Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail

Many companies experience times when they find their accounting departments short on staff or short on expertise. Sometimes emergencies and financial needs arise that are beyond the capability of their financial personnel to address. This is particularly true in times of economic turbulence.

Some companies encounter major opportunities that they need expert help to evaluate and pursue. Other companies want experienced professionals to provide training or mentorship for their financial employees. Still others want to upgrade their accounting software but do not have the technical knowhow to make the transition.

One of the best and quickest ways to remedy such situations is through staff augmentation. This increasingly popular method of strategically leveraging resources and expertise can be invaluable in helping a company to achieve its financial goals.

What Is Finance Staff Augmentation?

Staff augmentation is a way to quickly fill a company’s staffing or expertise needs through outsourcing without the expense and headaches of hiring full-time employees. Companies manage their augmented staff just as if they were regular employees, but with fewer liabilities and generally at lower cost. The outsourced employees may work in-house or remotely, full time or part time, long term, on a temporary basis, or as needed, depending on your company’s requirements and resources.

Staff augmentation is becoming increasingly common in nearly every industry. It has become the go-to solution allowing a business to bring on a highly experienced professional on a temporary basis for less than it would cost to hire an employee with the same qualifications. Staff augmentation can be a solution for seasonal fluctuations and to bridge the gap between times when needs exceed current staff capabilities but do not yet justify additional full-time hires.

How Does Staff Augmentation for Financial Teams Work?

Finance-related staff augmentation begins with an evaluation of the company’s financial needs and the capability of the current staff to meet them. This exercise can point out areas where needs are unmet or where additional resources are required.

Once the needs have been identified, the company must determine whether to hire new employees or seek outside help. Hiring can be a risky, time-consuming, and expensive proposition—especially when seeking a high-level expert such as a CFO.  This is not always a viable financial move for the company, particularly if the need is immediate or short-term.

A better option may be to use the services of a financial outsourcing company. Such a company will have a team of highly experienced CFOs, controllers, and bookkeepers, and can quickly find the right person to join your team either on a short-term or long-term basis.

Financial staff augmentation can provide your company with fractional, interim, or consulting financial services at less cost than hiring a full-time expert, and with less risk. If the relationship with an outsourced expert doesn’t work out for any reason, the outsourcing company can quickly make a change with minimal impact on your business. For companies seeking the expertise of high-level positions such as CFOs, financial staff augmentation allows companies access to a higher level of expertise and experience than they’d be able to afford or justify if hiring for a full-time, in-house solution.

What Benefits Can Staff Augmentation Provide?

Staff augmentation offers a flexible solution to the ever-changing need for allocation and training of personnel. It can help you meet deadlines and avoid the risks associated with hiring, firing, and layoffs. Some other benefits are listed below.

Cost Efficiency

Outsourced staff often work remotely. Any benefits they receive, such as health insurance, bonuses, and 401K, or contributions are paid by the outsourcing agency. Thus, staff augmentation makes it possible to decrease overhead expenses, including payroll, utilities, equipment, and software, particularly in the case of short-term staffing. Outsourcing also makes it easy to increase or decrease staff as business ebbs and flows.

Stability

When employees leave or become unavailable for significant periods, staff augmentation can help your company rapidly compensate and maintain momentum.  A qualified, experienced professional can be brought in quickly, minimizing the time-consuming processes of hiring and training.

Expertise

It can be a big advantage to augment company staff with one or more seasoned professionals who are well equipped to deal with problems and have experience with multiple companies in your industry. They will also have valuable contacts in the industry as well as support from the outsourcing company. Often, they will have access to top-of-the-line software as well.

Staff augmentation is a great way to fill temporary knowledge gaps within a company. If an opportunity or challenge arises for which your team doesn’t have the required expertise, bringing in a consultant or fractional expert can help fill your needs for the duration of the project. For instance, if your company is planning to raise funds, implement an ERP solution, determine short-term or long-term cash forecasting, or make the change from cash to accrual basis accounting, it can be beneficial to temporarily augment your existing team with someone who has the knowledge and expertise to support these initiatives.

Training

New and existing employees can benefit from the experience and broad knowledge of an outsourced expert. Companies often bring in outside resources to train their teams and bring them up to date on processes and technologies. As accounting teams become more proficient in their tasks, the entire enterprise is strengthened and profits increase.

This training can be especially useful when an internal employee is promoted to a controller or CFO position. These highly specialized jobs can be very challenging to someone who is new to the role. An outsourced expert can provide the necessary support and coaching until the promoted individual is fully adept.

Industry Perspective

An outsourced professional will have experience with a number of companies and projects and can provide new insights and recommendations for improvement of existing procedures. A fresh pair of eyes can often make a huge difference in outcomes by identifying opportunities for cost savings and increased efficiencies.

Control

The augmented staff is fully accountable to you, just like your regular employees. You have complete control over their assignments and can monitor their results. If a problem should arise, you have the support of the outsourcing company, who can work with the individual, provide additional resources, or replace the person with someone better suited to the job.

Flexibility

Augmented staffing can facilitate company expansion, new projects, or the reassignment of existing staff members. They can alleviate the burdens of employees who are overworked and allow business executives to focus more on their core business responsibilities and less on monitoring the accounting team. Augmented staffing can help your company gear up quickly for a new project, and then ramp down when the project is finished.

