Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail

CFOs are high-level, strategic experts who optimize financial resources in a company while using those resources to achieve company goals more efficiently and effectively.

Unlike bookkeepers, controllers, and accountants whose primary functions are rear-facing, tracking and reporting on month-to-month financial performance, a CFO’s value is in forward-facing strategic finance. CFOs look to the short- and long-term future to make course adjustments that maximize company performance and value.

At Preferred CFO, we tell our clients that a CFO is an investment. How, then, does a CFO provide tangible ROI?

How CFOs Add Value

While lower-level financial experts such as bookkeepers and accountants work along the same lines to achieve the same goal (GAAP recordkeeping), CFOs can be much different in the strategies they use to drive value. However, all of these strategies are aimed toward a similar goal of optimizing company performance and profitability, maximizing existing and potential resources, and increasing the efficiency and efficacy with which a company achieves its goals.

Driving Financial Strategy

The biggest value a CFO offers is elevating a company’s financial strategy.

We know that finances are the lifeblood of a business, but too often, they are a subconscious reflex (like breathing) in a company as opposed to a consciously harnessed asset. Some companies without CFOs also make the mistake of seeing finances in a binary way (e.g., “Need more money? Sell more widgets.”).

A CFO takes critical, conscientious control of a company’s finances to transform them into a more effective asset for the company. Because of their financial and operational expertise, a CFO can offer nuanced strategies that reduce COGS, improve profit margins, maximize funding/lending programs and opportunities, optimize cash flow, and more.

Creating Financial Forecasting

Forecasting is one of the most influential tools in a CFO’s arsenal and, arguably, brings the most value to a company. A financial forecast is a detailed short- or long-term plan based on educated historical performance and industry trends that advises the month-by-month financial decisions that will lead a company from where it is now to where it wants to go.

Having a financial forecast is like having a blueprint to build a house instead of trying to build the house with an idea of how you want it to look in the end but no specific instructions about how to get there. A financial forecast can reduce wasted spend, accelerate progress, and maximize the possibility for success.

Establishing Financial Visibility

A CFO will also help your company establish better financial visibility. This includes improving processes for better, more accurate recordkeeping. The value of this financial visibility is having cleaner, more attractive books for capital raises or transactions that require due diligence, having a more straightforward path for achieving your goals, and having a clearer view of your financial performance to better inform strategic decisions.

Improving Cash Flow

Your CFO will take control of your cash flow to optimize your current assets and reduce unnecessary spending. This includes creating a cash flow forecast that will tell you where to expect cash to come or go—and when. It will also help your CFO analyze where money is being spent and to make adjustments to reduce unnecessary expenses.

Increasing Profit Margin

Another way a CFO adds value to a company is by increasing profit margins wherever possible. This means analyzing inventory strategy, reducing expenses, renegotiating contracts with vendors, adjusting pricing, and providing informed decision-making regarding sales or special offers. These tools, as well as industry knowledge and competitive analysis, give your CFO the opportunity to help increase profits without having to necessarily sell more.

Product Line Optimization

A CFO can also provide product line analysis and optimization. From the Pareto principle, we know that 80% of sales tend to come from 20% of your products. You probably know which of your products or services generate the most revenue, but do you know where the rest stand? A CFO will help analyze whether any products or services are less-profitable—or worse, have a negative profit—and determine next steps to resolve the issue or minimize negative impact to help your company run more efficiently.

Raising Capital

CFOs can also provide capital by assisting in and executing capital raises. We know it generally takes money to make money, but the amount of money you raise and the mix of debt and equity financing can make a difference to your long-term success. For instance, too much equity financing can dilute shareholder value, and too much debt financing can create unnecessary debt and interest burdens.It is some founders’ instinct to raise as much capital as possible when they are strapped for funds. However, a CFO will use financial forecasting and modeling to ensure the decisions for how much and from where are as informed as possible.

In addition, a CFO can help create a more positive financing experience by having the necessary documents in place for any due diligence, reviewing and negotiating terms, and providing financial expertise to founders, lenders, and/or investors.

Preparing for a Successful Exit

Finally, CFOs can also bring value to a company by strengthening their end game. Most founders have a goal of eventually exiting their companies, whether that’s through a strategic succession plan, a sale, or a merger. CFOs discuss this goal with stakeholders and help to devise a financial strategy to best help achieve it.

A CFO will also help in providing necessary financial documents and reports, analyzing offers, overseeing due diligence, attending shareholder meetings, and negotiating contracts.

Final Thoughts

The value a CFO provides a company ultimately depends on his/her experience and background. Finding a CFO with significant c-suite/operational expertise conducive to your industry, stage of growth, and company goals can maximize the value you receive from your CFO.

About the Author

Jill Tavey CFO at Preferred CFO

Jill Tavey

CFO

Jill Tavey is an experienced outsourced CFO with over a decade of high-level financial expertise and experience. Her ability to negotiate, make and maintain key relationships, and shape strategic direction has helped propel multiple companies through significant growth.

You may also be interested in...

5 Great Ways to Advertise On a Budget

While Preferred CFO isn’t an advertising agency, we work with many as clients and are used to working with non-agency clients to project ROI metrics on current and future advertising campaigns. A thoughtful approach to advertising can help increase the chances of...

5 Leadership Techniques to Help a Struggling Business

The real challenge to any business leader doesn’t appear when things are going well, but rather when things turn ugly. It doesn't do anyone any good if you the leader loses control, blames others, or even works excessive long hours to cover their uncertainty of what /...

Nail It, then Scale It

Nail It, then Scale It One of my acquaintances is a successful entrepreneur in Utah who struggled in one of his first businesses. The business was a networking platform. It was intended for use by businesses to connect with customers and suppliers. As the business...

The Importance of a Devil’s Advocate

The Importance of a Devil’s Advocate The 2013 movie World War Z starring Brad Pitt describes Israel as having something called the tenth man rule. An Israeli official explains to Pitt's character Gerry Lane that after the Yom Kippur War took Israeli leaders by...

3 Politically Economic Reasons to Hire a Financial Analyst

3 Politically Economic Reasons to Hire a Financial Analyst A recession can put anyone out of business. All business owners know that the broader economy in which they operate could betray them at any time. Understanding the direction and impact of potential economic...

4 Ways to Differentiate Your Product or Service

4 Ways to Differentiate Your Product or Service In 2004, the largest social media sites were MySpace (with 86 million users) and Friendster (with less then 10 million users). It seemed that the social media niche had been filled. MySpace was growing rapidly. So...

3 Economic Lessons from World Events

3 Economic Lessons from World Events Finance is useful in large part because of its ability to convert qualitative principles into quantitative dollar amounts. In a cost/benefit analysis a financial analyst converts both cost and benefit into a discounted cash flow...

Getting Funding for a Small Business Loan

Credit & Loan Options for Small Businesses Successful small businesses need credit to grow. Struggling small businesses need credit to survive. Here are five sources of funding that don’t require selling equity, pulling cash out of pocket, or begging from friends...

Debentures and Collateral

In Disney’s 1997 cartoon adaptation of the Greek legend of Hercules, the evil Hades says to his kindhearted-but-enslaved underling, “Meg, Meg, Meg, my sweet deluded little minion. Aren't we forgetting one teensy-weensy, but ever so crucial little, tiny detail?” At...

The First Principle of Investment

The term value is frequently misused. Dollar-store advertisers use it to mean that even though something is complete garbage, at least it’s cheap garbage. Portfolio managers use the term “value” to mean an underpriced-but-valuable asset. That’s better, but also...

Understanding Industry Rivalry

Michael Porter, a well-known strategy professor at Harvard identified five forces that shape the profit-making potential of the average firm in the industry. The five forces are: rivalry, buyer power, supplier power, threat of new entrants, and the threat of...

5 Lessons from The Big Short

In 2010, financial journalist Michael Lewis published a book telling the story of investors who made money in the 2007-2010 crash by betting against the mortgages we now know were doomed. He called it The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine. On 11 December 2015,...

Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail