The Crucial Roles of Professional Accountants in Business in Mid-Sized Enterprises
The Crucial Roles of Professional Accountants in Business in Mid-Sized Enterprises
The Crucial Roles of Professional Accountants in Business in Mid-Sized Enterprises
Accountants in Business in
Mid-Sized Enterprises
Professional Accountants in Business Committee
International Federation of Accountants
545 Fifth Avenue, 14th Floor
New York, New York 10017 USA
The mission of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) is to serve the public interest,
strengthen the worldwide accountancy profession and contribute to the development of strong
international economies by establishing and promoting adherence to high-quality professional
standards, furthering the international convergence of such standards and speaking out on public
interest issues where the profession’s expertise is most relevant.
This publication was prepared by IFAC’s Professional Accountants in Business (PAIB)
Committee. The PAIB Committee serves IFAC member bodies and the more than one million
professional accountants worldwide who work in commerce, industry, the public sector,
education, and the not-for-profit sector. Its aim is to enhance the role of professional accountants
in business by encouraging and facilitating the global development and exchange of knowledge
and best practices.
This publication may be downloaded free-of-charge from the IFAC Web site at
http://www.ifac.org. The approved text is published in the English language.
Copyright © September 2008 by the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC). All rights
reserved. Permission is granted to make copies of this work provided that such copies are for use
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ISBN: 978-1-934779-36-1
2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 4
Executive Summary: Eric Krell .............................................................................................. 5
Interviewees
Julian Clarke, Director, SME Financial Systems ..................................................................... 8
Gord Cummings, Board Member, RWDI ................................................................................. 13
Paul Druckman, Non-Executive Director and Co-Founder, M Institute .................................. 17
Gustaw Duda, former CFO, Poligrafia, now CFO, Orlen Oil ................................................... 22
Ross Fyffe, Principal, Seamless Business Support and Ivan Boardman, Associate,
Seamless Business Support ......................................................................................................... 26
Guy Griffiths, CFO, Harris Scarfe Australia Pty Ltd. ............................................................... 30
Y.C. Lee, Managing Director, CCM Pharmaceuticals ............................................................... 34
Donna Mackenzie, CFO, IZEA ................................................................................................. 38
John B. Pollara, former CEO, Zieman Manufacturing Company ............................................ 43
Roel van Veggel, CFO, André Rieu Group ............................................................................... 48
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The Crucial Roles of Professional Accountants in Business in
Mid-Sized Enterprises
Introduction
Professional accountants in business play crucial roles identifying and addressing unique
challenges facing mid-sized enterprises in strategic management, corporate governance, risk
management and internal control, financial reporting and accounting and other areas.
IFAC’s Professional Accountants in Business Committee commissioned financial journalist Eric
Krell to conduct a series of interviews with 10 leading professional accountants in business on
their experiences in mid-sized enterprises. How do the challenges of typical mid-sized
enterprises affect their work as chief financial officer, controller, advisor or in another capacity?
How do they apply their skills and expertise to identify and address these challenges? What key
lessons can be learned?
Although those interviewed are from different mid-sized enterprises from all over the world, they
deal with similar issues and their solutions point in the same direction. In that way, each article
highlights practices that other professional accountants in business might find useful in
addressing issues within their own organizations. The key lessons they share can help
professional accountants in business and others drive performance and create value for their own
organizations.
The appendix provides a brief description of the roles and domain of the professional accountant
in business and of the characteristics of a mid-sized enterprise.
This information paper is part of a broader Professional Accountants in Business Committee
project on the role of professional accountants in business in mid-sized enterprises. These
interviews will serve as the basis for the development of a principles-based good practice
guidance on the typical challenges that mid-sized enterprises confront and how professional
accountants in business could assist in responding to those issues.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Overview
Seize Opportunities for Improvement
First, PAIBs are enablers of the ME’s performance. They provide crucial contributions to
streamlining business plans, installing and improving management information systems,
implementing process improvements, mitigating risks, strengthening relations with banks and
investors, attracting capital and other activities that enable the current and future success of their
companies.
Second, PAIBs operate as generalists in mid-sized enterprises. While they specialize in finance
and accounting management activities, they serve as an integral part of the management team
and fulfill a wide variety of responsibilities beyond the finance and accounting discipline.
Unique Challenges
The purpose of these interviews is to better understand the unique challenges that global MEs
confront and how PAIBs help address these challenges. The featured PAIBs, who are based in
the U.K., Malaysia, the U.S., Canada, South Africa, Poland, Australia, Ireland and The
Netherlands, were candid, instructive and, above all, inspiring. Ross Fyffe and Ivan Boardman,
for example, are two South Africa-based PAIBs and business advisors who are helping numerous
struggling MEs adapt to rapid changes and challenges in the wake of momentous political and
socioeconomic shifts.
Combined, the interview subjects have worked at dozens of fast-growing, under-pressure and
stable mid-sized companies around the world. These PAIBs’ titles include CFO, corporate board
member, managing director, (former) CEO, advisor and “turnaround specialist.”
While CFO for a Poland-based printing company, Gustaw Duda, now CFO of Krakow-based
Orlen Oil, helped transform a sizeable loss into a significant profit. Duda did so by revamping
the company’s budgeting and control function, establishing a credit control function, and
bolstering the skills within the finance and accounting department.
One other title bears mentioning for how well it illustrates the importance of the PAIB’s
generalist role. “CFO and concert tour director” Roel van Veggel of André Rieu Group, the
globally renowned Dutch orchestra and choir, earned his expanded duties by seizing
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
opportunities for improvement within the organization, especially those outside the traditional
boundaries of the finance and accounting department. “You can create your own job,” he asserts.
“You’re expected and encouraged to look for potential needs throughout the company; if you see
a challenge you can address, you pick it up.”
Generating Value
The PAIBs featured in this report have pounced on numerous responsibilities that directly affect
the current and future success of their mid-sized enterprises. Their most prevalent duties hinge
on helping their companies to generate value by:
• Establishing a common “performance language” throughout the company so that
everyone’s activities are aligned with the vision and goals leadership has set;
• Upholding business integrity;
• Creating, implementing and improving management information systems to bolster
strategy, planning, decision-making, execution and control activities;
• Managing costs through rigorous planning, budgeting, forecasting and process
improvement efforts;
• Managing risk and handling business assurance;
• Measuring and managing performance; and
• Communicating financial and other performance information to internal and external
stakeholders, including regulatory authorities, lenders, bankers and investors in a manner
that fosters trust.
A PAIB’s value often directly affects the fortunes of mid-sized enterprises, notes entrepreneur
Paul Druckman, a PAIB by training, co-founder of U.K.-based mid-size business advocacy
association M Institute and current board member to three MEs. “When it comes to funding
growth, a medium-sized business needs its finance professional to serve as a liaison between the
investors and the rest of the company,” he explains. “That means the finance director needs to
look after venture capitalists, bank executives and angel investors. This requires a very different
set of competences than managing the budget.”
These competencies can be acquired, as Druckman has witnessed and as Australia-based Harris
Scarfe Australia Pty Ltd. CFO Guy Griffiths has experienced.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
After helping ice-cream maker Häagen-Dazs establish its European operations as a financial
manager with the company, Griffiths returned to the classroom, earning his MBA from London
Business School. He did so to help strengthen his operational competencies so that he might one
day qualify as a CEO candidate.
Donna Mackenzie has added to her own competencies by “wearing as many hats as possible” on
the job. She has served as CFO for a number of high-growth companies and remains in high
demand among venture capitalists looking for talented financial executives to help guide the
companies they invest in to the next level of maturity. “There are … pressures that are unique to
this environment compared to a relatively stable organization,” she notes. “Being able to wear
many different hats and juggle many different balls at the same time is crucial.”
