Reflections from the HFS F&A Leadership Roundtable, Stockholm
In October 2019, HFS held a Capgemini-supported executive roundtable in Stockholm’s Grand Hotel. It brought finance and accounting leaders across multiple industries in the Nordic region, HFS analysts, and Capgemini together to discuss their progress and challenges on the journey to the finance OneOffice.
Enterprises can no longer confine finance to the back office. It needs to be a part of the HFS OneOffice framework, unifying the front and back offices and helping enterprises create a compelling customer, partner, and employee experience (Exhibit 1).
Finance is a natural aggregation point for critical data in the enterprise
Many processes haven’t changed in decades, and the reality is that transformation is not easy; it requires a big change in attitude, culture, and direction. Finance is at the heart of this change, but many of its executives need a focused, strategic plan for stepping up and taking the lead. When data crosses multiple functions in organizations, it becomes a shared asset. Because the finance function sits at the center of the enterprise, it could be the data arbiter moving forward, catalyzing decision making. With global responsibilities, finance can provide an objective assessment of what’s going well and what’s not. The technology to harness this data is available. Does the finance function want this responsibility? If not finance, who else should take on this role?
With the exponential growth of data and the strengthening alliance between humans and machines, the CFO’s ability to orchestrate presents a great opportunity. The role of the CFO should be less about rules-based administration and more about leveraging smart analytics and AI to improve data–driven decision making and end-to-end operational excellence.
Exhibit 1: The HFS OneOffice Framework seeks to eliminate silos for better data flows across functional areas
HFS’ published research on the 10 critical success factors to drive the Finance OneOffice underpinned the discussions at the roundtable. HFS views the desired end state as an F&A function where accounting transactions run like water and finance professionals focus on driving strategic objectives.
In preparation for the roundtable, HFS asked attendees: On a scale from 1 to 10, how would you rate your finance organization in terms of achieving the “finance OneOffice”? The responses averaged 4.5, and 65% rated below 4. Clearly, we have a long way to go! Exhibit 2 summarizes participants’ ranking of the 10 factors.
Exhibit 2: Participants’ rankings of HFS’ 10 critical success factors of the finance OneOffice show that hyper-automation and integrated technology architectures are top of mind
Source: Inputs from HFS F&A Roundtable participants, October 2019
Survive and thrive in a world that is volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous (VUCA)
Several conclusions emerged throughout the day:
Exhibit 3. Organizational silos and complexity are keeping F&A from reaching the Finance OneOffice goals
Source: Inputs from HFS F&A Roundtable participants, October 2019
The Bottom Line: Enormous changes are required in the back office to transform into the finance OneOffice. If silos persist, then there is more work to be done to improve data flows and enterprise performance.
Organizations are striving toward becoming truly data–driven, letting data take the lead and tell its own story, highlighting previously unknown problems and opportunities. This will undoubtedly happen as enterprises feed data into machine learning algorithms and the resulting patterns lead to insights that can be trusted and acted on.
A useful navigation tool on this journey to data–driven organizations is Capgemini’s “Five Senses of Intelligent Automation”: watch (monitor), listen/talk (interactions), act (service), think (analyze), remember (knowledge). The five senses combine to form automation solutions and deliver artificial intelligence, driving the journey to data-driven organizations. Some of the outcomes achieved with clients using this approach include: request handling timeframe reduction from 3-4 days per request to 2-3 hours, disputes resolution time reduced by 4.6 days, and quality improvement from 87.7% to 99.5%.
The finance function must become the arbiter of real–time data to support key decisions around the competitive strategy of the firm, where divisions between departments cease to exist and finance staff are measured on the same metrics—usually improved customer experience, improved profitability, and quality of data. Finance plays a pivotal role in managing enterprise performance data, but is it ready to take on the added responsibility?
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