the company toward its goals.
Help Me Assess My Financial Team
Are you unsure about the capabilities of your financial team? Preferred CFO is happy to help you do a financial team analysis to discuss your team’s strengths and potential areas for improvement. Request a financial team analysis by reaching out to Preferred CFO today.
You may also be interested in…
Mad Business Lessons to Learn in March
From competition to leadership, many lessons can be learned from participating in sports. March Madness is a particularly unique time where teams are pushed to their limits with stakes get higher and higher. Coaches spend hours reviewing film and strategizing new and...
3 Ways to Recognize & Utilize Internal Synergies
Recognizing synergies can make a remarkable difference for your business. The idea behind synergy is that one plus one no longer equals two, but now equals three or more. You’ll also hear the economic term “economies of scale,” which happens when potential output...
4 Lessons from Warren Buffet on Investing
The Oracle of Omaha and CEO of holding company Berkshire Hathaway has been observed and idolized perhaps more than anyone in the finance community. With an average annual return of 19% over the Treasury rate and a personal sharpe ratio that is higher than all U.S....
Focus On Creating Customer Value
About a year ago I asked the founder of a very successful start-up in Utah how he had positioned his company in comparison to the competition. His response was instructive; he said that they hadn’t focused on the competition much at all, but on the value their...
3 Tips for Building an All-Star Management Team
A recent Stanford Business School journal article points out the importance of a good management team to investors, “Venture capitalists consistently emphasize the importance of the management team in an entrepreneurial venture and focus much of their due diligence on...
The Google Approach: Promoting Innovation Through Culture
Google’s Policies Google’s business model has hinged on their ability to constantly innovate. When Larry Page and Sergey Brin founded the tech company, they noticed that their best ideas didn’t come as they worked hours and hours alone at the desks, but as they talked...
Drastic Performance Differences a Mission Statement Can Make – As Observed by an Outside CFO
A mission statement is a formal summary of the aims and values of a company, organization, or individual. Think of your mission statement as your business model, summarized into a few sentences. Anyone can write something down and title it their mission statement, but...
Three Ways Growth Can Make or Break Your Company
How you manage your growth is a vital ingredient to your company’s future success. A balance needs to be struck between keeping the engine going and too much growth; and yes, there is such a thing as too much growth. In this post I'm going to explain three ways to...
Using Leverage to Your Advantage Without Getting in Too Deep
The leverage decision is an important one that can have far-reaching consequences. The most basic leverage ratio is debt/equity and measures what percentage of your assets is financed with debt. The most fundamental advantage of using leverage is that it boosts...
Is There Sufficient Demand to Invest?
I’ve seen many business owners who are ready to grow and expand their business in their existing business or into new product lines or markets but aren’t sure if there is enough demand for their increased investment. Understanding the level of demand in your industry...
A Little-Known Secret to a Larger Bottom Line…
The Boston Consulting Group did a study of the cash conversion cycles of 122 fast-moving-consumer-goods companies from 2006 through 2009, and the results were incredible: by simply being more efficient with their inventory and receivable cycles, they estimated savings...
Equity Financing 101 – Explained
The realm of equity can get very complicated and is rarely as straightforward as debt financing. It is a critical alternative to debt, however, and deserves careful consideration. Most small business owners will hear that debt is a better form of financing because you...