The fact that this juggling act requires traditional PAIB competences – such as risk management,
funding growth, management information systems, budgeting and forecasting, and control – is
not surprising. Much more surprising is the emphasis these PAIBs placed on communications
inside and outside the organization.
While the importance of the PAIB’s interaction with bankers, venture capitalists and other
sources of funding is well known, the internal relationships – the ones between the PAIB and all
other employees – appear equally important, even if they do not receive as much publicity.
In addition to communication, “One of the [other] most important PAIB competencies involves
anchoring decisions in facts, and those facts have to be a part of every strategic decision,”
emphasizes CCM Pharmaceuticals Managing Director Y.C. Lee. A PAIB by training and a
former CFO, Lee believes a vital PAIB competence is the focus on numbers. “As an executive,
you find that discussions can quickly get complicated because the organization contains so many
different mindsets and perspectives, based on different backgrounds,” Lee adds. “We often don’t
spend enough time trying get to the common denominator in terms of what we’re actually talking
about and the decision we’re trying to make. … Numbers provide that common denominator.”
Engagement with highly competent PAIBs appears to be the common denominator among a
diverse collection of successful MEs from around the world. The profiles on the following pages
highlight the experiences of these PAIBs and also extract numerous lessons, which follow each
profile in bullet form.
If there is a final lesson to be learned from this useful collection of insights, it may relate to a
perspective on the PAIB’s role in MEs offered by Zieman Manufacturing Company’s former
Chief Executive Officer John Pollara. He points out that effective accounting brings about more
favorable banking relationships; smoother dealings with sales, franchises and tax authorities;
much more beneficial relationships with vendors; and higher levels of trust among stockholders.
“I was always a firm believer that there is only one kind of accounting,” Pollara emphasizes,
“and that’s good accounting.”
His point is a good one – and one that is driven home repeatedly in these interviews. The
discussions suggest that the PAIB qualifies among the most important people in any type of ME.
PAIBs are professionals who, according to veteran PAIB and board member Gord Cummings,
can “reconcile the urgent with the important” in a way that helps the mid-sized enterprise
succeed in getting bigger and/or better.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
After witnessing the problems that afflict mid-sized enterprises (MEs) on five continents,
Ireland-based SME Financial Systems Director Julian Clarke has developed a convincing
perspective. In his view, MEs have two Achilles heels: information technology and helping to
maintain their company’s reputation while facing the competitive challenges posed by larger
competitors. More specifically, mid-sized companies suffer from ineffective management of
information systems while their managers sometimes suffer from not knowing where to turn
when business-integrity issues materialize.
“If you cannot access information about your business, how can you make correct decisions?”
asks Clarke, who notes that some surveys indicate that 60 to 80 percent of ME managers express
dissatisfaction with their accounting software vendors.
Clarke worked in KPMG’s corporate tax area and, after earning his chartered accountant
qualification, left Ireland for Australia where he led finance and operational functions for a bank,
two insurance companies and an entrepreneurial commercial property company. For the past 15
years, Clarke has used his accounting training and experience as an independent advisor to MEs
worldwide. Now based again in Ireland, Clarke’s advisory work focuses on information systems,
financial modelling, strategy development, operational improvement and business integrity
within entrepreneurial small and mid-sized companies.
An IT Blindspot
In Ireland, as elsewhere, the biggest problem MEs contend with is getting paid on time, Clarke
notes. “They’re too busy running the business, which is the interesting thing, to bother chasing
payment, which is the boring bit,” says Clarke. “Delayed payment becomes a vicious circle and
portrays a lack of both basic integrity and common sense as it risks harming the fundamental
business relationship. Explain you are not a bank, use CRM to record excuses, and you will find
persistence pays.”
He also believes that many mid-sized enterprises do not have sufficient financial management
capabilities in general and in information systems in particular. “They don’t know what they’re
missing,” he says, “and often their professional advisors do not know, either.”
That’s because their external advisors may be biased, although perhaps not consciously. These
advisors, who may include their external accounting firm, often suggest financial systems that
work best with their own organization’s software rather than what would best meet the ME’s
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
unique needs. “The best marketed applications rather than the best programs are often
recommended,” says Clarke. “The software packages that dominate some markets are old-
fashioned and relatively difficult to use.”
Although Clarke points out that “expertise is supposed to be a cornerstone of our profession,” he
says he is very understanding of accounting firms whose “undoubted expertise lies in the areas of
audit, accounting, tax and business advice.” Yet a lack of wide financial systems expertise can be
an external accounting firm’s own Achilles heel.
How can PAIBs help eliminate these pitfalls? It is up to the PAIB within MEs, Clarke suggests,
to help strengthen the selection and implementation process. “The most important action is to
find impartial advisors,” says Clarke. “The advisor needs to be capable of understanding the
business deeply and also possess a detailed knowledge of the current financial software market.”
Whether or not the ME’s management decides to use an external advisor to assist with systems
selection, Clarke says that the internal PAIB should “gain a firm understanding of the ME’s
specific business information needs from discussions with those who run the business in all areas
and at all levels.” He also notes that the opportunity exists for operational improvement and
superb management information throughout the organization.
“Contrary to popular belief,” he notes, “MEs can have management information superior to their
larger competitors – a great potential competitive advantage.” External accountants can also
benefit from clients with well implemented, appropriate systems, according to Clarke: “A more
efficient performance of their compliance work results, offering a wider scope for business
advisory.”
Spreadsheets, a powerful but highly error-prone tool, Clarke notes, are often used to compensate
for system inadequacies. “Spreadsheets are far better suited to forecasting than to recording and
reporting on day-to-day activity,” he adds. “Selecting the wrong financial system creates so
many problems and only adds to the problem of not getting paid on time. It also prevents MEs
from knowing how effective their sales and marketing and other activities are. How can you run
a business if you don’t really know how it is doing?”
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
“One of the more difficult challenges facing PAIBs is when they encounter an integrity issue
within their own organization,” Clarke asserts. “As one of the few professionally qualified
managers in an ME, PAIBs have the professional standards and the responsibility for responding
quickly and appropriately when issues of integrity arise,” says Clarke. “PAIBs understand the
rationale for business integrity – not integrity for integrity’s sake, but because of its strong link
with reputation and longer term business success, based on mutual benefit, fair play and trust.”
He much prefers the terms “trust, reputation, integrity and professionalism,” or “TRIP,” to the
phrase “business ethics,” which he believes sounds too philosophical. “Put simply,” he asks,
“Would you do business with someone you don’t trust?”
His approach, as outlined in a 2007 Accountancy Ireland article, includes four reasons for
ensuring that the company takes a proper “TRIP”:
• Organizations that conduct their affairs with integrity are trusted;
• Trusted organizations gain a good reputation;
• Organizations with a good reputation are consistently successful; and
• The public expects higher standards of integrity from members of professions.
This responsibility places demands on both the PAIB and the professional organizations that
support them.
“Ethical and integrity guidance from our professional organizations can be very, very helpful,”
says Clarke. “We need to build on this support and also to make more PAIBs aware that this is
available. A profession only maintains its reputation at a macro level when its professionals
demonstrate ethical practice at the micro level and are supported, perhaps in trying circumstances,
to uphold their standards. Accountancy is the language of business – many others rely on our
profession getting it right. Appreciation of this creates an even greater responsibility on us to
support our own professionals if business is to function as the business community expects.”