How to Maximize the Benefits of Staff Augmentation

The most common drawbacks of staff augmentation are lack of accessibility to remote workers, miscommunication of expectations, and misunderstanding of long-term costs. Here are some things you can do to ensure a positive experience with staff augmentation:

1. Set Expectations Clearly

Make sure you have a clear picture of what you want each outsourced worker to do, what your end goal is, and how long you expect the working relationship to last. Communicate this clearly to the outsourcing agency so that they can help you select the right person, set an appropriate schedule, and get a good cost estimate. Once you have chosen an outsourced employee, make sure that person fully understands those same expectations. It is best to communicate your expectations in writing so that you, the outsourcing agency, and the employee all have the same understanding.

2. Fully Understand Costs

For short-term and as-needed projects, staff augmentation can be much less expensive than hiring full-time employees when accounting for hiring costs, benefits, bonuses, and termination costs. However, on long-term projects, especially those with a top-level CFO, the cost of staff augmentation may be similar to that of hiring a less experienced CFO in a full-time role. Also remember that, while training and management needs are usually reduced by staff augmentation, some level of onboarding and supervision will still be needed, depending on the project. Be sure to take all of this into consideration as you calculate the full cost and determine whether staff augmentation is right for you.

3. Hold Regular Meetings

It is important to remember that outsourced employees that work remotely may have contracts with other companies and/or live in a time zone different than yours. Having regularly scheduled online or phone meetings can make communication and accountability much easier.

Wrapping Up

Financial staff augmentation can be a great way to quickly ramp a business up or down. It can provide needed personnel and expertise while reducing the expense to hire, dehire and minimize risk. It can help a company become more resilient and flexible in uncertain times. As with any business decision, there are pros and cons to consider. If you are considering augmenting your financial staff, we invite you to visit PreferredCFO.com or contact us to learn more.

About the Author

Eric Dorfman CFO Preferred CFO

Eric Dorfman

CFO

Eric Dorfman is a growth- and results-driven CFO with over 20 years of diverse experience in strategic finance leadership for public & privately-held companies in a wide range of industries.

You may also be interested in...

Signs that a Business Needs a CFO

As early-stage companies grow, many experience a number of challenges and problems that indicate the need for a CFO, but don’t recognize it. Often they mistakenly think that the hodge-podge matrix of undertrained staff that they’ve set in charge of their finances will...

Hiring a Financial Accountant: What to Know

So your bookkeeper has been great. In fact, information they’ve been able to provide you has helped you make decisions to grow your business to where it is now. But now you find that your bookkeeper is overwhelmed, dealing with transactions outside of their expertise,...

Setting up? Accounting Pitfalls to Avoid

There are a handful of guidelines with respect to setting up an accounting system correctly that are widely accepted.  Consider these: Set up a reliable accounting system such as QuickBooks and tie the system to your bank accounts, and as many systems as you use....

Make or Break Your Business: Choosing Accounting Software

Every business is unique and has different accounting needs of its software. There is no single accounting software that is the best or every industry or business.  It’s not worth the time or the reading to compile a list of all industries and the best software for...

Hiring the Right Bookkeeper

Strong bookkeeping should be an undisputed given for any company. The benefits of bookkeeping cannot be overstated: its the core to deriving valuable information about a business’s operation in order to make valuable decisions.  An exhaustive list of the benefits can...

Reigning in Loose-Cannon HR Departments with Finance Metrics

The human resource department is complex for a number of reasons, centered on the fact that people are complex, their motives are complex, and their decisions are complex.  Not surprisingly, whether you’re a large or small company, your finance and human resource...

Stepping into the Minds of Consumers – a CFOs Perspective

Traditional economics teaches us that consumers are rational and accordingly make decisions in a rational manner. They seek to maximize their utility (the use or happiness they get out of products and services) by purchasing and consuming until they reach diminishing...

How to Attract and Retain a Strong Millennial Workforce

I believe some confusion exists in the workplace regarding millennials. Once we get past the often erroneous stereotype of feeling entitled and not willing to work, millennials can add a lot of value to any workplace, with the right touch. Many employers try to attain...

3 Strategies to Make Your Budget Count

A budget shouldn’t be something you draft at the beginning of the year, stash away in a drawer, and then compare with your year-end numbers to see how you did.  That may sound ludicrous, and that’s because it is.  Unfortunately, the way many business owners use their...

The “Right” Investor Depends on Timing

Too many entrepreneurs approach fundraising thinking that all money is the same.  “An ‘investor’ is someone with money, and therefore all people with money can be an investor in my business.”  Well, not exactly, and here’s why. The right investor entirely depends on...

Five Common Finance Mistakes Made by Startups

Entrepreneurs are gutsy. They understand the customer, and they are always trying to provide the right value to the customer.  But sometimes entrepreneurs make mistakes.  Especially when it comes to the finances of the business, which are not always at the forefront...

Is Your Hobby Considered a Business by the IRS?

Let’s face it—hobbies are born of passions, and at some point you’ve spent so much time working at your hobby that you become somewhat of an expert. Experts of some hobbies can make decent money from amateur hobbyists.  You may be in this boat (not too bad to get paid...

Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedinmail