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Introduction

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I am convinced that corporate accountants, as professionals, want to leave a legacy before they move on. To be remembered they need to have made a permanent improvement to the organization.

Many finance teams are merely processing machines, moving from one deadline to the next, having too little time to invest in being a business partner to budget holders and senior management.

I know this from observation and my own personal experience.

THE THIRD VERSION

This book is a third version, as it follows on from Pareto's 80/20 Rule for Corporate Accountants and Winning CFOs: Implementing and Applying Better Practices. The book has been restructured to facilitate easier implementation and is accompanied with a 100-page toolkit. The reader can access, free of charge, a PDF of the suggested templates, checklists and templates from www.davidparmenter.com/The_Financial_Controller_and_CFO's_Toolkit.

The better practices in this book are ignored at your peril, as they are based on the wisdom and better practices of over 5,000 accountants whom I have met through delivering my workshops and webcasts around the world.

I would like to add that few, if any, of these practices were used by me when I was a corporate accountant; thus senior management did not shed a tear when I left the organization. It is my mission to ensure CFOs, financial controllers, and management accountants leave a legacy that remains long after they have left the organization.

David Parmenter

Writer, Speaker, Facilitator

Helping organizations measure, report, and improve performance

Waymark House, 20 John Street, Titahi Bay, New Zealand (+ 64 4) 499 0007

parmenter@waymark.co.nz www.davidparmenter.com

15 September 2016

Dear CFO and Financial Controller,

Invitation to leave a profound legacy in your organization

This book will cover the better practices that will have a profound impact on the way your finance team functions and help you make a difference as a leader and business partner. Do you find yourself and your team locked up in the past as historians, still trapped by the archaic annual planning process, constantly fighting fires, and unappreciated by the organization at large? If so, the panacea for you is here.

This book is written from the standpoint of an accountant and observer. It is a book that you need to read before you pass it down to your direct reports. Far too many CFOs have passed on the responsibility of keeping abreast of 21st century lean finance team methods to their younger accounting staff. While the detail is the domain of the younger corporate accountants, continuing learning is a duty that all of us need to shoulder.

This book is designed to transform your contribution, increase your job satisfaction and profile in the organization, and help you leave a legacy in every organization you work for. Please, would you at least read the following chapters:

Chapter 1 Getting Your Finance Team Future Ready

Chapter 2 Leading and Selling the Change

Chapter 10 Lean and Smarter Work Methods

Chapter 11 Effective Leadership – Growing and Retaining Talent

Chapter 16 Implementing Quarterly Rolling Forecasting and Planning

Chapters 17 Finding Your Organization's Operational Critical Success Factors

Chapters 18 Getting Your KPIs to Work

Chapter 20 Performance Bonus Schemes

Invest 45 minutes of your time to make use of the support materials (webcasts, electronic templates) on www.davidparmenter.com.

I am hopeful that someday in the future we will meet, whether it is at a course or over a coffee. It is my fervent wish that you will be able to say, “I used this book to make a difference.” It will mean that both you and I will have left a legacy.

Kind regards,

David Parmenter

HOW TO USE THE BOOK

This book is divided into six parts and appendices. Exhibit I.1 explains the purpose of each section.


EXHIBIT I.1 Book Outline

THE PDF TOOLKIT

With all my books there is a heavy focus on implementation. The purpose is to prepare the route forward. To second guess the problems the finance team will need to address and set out the major tasks they will need to undertake. Naturally, each implementation will reflect the organization's culture, future-ready status, and the level of commitment from the CFO and his or her direct reports.

The PDF toolkit is to be read and used in conjunction with The Financial Controller and CFO's Toolkit – Lean Finance Teams' Best Practices. The location of the templates is indicated in the relevant chapters.

To support your implementing the strategies and best practices in this book, the following electronic media are available:

● Webcasts and recorded presentations (see www.davidparmenter.com/webcasts). Some of these are free to everyone and some are accessed via a third party for a fee.

● A PDF download of the checklists, draft agendas, questionnaires, and worksheets referred to in the chapters are available from www.davidparmenter.com/The_Financial_Controller_and_CFO's_Toolkit. The website will refer to a word from a specific page in this book that you need to use as a password to access these free.

● The electronic versions of all the templates and most of the report formats, featured in the book, can be purchased from www.davidparmenter.com.

EXHIBIT I.2 Impact of Working Smarter, Not Harder


REPORTING HISTORY OR MAKING IT

The impact of the efficient and effective practices listed in the book will, if implemented, make a major change to the nature of work performed by the accounting team. There will be a migration away from low-value processing activities into the more value-added areas such as advisory, being a business partner with budget holders, and implementing new systems.

As Exhibit I.2 shows, the change in focus should mean we are working smarter, not harder. This change in workload will, over time, lead to the formation of a smaller but more experienced accounting team and a better work–life balance.

In many finance teams around the world, far too much time is spent in month-end reporting, the annual accounts, and the annual planning process, as shown in Exhibit I.3. I call these three activities the trifecta of lost opportunities for the accounting team. They leave so little time to add value.


EXHIBIT I.3 The Year's Workload of a Non-Lean Finance Team (Based on a June year-end in the Northern Hemisphere)


Exhibit I.4 shows how the year's workload will change with shift away from processing into more service delivery work (based on a June year-end in the Northern Hemisphere). The key change is to radically reduce the time the accounting team spends in the trifecta of lost opportunities.


EXHIBIT I.4 The Year's Workload of a Lean Finance Team (Based on a June year-end in the Northern Hemisphere)


The better practices in this book will approximately double the amount of “added value time” you and your team have.

The Financial Controller and CFO's Toolkit

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