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
“Too many PAIBs who come up through a Big 4 accounting firm are not receiving a sufficiently
varied experience,” Clarke notes. “Instead, they tend to specialize too much, too early. This is
not a critique of the firms per se. The same applies to the larger firms across all professions.
PAIBs should ensure that they complement their areas of specialization with broad-based
experience.”
Although Clarke worked primarily in corporate tax during his time with KPMG, he expanded his
skills and competences by asking for a variety of assignments. He helped manage a supermarket
chain in bankruptcy, sought out projects that helped strengthen his financial modeling skills and
taught accounting training courses to new hires.
“I strongly advise newly hired auditors to get as much experience as possible in as many areas of
the accounting firm as possible during their first four to six months on the job,” Clarke adds.
“Understanding what makes businesses tick increases your overall competency, hence adding
value to the firm and ultimately to the client.”
He believes experience in people management is a critical skill for the PAIB and suggests “one
of the many advantages of a professional accounting qualification is the opportunity to manage
people at an early stage of a career.”
That strength is valuable when broadly experienced auditors and accountants want to become
PAIBs in medium-sized entities and face the challenge of addressing common weak spots, such
as ineffective information systems and integrity issues.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Key Lessons:
• You cannot make correct decisions if you cannot access information about your business.
• A PAIB can help strengthen the finance and accounting system selection and
implementation process by gaining a firm understanding of the ME’s specific business
information needs, conducting a thorough review of the software market and ensuring that
end users are properly trained and supported.
• PAIBs who want to become successful in MEs should seek out a variety of business
experiences and avoid “specializing” their skill areas too greatly or too early in their
careers.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Gord Cummings’ grooming as a professional accountant in business (PAIB) and his four-plus
decades as a successful business leader have taught him to translate prickly problems into
manageable terms. Ask him what obstacles frequently prevent growing medium-sized enterprises
(MEs) from reaching that elusive “next level” of success, and Cummings frowns in thought for a
few moments before replying. “The urgent,” he notes, “frequently overtakes the important.”
Cummings ought to know. Many of the 18 companies on whose boards he has served in the past
20 years – including RWDI, a privately held Ontario, Canada-based engineering firm – have
struggled to overcome this challenge.
Yet the firm – which was founded in 1972, has been profitable every year since then, and today
boasts more than 400 employees – faced a series of “get to the next level” challenges that the
vast majority of mid-sized, fast-growing companies also confront. The pressing matter of serving
clients and generating revenue distracted attention and resources from the other needs that are
highly important to the firm’s longer-term success.
Despite the tumult of serving clients and growing revenue at roughly 15 percent annually, RWDI
had the foresight to spot a subtle warning sign: profit growth began to level. Rather than
responding to its profitability changes with quick-fixes, RWDI’s management team dug deeper
and, in doing so, took steps that later helped identify longer-term needs that required attention,
including succession planning and talent management.
One of the most important steps RWDI’s management team took was in response to their
recognition that the company could benefit from outside perspective and guidance in addressing
these challenges. This realization resulted in the naming of Cummings as the company’s first
outside director in early 2007. Since then, Cummings and the management team have worked
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
together to assess and plot solutions to its growth challenges. That work produced a series of
considerations that the entire organization is currently evaluating as it charts its strategic course
for the coming years.
Although performance objectives were being set, the organization as a whole had not adopted a
systematic approach to measuring actual performance against those objectives; the existing
compensation system was not designed to support performance-based incentives. “They knew
they needed greater individual accountability throughout the business,” Cumming notes, “but
they weren’t certain exactly how to go about doing so.”
As a result, the board and management are in the process of evaluating a new performance
measurement system and stronger links between performance and compensation throughout the
business.
“Suddenly, you have a need for a next generation of leaders who have to work differently than
the previous management because they will be running a much larger company.” Cummings
adds, “And how do you ‘source’ your next generation of management?”
RWDI’s leadership team had long preferred to promote from within. This preference emphasizes
the cultural heritage of the firm, reflects the absolute importance of engineering expertise in the
company’s success and enables the leveraging of a large supply of longtime employees in the
workforce.
Yet, the promote-from-within approach posed another challenge: successful engineers don’t
necessarily make successful leaders.
RWDI’s engineers had distinguished themselves as a preeminent resource for helping to make
some of the world’s most impressive structures safe. Those same engineers also acknowledged
that engineering, not management, was their primary competency.
“This is exactly the same sort of realization that a growing – and forward-looking – legal firm or
accounting firm would reach,” notes Cummings. “At some point in a growing firm’s
development there’s a question of whether the partners should only deliver professional services
or also take an active management role in leading the firm to the next level.”
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
However, Cummings emphasizes that engineers, like other specialty professions, can learn how
to manage larger organizations, more mature business processes and functional areas such as
finance, HR and IT. “You’re not born with management skills, nor do you receive them on your
21st birthday,” he notes. “They’re learnable traits. Just as accountants can learn to manage, so can
engineers.”
He identifies several methods for doing so, including mentor programs, job rotations, the use of
“stretch assignments” by high-potential employees, and executive education classes. “However,
when it comes to actual implementation, everyone says, ‘Oh, but we can’t afford to lose him or
her for a two-month course at Harvard or Queen’s [University],’” Cummings acknowledges.
“But, in some cases, you have to do that.”
When a growing ME, like RWDI, favors promoting senior managers from within, it must then
cultivate the next generation of leadership. Doing so requires a valuable commodity many MEs
believe they cannot afford: time (taken away from billable engagements). “But you have to
identify a half-dozen or so key people – those in their mid- to late-40s – and help to prepare
those individuals as future company leaders,” Cummings says.
Most, if not all, of the current partners and employees are “busy building the business and
delivering services, and none of them has been able to carve out precious time to ensure that up-
and-coming managers participate in job rotations, leadership development retreats, executive
education classes from top-notch universities or other developmental activities that help groom
highly skilled engineers into senior managers,” Cummings explained. “It’s easy to say, ‘Well,
they should have done these sorts of activities,’ but it’s also understandable given the challenge
of balancing immediate priorities while growing at a fast pace.”
This also represents a common challenge among growing MEs. Rather than hiring, and paying
for, chief financial officers (CFOs), chief operating officers (COOs), senior level human
resources vice presidents and related executive-level positions, MEs frequently have long term
general staff who sort of “grew into” these specific functions.
These supporting managers tend to excel in the technical aspects of the current systems and ways
of working yet lack the formal education, outside experience, strategic instincts and, above all,
authority to capture the ear of their more senior business colleagues and bring the whole of the
support systems to a higher level, necessary to complement the growth of the organization.
RWDI’s highest ranking finance manager, for example, is a highly skilled comptroller who
prepares the financial figures, shares the financial reports, ensures that payroll is fulfilled and
handles other accounting responsibilities.
But growing MEs sometimes need “that senior financial officer who says, ‘Look, this month’s
results aren’t all that great, what are we going to do about it?’” Cummings notes. “That person
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
needs the authority to make people sit up and listen.” Without that authority, for example, a mid-
sized enterprise’s finance manager may realize that the company does not possess the right
financial information systems but lacks the power to get the management team to approve the
purchase of a new system.
Seasoned finance executives offer other value, too, according to Cummings. “CFOs should play
a much stronger role in the setting of annual objectives and how those objectives are measured
and reported,” says Cummings. “And they can greatly assist in the acquisition of businesses by
making sure a potential acquisition is valued correctly.”
CFOs also can help manage assets much more effectively. The bulk of an ME’s assets often
consist primarily of inventory and receivables. And while most MEs excel at top-line growth, too
little focus is granted to the bottom line, which requires a disciplined and consistent approach to
return on investment (ROI) measures.
That vision includes the foresight of bringing in an outside PAIB to help assess and select which
opportunities it will pursue in focusing on the tall challenge of balancing the urgent with the
important while designing an approach for long-term success.
Key Lessons:
• Closely held or private mid-sized enterprises often encounter growing pains; bringing in an
outside advisor, board member or executive – particularly one who is a professional
accountant in business – can help alleviate those problems.
• Common growth challenges include the need for greater accountability for individual
results throughout the organization and more sophisticated administrative and support
processes. These needs center squarely on the PAIB’s areas of expertise.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
The way entrepreneur Paul Druckman sees it, finance professionals around the world speak a
single language with multiple dialects.
“Wherever I do business, I have more in common with the finance professionals in the
companies that I’m involved with than any of the other executives – including even the
entrepreneur – when it comes to managing and understanding the details,” says Druckman, a
professional accountant in business (PAIB) and co-founder of U.K.-based mid-size business
advocacy association M Institute. “That’s because we speak the same language.”
Yet Druckman, who currently serves as a non-executive director/chairman for three mid-sized
companies, can also be hard on his fellow finance professionals. Look closely at a mid-sized
company under pressure, he says, and there is a good chance you will see a finance director who
is struggling to fund growth. “I think one of the biggest challenges mid-market companies face is
finding funds for growth,” he explains. “Fairly often, the finance director in a medium-sized
company is quite capable of handling the management accounts and running and controlling the
finance function and other functions, like IT.”
However, when it comes to finding the necessary cash, structuring debt finance, weighing
acquisitions and related work, many finance directors fall short. These activities require the right
personality and the right competences. A certain breed of finance professional possesses that
personality type and those competences, asserts Druckman. He believes it is vital for finance and
accounting managers to understand their strengths and weaknesses and then seek out situations
and relationships where the former can be leveraged and the latter have less of a negative impact
on their organization’s development.
Druckman remained close to his roots during his entrepreneurial ventures. He became president
of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England & Wales (ICAEW). During his tenure there,
he noticed that the roughly 100,000 mid-sized businesses in the U.K. faced unique challenges
and lacked sufficient sources of external support for dealing with these issues. That realization
later spurred Druckman and two partners to create M Institute, a membership organization that
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
works exclusively with the leaders of medium-sized companies by equipping them with
resources to address their unique challenges. To accomplish its mission, not-for-profit, member-
owned M Institute partners with ICAEW and with U.K. business-lobbying organization CBI as
well as with Microsoft, Durham Business School, Quoted Companies Alliance and other leading
organizations.
Druckman’s current board service involves three mid-sized U.K. companies in the technology
and financial services sectors. Two of those organizations are fast growing while the third is
under pressure, Druckman reports. “Each of these companies has had different experiences with
their finance professionals,” says Druckman, who emphasizes that all of these professionals play
pivotal roles in the successes and struggles of the companies. Despite these differences in
experience, Druckman asserts there is one golden rule when it comes to the finance
professional’s performance in mid-sized organizations: their competences should match the
needs of the organization.
Some finance professionals satisfy that rule and others do not, Druckman explains, because
corporate finance know-how represents only one of four different types, or “dialects”, of
financial fluency within mid-sized organizations.
One type is the so-called “bean counter” or “number cruncher,” terms whose slightly derogatory
connotations mask their importance, Druckman notes. “These are valuable competences,” he
asserts. “This is the person who maintains the accounting records and produces management
accounts every month in a very similar fashion according to a formula. And this person is very
happy doing this work.”
A second type of finance professional excels at delivering budgeting and preparing financial
analyses when requested to do so. These accountants are “very capable dealing with budgets and
handling everything that’s asked of them about the finances of a potential acquisition or the
creation of a new department,” Druckman explains. “They provide excellent numbers based on
what they’ve been asked to do.”
Finance professionals with a broader set of competences and responsibilities comprise a third
type. These finance persons serve as the founder and/or CEO’s right hand, primarily in the
administrative sense. “They handle all sorts of responsibilities, from IT to procurement to writing
up notes at the board meetings,” Druckman explains. “They’re almost an assistant executive with
a financial bias. They want variety, but they also have someone telling them what to do.”
The final type of competence emphasis consists of what Druckman calls the “true CFO”: the
finance professional who also takes an active lead in managing all aspects of corporate finance,
relationships with investors and other funding, scenario planning and regulatory relationships. In
addition, they take an active role in the development and strategy of the organization, being pro-
active rather than reactive.
Fund or Fade
The types Druckman identifies will be familiar to anyone who has worked in or with the finance
and accounting function in a mid-sized business. The competence areas are not necessarily
discreet. Many finance professionals possess capabilities across more than one type of the above
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
competence areas. However, precious few of them in mid-sized companies are equally adept at
crunching the numbers and funding growth.
The purpose of Druckman’s categorization is to cultivate greater self awareness among finance
professionals and their mid-sized organizations. The unique finance and accounting needs of a
mid-sized enterprise at a given point in its development (e.g., fast-growing, stable or under
pressure) should continuously be supported by the right finance and accounting competences.
That can be difficult to achieve, because an organization’s finance and accounting needs have to
keep up with an organization’s changing needs. Sometimes that change occurs rapidly,
particularly in the area of funding for growth.
“When it comes to funding growth, a medium-sized business needs its finance director to serve
as a liaison between the investors and the rest of the company,” he explains. “That means the
finance director needs to look after venture capitalists, bank executives and angel investors. This
requires a very different set of competences than managing the budget.”
Those competences can be acquired, as Druckman has witnessed. In the largest of the three
companies Druckman currently serves as a board member, the finance director has “grown into”
the corporate finance role. “You don’t always have to replace your finance director,” he says.
This is not to say that one set of finance and accounting competences are intrinsically more
valuable than another. Druckman points to an example at one of his companies in which a
finance professional who specialized in accounting and control was hired to bring greater rigor
and precision to those processes. “The company had been getting by with systems and controls
that were not as tight as they could have been,” Druckman recalls. “The external accountant
clearly communicated that it was no longer acceptable to simply ‘get by.’ It took some time to
instill that discipline, but once it was there, every single person in the company understood that
the numbers had to be exactly right, all the time.”
The new discipline bolstered the accuracy of forecasting and business planning, with one other
notable benefit: the company recently secured a loan of more than £750,000, largely, Druckman
reports, because of the strength and depth of the financial information the recently hired
accountant assembled.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
“I’m absolutely convinced that we would not have received that loan without the management
information that was presented and without the sense of security that all of the information was
absolutely correct, to the penny.”
“In many cases, the chief executive or the founder of the business doesn’t understand that
competence in corporate finance and competence in accounting and reporting rarely reside in the
same individual,” he says. “In a medium-sized business, the expectation is that the finance
person will fulfill both roles at the same time.”
That’s why mid-market PAIBs can benefit from friends in high places, like Druckman. As a non-
executive director who remains fluent in finance and accounting, Druckman has devoted time to
working closely with finance directors in an advisory capacity. They can tap his experience and
knowledge to help maneuver difficult challenges, such as recognizing when they are in over their
heads and then taking steps to address those gaps.
Druckman and his finance directors have developed relationships whereby “I can drop them an
email saying, ‘Hey, why are you doing this? I thought we agreed at the last board meeting you
wouldn’t do that?’” he explains. “Inevitably, most finance professionals in medium businesses
will encounter something for which they have no experience at all. And it is valuable for them to
rely on someone close to the organization to talk through those issues with them so they can
come up with good solutions.”
This sort of guidance, from board members and other trusted advisors with deep finance and
accounting experience in mid-sized companies, can help finance persons, no matter their dialect,
master the most challenging of all words in their common language: success.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Key Lessons:
• In a medium-sized business, the expectation is that the finance person will fulfill various
roles at the same time.
• Competences can be acquired. Organizations don’t always have to replace their finance
persons.
• Because different types of finance and accounting competences provide more value to mid-
sized companies at different points in their development, PAIBs should be aware of these
fluctuations and respond appropriately.
• A “true CFO” takes an active lead in managing all aspects of corporate finance,
relationships with investors and other funding, scenario planning and regulatory
relationships.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Among the numerous hats worn by mid-market professional accountants in business (PAIBs),
the role of turnaround specialist ranks among the most important and most sought after. This
challenge helps explain why so many stories about successful corporate turnarounds obscure the
real-life struggles PAIBs and their colleagues confront while turning around distressed mid-sized
enterprises (MEs).
Gustaw Duda prefers to highlight both the successes and the stumbling blocks he encountered in
playing a central role in turning around Poland-based Poligrafia, which is why his story is so
worthy of print.
Duda, who now serves as the CFO of Krakow-based Orlen Oil, and his former colleagues at
Poligrafia managed to leverage their wins and minimize their losses in such a way that this
turnaround story produced a happy ending.
Poligrafia began its existence in the early 1990s as a printing plant subsidiary within a
construction company. The business, which targeted small to mid-sized publishers in Poland,
hummed along with modest, but steady profits for the next nine years… until the parent company
was acquired by large international construction corporation.
The printing business’s new parent company quickly sold it to a private equity fund, whose
management took oversight of the business. They quickly injected large amounts of capital into the
business, which had been run extremely conservatively for the first nine years of its existence. The
investments largely went toward the purchase of new production equipment, giving the business
the capacity – and, more daunting, the need – to serve much larger publishing customers.
Poligrafia doubled in size in less than two years, transforming from a stable company on the
verge of small and mid-sized status to a full-fledged, rapidly growing ME. Problems arose in
equally rapid fashion, and it became evident that the existing management resources were not
suited to operate a much larger entity. At the time of this transition, in 2001, the company’s
president still conducted most of her communications to her departments via letters. She did not
use a computer.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
The primary problem was that Poligrafia could not generate sufficient production for its new
printing equipment. The company’s existing customer base consisted of publishers whose
publications boasted circulations of 20,000 to 40,000 copies. Poligrafia’s new infrastructure
demanded more customers with circulations of 100,000 plus to generate sufficient returns on
investment.
In 2001, profits decreased significantly as a result of this production gap, and the company’s
banking relationships began to sour.
“At the beginning of 2003, I had trouble with our banks,” Duda recalls. “It was the first issue I
confronted because the banks decided not to roll over our credit lines, and the company was
quickly losing liquidity.… We needed to convince the banks that the recent change in
management would help make our profitability issues temporary.”
Duda also recognized that the company’s sagging credibility with its bankers represented more
of a symptom than a root cause. He set out to eliminate this symptom by making some
fundamental improvements, all of which resided within his responsibilities as CFO.
Revamping the budgeting and control function: When Duda joined the company, it lacked a
proper budgeting and control function. The budget was prepared on a very high level by
comparing the targets for the next year with the previous year and then making small
adjustments as needed. The approach was passable when the company was small and profitable,
but offered little, if any, guidance and cost-control capabilities now that the company had grown
and profits had disappeared. Duda started from scratch while emphasizing the value of a reliable
budgeting and control process to the entire company. The work included reorganizing cost
centers, implementing processes to more accurately track costs,
“The banks could see that better understanding different sources of revenue and fostering
our new budgeting and a more budget-savvy culture. It was a tall task, and one Duda
control process was much would have liked two years to execute. He accomplished the
more sophisticated.” task in less than half that time, and Poligrafia’s banks took
notice, he reports. “It included information such as production
volume per machine and currency exchange rates.” New modeling capabilities also showed the
bank what would be the impact of fluctuations in sales volumes, prices, interest and currency
exchange rates on the company’s profitability.
Establishing a credit control function: In addition to remaking the budgeting system, Duda
also established a credit control function to attack costly debt-recovery problems and, by doing
so, increase working capital. First, Duda trained one of the employees as a credit specialist to
manage the newly created department. Second, they established procedures for pre-qualifying
customers based on their credit histories and analysis of their financial standing. Third, they
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
communicated the new guidelines to the sales force and the entire company. These procedures
instilled greater financial discipline in the sales force that previously sold to customers without
devoting much care to whether the customers would pay on time, or at all.
By highlighting all of the improvements, Poligrafia presented a story to the banks that
“convinced them that we would be fine,” says Duda.
Achieving all of these improvements was difficult and time consuming. Duda would have
preferred to delegate the specialists issue to someone better qualified to conduct an external
market analysis on skills and salaries. “I had to do this work personally because at that time I
didn’t have a person I could ask to do it,” Duda recalls.
The previous system was highly subjective, Duda recalls; it essentially involved the previous
president determining who warranted a bonus each month. Duda and his executive colleagues
assembled a team of some 30 key employees from across the company, and they set out to design
a new quarterly bonus system based on EBIT (Earnings Before Interest and Taxes) realization
that would align behaviors in different functions with corporate objectives. Despite those sound
intentions and the highly collaborative approach, the effort did not get off the ground, in large
part, due to communications problems. A skilled HR executive – a luxury the company could not
afford at the time – probably would have handled communications and training around the new
system more effectively, Duda believes. “It was the right diagnosis,” he acknowledges, “but the
execution was not 100 percent correct.”
Although that objective fell short, the other process improvements Duda and his team
implemented hit their mark: Poligrafia returned to profitability in 2004, posting PLN 10 million
in net income. The success of the turnaround strategy quickly gave way to the need for an exit
strategy. In January 2005, Duda and his team launched a due diligence process to prepare the
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
company for sale, which was completed 10 months later when U.S.-based RR Donnelley
purchased the business.
Duda then moved on to his current role, content in the knowledge that his efforts had doubled the
value of Poligrafia in three years of work, rich with ups and downs.
Key Lessons:
• Make sure that you keep your credit lines open, especially in tough times.
• Don’t be misled by symptoms; set out to identify and then address the root causes of
problems that cause profits to decline.
• A proper budget and control function becomes even more important as an organization
grows and confronts new challenges.
• A proper credit control function instills greater financial discipline in the organization and
improves the balance sheet.
• A well designed and properly implemented incentive system aligns behaviors in different
functions with corporate objectives.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
On first look, the call center assignment may have appeared an unlikely match for a professional
accountant in business (PAIB).
Ross Fyffe, a professional accountant and a principal of South Africa-based business advisory
firm Seamless Business Support CC, was called in to help a faltering call center operation. The
under-pressure mid-sized enterprise (ME) had lost roughly 1 million Rand per month during a
six-month period. The call center’s struggles stemmed from turmoil, including fraud, it
experienced under previous ownership.
On closer inspection, however, the work Fyffe conducted in the call center represents an
increasingly common assignment for a professional accountant in business. The assignment
required Fyffe to scrutinize all areas of the business, hire and fire employees, refinance existing
equipment, restructure debt, more accurately account for assets, purchase new equipment,
mentor executives and take other steps to quickly reduce the operation’s losses. Fyffe’s ability to
perform these actions stems from his accountancy background.
Fyffe’s previous experience, which includes 14 years in numerous roles in the passenger
transport industry, began in the finance and accounting function. Fyffe’s colleague, Ivan
Boardman, a chartered accountant by training, is an associate with Seamless Business Support
CC. He previously served as a finance director in some of South Africa’s largest organizations.
The PAIB’s generalist capabilities are in high demand in South Africa, as rapid changes in the wake
of momentous political and social shifts have created new challenges in a fast-growing economy.
One of the country’s primary challenges is that there are not enough skilled employees to keep pace
with the economic growth. This gap hits mid-sized companies particularly hard. The varied
assortment of turnaround and process-improvement projects that Fyffe and Boardman regularly
conduct reflect the growing value PAIBs offer to under-pressure small and mid-sized companies.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Much of Seamless Business Support’s work originates from financial institutions. When
borrowers, particularly fast-growing MEs, encounter growth or performance problems, the banks
seek outside advisory expertise to help their customers work through their challenges. In some
cases, the financial institutions pay most or all of the advisory firm’s fee.
Fyffe and Boardman determine which areas of an under-pressure ME need attention first by
conducting an overall assessment at the beginning of each assignment. The assessment examines
the mid-sized company’s finance and accounting, sales and marketing, human resources (HR),
information technology (IT) and operational areas – what are commonly referred to as the
“pillars” of the business.
If the issues extend beyond Fyffe’s and Boardman’s personal expertise, they call in subject-
matter experts from their firm to address those areas. Sometimes this occurs when the problem
involves technical, marketing or HR issues. In many cases, however, Fyffe’s and Boardman’s
broad PAIB capabilities and experiences are sufficient to help clients tackle their problems.
Although the specific nature of these problems varies by company, Fyffe says the following
areas, in particular (all of which fall within the business pillars described above), require them to
put their PAIB skills to work.
Talent Management: “The biggest problem for every company we work with relates to the
limited availability of skills,” Fyffe says. He helps companies structure in-house training
programs and functions and also to find suitable external training services. This capability
requires Fyffe to maintain knowledge of government and higher-education training programs,
such as South Africa’s Sector Educational Training Association (SETA), and to understand how
these programs might help clients.
Management Information: Many South African MEs need support in producing accurate and
easily accessible management information. The raw data often exists, but organizations
encounter problems when trying to access, analyze and use the data to drive decision making. “In
many instances, we need to assist clients with strengthening internal controls around their
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
information systems and the accounting processes those systems support,” Fyffe reports. Once
that control is put in place, the data in those systems can be turned into information. At that
point, Fyffe helps clients identify which measures and metrics provide the best understanding of
business performance. Bringing greater discipline to the use of management information serves
as the foundation for developing better business plans and strategies.
Financing: Once MEs have access to the right management information, they are better prepared
to make their case to financial institutions or investors for additional capital. Besides the skills
gap, funding represents one of the most formidable challenges MEs confront. “In South Africa,
the major problem with start-up companies is that it is difficult to find people or banks to finance
them,” Fyffe notes. “And venture capitalists are not prepared to lend a new company money
unless there is an overseer in place to help assure that the right management information systems,
among other needs, are in place.” That’s where Fyffe and Boardman provide assistance. “We get
involved, to a large degree, as the middle man between our clients and the banks, angel
companies or venture capitalists,” he explains. “This is quite a big task.” That’s because the
objective of this role is to inspire confidence in lenders. Instilling this trust typically requires the
ME to improve numerous processes and strengthen its overall risk management and governance
capabilities (which represent another area that Fyffe and Boardman help MEs address).
Supply Chain Management: In addition, the operational processes of MEs often require
improvement. Fyffe and Boardman help a growing number of MEs restructure their procurement
function and other supply chain processes. Some of this work relates to government rules on
preferred suppliers, so advisors like Fyffe and Boardman also need to keep informed of
regulations such as South Africa’s Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) program. “A number
of smaller companies closed down because they couldn’t meet BEE requirements,” notes Fyffe,
who helps MEs comply with the BEE program so that they can not only survive, but also can
gain access to new customers. Supply chain challenges among MEs also extend to global issues,
given South Africa’s advantageous geographical location between new manufacturing hubs like
China and Europe and the U.S. “We can be the stepping stone to some degree,” Fyffe adds. “We
keep informed of what’s happening in India, China and elsewhere and feed that information to
our clients, so that they can make the right decisions with their imports and exports.”
The work paid off handsomely: when Fyffe completed his work, the call center’s loss had swung
to a monthly profit of R100,000. The improvement illustrates the value of PAIB capabilities in a
period of significant change.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Key Lessons:
• An initial assessment of the “pillars” of the business – finance and accounting, sales and
marketing, human resources, information technology and operational areas – represents a
wise first step to prioritizing issues that require improvement.
• Bringing greater discipline to the use of management information serves as the foundation
for developing better business plans and strategies.
• Once mid-sized enterprises have access to the right management information, they are
better prepared to make their case to financial institutions or investors for additional
capital.
• Instilling trust with lenders and investors typically requires the improvement of numerous
processes as well as the fortification of overall risk management and governance
capabilities.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
A “guy” with deep accounting and business experience takes a job at an Australian big box
retailer recovering from an accounting fraud that landed one of its former CFOs in jail. Guy
helps complete the recovery effort while readying the mid-sized company for sale. Guy remodels
the finance function as a strategic business partner.
This suffices as what Harris Scarfe Australia Pty Ltd. CFO Guy Griffiths would describe as a
“helicopter view” (a term from his MBA days) of his recent activities. While Griffiths might
frown at the corny play on his name and emphasize that most of the credit for the company’s
recovery rests with his immediate predecessors, who joined the company immediately following
the fraudulent activity, he cannot argue with his own successful track record. Since joining the
retailer two years ago as its CFO, Griffiths’ leadership has helped a successful sale of the
company, enabled Harris Scarfe to resume its growth path following major distress and restored
credibility to the finance and accounting department.
The secret behind Griffiths’ success resides in his training and wealth of experience. This
background equipped Griffiths with the business vision to size up the big picture and the
technical expertise to simultaneously drill into the different perspectives he gains from
“helicoptering” above.
After earning his chartered accountant designation in Australia, Griffiths worked for the Big 4
public accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers as an auditor in the U.K., Canada and Barbados.
He earned a master’s degree in economics and then entered the private sector in a financial
management position with ice cream maker Häagen-Dazs, where he was part of the team that
established Häagen-Dazs in Europe. Recognizing that he did not possess the operational
background necessary to one day qualify as a suitable CEO candidate, Griffiths returned to the
classroom, earning his MBA from London Business School.
He returned to Australia where he worked in finance and accounting roles and gained some
operational experience in a position with IBM and, later, with Woolworths, the leading
Australian grocery and general merchandise retailer. Along the way, Griffiths also earned his
certified internal auditor (CIA) designation.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
From November 2001 through the present, the company’s leadership team executed a “long,
long process of repositioning and redefining our customers, the products that we sold, the in-
store ambiance and many other crucial aspects of the business,” notes Griffiths, who joined that
effort in 2005.
As a result of these efforts, the company transformed itself from a broad-spectrum department
store to a big-box retailer whose four main businesses, or “pillars” are home wares, linens, men’s
wear and women’s wear.
A detailed and lengthy financial evaluation of the business spurred the reorganization. Every
business, merchandise category and store location was analyzed; product categories and stores
that did not reflect a desired sales growth pattern were shed. The finance function introduced
new metrics such as fixed costs, stock turns and gross margin return on investment (GMROI) to
help make these determinations.
Going Private
When Griffiths joined the company, he faced two immediate challenges. First, he needed to help
complete the recovery effort, in large part by restoring the credibility of the finance and
accounting department. Second, he needed to help position the company for sale. The
shareholders who, at that time, oversaw the company’s recovery did not have the resources
necessary to fund expansion and future growth.
The bulk of Griffiths’ attention and much of his staff’s time during his first year with the
company was diverted to preparing the company for sale. “The level of work that’s required in
the sale process is incredible,” he says. “You have nonstop due-diligence reviews on the legal
and the financial side. You have strategic due diligence. You
“The finance department’s have 5,000 questions from the prospective buyers.”
goal is to inspire business
unit leaders throughout the The company was sold in April 2007, and is now primarily
company to treat finance owned by a private equity firm, which accepted the company’s
and accounting as their strategy and kept its management team intact. For his part,
right-hand consultative Griffiths adopted a straightforward approach to working with
support resource.” his company’s owners-to-be during the sales process. “Any
private equity firm has bought and sold more companies than
you’re ever going to sell,” he advises. “And they know exactly what they want the company to
do in terms of performance. As CFO, it’s your job to get out there and achieve what they want.”
Culture of Review
Once the sale was completed, Griffiths turned his full attention to completing the rebuilding of
the finance and accounting department that his predecessor had initiated. Griffiths’ intention, he
31
THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
says, is to foster a “culture of review” that originates in the finance and accounting function and
spreads throughout the entire organization. That review refers to focusing on the balance sheet
and treasury as the company returns to growth mode.
“We’re about 50 percent of the way to where I want us to be,” says Griffiths, who says that the
remodeling of the finance function required three major steps.
Restoring Credibility: “Without credibility,” Griffiths emphasizes, “you can’t build effective
forecasting, you can’t track actuals and you can’t build an effective financial reporting system.
Without credibility, you can’t build anything.” His department quickly established its credibility
by unleashing skilled management accountants to ensure that stock levels, fixed assets, profits
and other key numbers used to manage the business were perfectly accurate and “didn’t need to
be amended by 500 audit adjustments.” The initial scrutiny that Griffiths’ accountants conducted
revealed errors in previous management reports that gave the board an inaccurate view of
profitability. The errors were quickly corrected and reported. “Now when we put the results
together, everyone is highly comfortable and knows that they are the right numbers,” Griffiths
points out. “That’s absolutely key.”
Adding value: After restoring its credibility, the finance and accounting team sought
opportunities to add value via a more collaborative relationship with its business partners. “If my
forecast tells me that we’ll have a cost overrun in the distribution center within the next two
months and everyone trusts our numbers, we can shift from being the put-the-numbers-together
people to more of the consultative/support people for the business,” says Griffiths, who
encouraged his staff to use their analyses and reports as an opportunity to suggest solutions to
business colleagues. “We’re not all the way there, yet,” he acknowledges. My finance team is
starting to work more closely with the business as a consultative resource on the cost side.”
Becoming a True Business Partner: “At the end of the day, I’m seeking to become the CEO’s
right hand when it comes to consultative support,” says Griffiths. “I may be pretty well there
right now, but the team has progress to make.” The department’s goal, Griffiths explains, is to
inspire business unit leaders throughout the company to treat finance and accounting as their
right-hand consultative support resource. Griffiths witnessed a similar dynamic during his tenure
at IBM. “The business unit manager for a division [in IBM] would take his finance guy with him
to meet with clients and make pitches to sales prospects,” recalls Griffiths. “And another
manager would take his finance guy to meet suppliers.… That’s what we’re aiming for, and I
have a clear model for how that looks.”
“Typically, an accountant possesses excellent skills related to the day-to-day debits and credits
that need to happen, as well as a very good overall understanding of how a balance sheet and
profit-and-loss interact,” he says. “But you often need a different person when it comes to
forecasting analysis skills. In our jargon we call them ‘planners’… These are mainly the
analytical types who can manipulate massive spreadsheets to identify all of the balances among
sales, stock levels, gross profit, etc. – it’s definitely a different set of skills.”
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
It’s also a rare capability, which, when combined with the need for specific industry expertise,
becomes even more valuable. “Retail planning resources are very difficult to find,” he adds, “and
they are gold when you get one of them.”
Griffiths also values public accounting experience. Public auditors venture into so many different
businesses and “have to talk to people to understand the overall business before they do the
‘ticking and flicking’ in their audit,” he notes. This need to interact and talk with clients provides
valuable lessons for communications skills which remain with you throughout your career. “In a
sense, therefore, there are three buckets of skills I’m looking for: the technical accounting, the
planning component, and the communications skills.”
The PAIB skills combination Griffiths assembled has proved valuable for the company as a
whole. Since the acquisition, when the company operated 34 retail stores, Harris Scarfe has
opened five new retail outlets. The previous shareholders’ review process for considering such
an expansion “would have taken ages,” Griffiths notes. However, because of the track record of
credibility that has been built with the new owners, “the private equity folks said, ‘Five new
stores? Okay, we have the funding capability. Are they in good locations?’ After a robust
afternoon’s worth of discussion on each of our proposals, they signed off.”
And there are currently plans to open an additional five stores this year. In other words: Guy
delivers.
Key Lessons:
• Continuous training and experience represent the keys to success for professional
accountants in business.
• Create a culture that is focused on results, not only in the finance and accounting function,
but throughout the entire organization.
• Professional accountant in business should use their financial analyses and reports as a
“consultative” opportunity to suggest solutions to business colleagues.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
CCM Pharmaceuticals Managing Director Y.C. Lee’s career illustrates the importance of
balancing opposing needs. Understanding and managing crucial business tradeoffs – such as
striking a prudent balance between risks and rewards, deep research and quick action, and
corporate governance and enterprise performance – define Lee’s success in his current role. He
credits his experience as a professional accountant in business (PAIB) with helping him
managing these difficult decisions as a top business executive in Malaysia’s fastest growing
pharmaceutical business.
A well-rounded mix of positions, office postings and responsibilities helped Lee understand
crucial business tradeoffs. He worked in finance and management accounting, information
technology (IT), regional operations management and merger and acquisitions in the U.K.,
Malaysia, Singapore and the Asia Pacific region with ICI. He has also worked in a variety of
business division within CCM.
CCM Pharmaceuticals’ current parent company is listed on the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange
and, since 2004, a significant portion of the company’s shares have been owned by a Malaysia
government-owned investment trust. CCM is currently the largest Malaysian manufacturer in its
chosen market segment, although its revenue (which translates to about $420 million U.S.)
qualifies it as a mid-sized enterprise (ME) in other parts of the world.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
“The ability to balance quick strategic decisions and sufficient information is generally very
important in Malaysia and the Asia-Pacific region,” Lee asserts. “You can do a lot more work
than a competitor to understand risk and quantify rewards, but the opportunity might not be there
anymore by the time you finish your deliberations.”
That does not mean that Lee and his colleagues need to weaken their risk management
perspectives when assessing strategic opportunities. Instead, they need to more efficiently collect
and assess the information that fuels their strategic decision making. This need, says Lee,
represents a key area where PAIB training and experience adds value.
35
THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
For example, when a European delegation approached CCM two years ago to propose a
substantial strategic investment in biotechnology, Lee and his colleagues had less than a week to
come to a conclusion on the proposed offer. To do so, the executive team needed to understand
the financial, regulatory and technical risks and rewards of the proposed deal, a technology
investment opportunity related to genomic research, which could have transformed CCM’s and
Malaysia’s striving towards this burgeoning technology space.
Rather than churning out tons of research and evaluation reports, the company immediately
assembled a panel of 50 biotechnology, business, financial, investment, government, policy and
regulatory experts and held a one-day conference to assess this once in a lifetime business
opportunity. “We have the strategic intentions to evaluate a ‘blue ocean’ opportunity, but also
needed to quickly understand whether the country’s investment, policy and regulatory framework
is ready for this type of investment,” Lee explains. “And from a larger perspective, we needed to
determine whether the opportunity was appropriate for the company and the country.”
Anchoring decisions in facts and figures: “One of the core PAIB competencies involves
anchoring decisions in facts and figures, and those facts have to be a part of every strategic
decision,” Lee emphasizes. Professional accountants also help synthesize different perspectives
by focusing the discussion on investment and outcomes based on numbers rather than on
viewpoints related to different areas of expertise. “As an executive, you find that discussions can
quickly get very complex given the divergent expertise, mindsets and perspectives, based on
different backgrounds,” Lee notes. “Very often, we don’t spend enough time to achieve
communicative rationality and derive a consensus over the decision we’re trying to make. …
Numbers provide that means and common denominator.”
Scenario planning: Lee still uses the same planning and analysis skills he developed as a
finance manager, particularly when it comes to assessing the “what ifs” of a large potential
investment, balancing the risks and rewards of that opportunity. These scenarios add valuable
insights to the discussions that precede strategic decisions.
Analyzing potential acquisitions: In a similar way, financial analyses conducted in the due
diligence phase can have major impacts. “If your evaluation [of a potential acquisition] is not
anchored in finance,” Lee notes, “it will be treacherous to balance the risk and rewards of the
potential acquisition.” This evaluation needs to be conducted in a highly specialized manner,
which, Lee notes, marks another PAIB quality. Most due diligence exercises involve a
significant amount of modeling and simulation techniques, including complicated pricing
formulas and crucial assessments of the target company’s control structure. “If any of those
evaluations are even slightly off the mark,” Lee emphasizes, “the cost can be astronomical.”
36
THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Continuous Improvement
Lee mentions one final PAIB quality that he views as valuable in his organization today as well
as over the course of his career. “It’s something that’s not emphasized as much as it should be,”
he notes, “and it is the area of continuous professional improvement. I mean, you don’t see a
marketing professional being asked to take on 50 or 60 hours of continuing professional
education every year. But a PAIB does.”
This component of the profession, he adds, emphasizes the importance of upgrading competency
sets, which also helps PAIBs advance in their companies and their careers. Just ask Lee.
Key Lessons:
• The only way to make sense of business problems and opportunities is to define them in
such a way that professionals with very diverse backgrounds and specialties can deliberate
and reach collective agreement. The PAIB creates a common understanding by putting
numbers around the opportunities and challenges.
• Sound strategic decision making is made possible by efficient collection, generation and
assessment of information. This is a key area where PAIB training and experience adds
value.
• Facts and figures, provided by PAIBs, should be a key part of every strategic decision.
• PAIBs have to keep pace with fast-changing business conditions to remain relevant to the
high performing expectation of the investment community.
37
THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
IZEA founder and CEO Ted Murphy must make a strong early-morning impression. Murphy
lured CFO Donna Mackenzie away from another fast-growing mid-sized company after selling
her on his enterprise over a breakfast meeting last year.
The addition of Mackenzie gave Florida-based IZEA and its flagship, blogging and advertising
service PayPerPost, an injection of financial and accounting credibility. This is exactly what the
world’s largest consumer generated advertising network needed to impress investors and help
focus its impressive growth. Before accepting Murphy’s offer, Mackenzie, a certified public
accountant and veteran of several high-growth companies, conducted her own due diligence. Her
story is a useful lesson to professional accountants in business (PAIBs) who are attracted to the
high-risk, high-reward dynamics of fast-growing, venture-capital-fueled companies.
By reducing the unknowns during the courtship phase, Mackenzie has learned to address one of
the largest challenges PAIBs who prefer working fast-growing mid-sized organizations confront:
the risk of joining a damaged, or doomed, company.
Mackenzie’s due diligence exposes her to fewer risks. This enables her to fully concentrate her
PAIB competences on the challenges posed by financially managing a fast-growing mid-sized
company, which in turn leads to more rewards for both. Joining IZEA and its PayPerPost
business has paid off: in the past year, the company has increased its workforce by close to 70
percent.
38
THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
operational improvements. “[These activities] gave me a broad range of experience,” she reports.
“I gained a lot of skills that still help me today.”
Mackenzie points to another important, and less tangible, dynamic within fast-growing
companies that helped shape her financial management skills. “This work is a bit ‘trial by fire,’”
she explains. “Either you are successful or you are out. I think it’s very important that you have
the right personality for this. It’s not the right setting for everyone. There are requirements and
pressures that are unique to this environment compared to a relatively stable organization. Being
able to wear many different hats and juggle many different balls at the same time is crucial.”
After the management consulting job, Mackenzie continued to improve her financial
management dexterity through an interesting combination of activities. She has worked for other
fast-growing mid-sized companies; prior to joining IZEA, she helped guide e-commerce
company Channel Intelligence Inc. to significant growth as the company’s senior vice president
and CFO. During her four-year tenure, she managed the company’s strategy development,
operations and finance and accounting function.
First, she serves on several advisory boards for early-stage companies in search of venture
funding. Second, she carves out a couple of hours each week to work in the University of Central
Florida’s venture lab, helping entrepreneurs get their companies off the ground, primarily by
providing guidance on obtaining funding. These activities help her better understand the origins
and tendencies of the companies she manages as a small- to mid-market CFO, and they help
strengthen her business network too.
Her network proved valuable when she learned that IZEA might be interested in her. Mackenzie
was introduced to her current CEO through an IZEA investor whom she already knew through
her personal network. “It was a great way to be introduced because I didn’t go into it cold,” she
recalls. “There was already credibility on both sides when we started our meetings.”
As the mutual interview process heated up, Mackenzie worked through a fairly methodical
screening of IZEA.
Investment and Investors: After getting a sense that the proper funding was in place,
Mackenzie researched the reputations of the investors and board of directors by looking at the
current and past ventures. “In some situations, investors just throw some money at a company
and see what happens,” she explains. “You have to avoid those situations because you want
investors who are committed.” She also meets with investors and board members to evaluate the
degree to which their objectives align. “While you’re doing that,” she adds, “you should also be
getting a sense, on a more personal level, as to whether these are people that you can work with.”
39
THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
CEO Personality: The fact that IZEA’s founder and CEO, Ted Murphy, had already hired a
controller before bringing in a CFO, immediately impressed Mackenzie, who has seen too many
fast-growth companies try to cut corners, to ill effect, by using contractors or accounting firms to
handle accounting and reporting responsibilities. “That showed a lot of foresight and forethought
on his part,” she recalls. “It shows a willingness to put together a strong management team.”
Over the course of numerous meetings, telephone calls and email exchanges, Mackenzie sought
to gain a feel for Murphy’s personality. Most founders have great ideas, but how they execute the
idea, and their flexibility on that count, is vital to long-term success. Mackenzie wants to know
how open-minded her prospective CEOs are and how willing they are to turn over more control
to their management team.
Management Team: If CEOs are going to let go of the control they exerted during the company’s
earliest days, they need to assemble a top-notch management team. Mackenzie looks for industry
experience, brains and responsiveness in her potential colleagues. “If you don’t have the industry
experience, it makes it more difficult to understand and respond to competitive threats, and to
understand and seek partnerships that can help the company leap forward,” she notes. “The entire
management team may not need to possess [industry experience], but certain roles, such as
business development and sales, should have experience in the industry or a closely related
industry.” Like most other senior executives, Mackenzie wants to be surrounded by the best,
brightest and most entrepreneurially spirited individuals, yet she singles out quick thinking as a key
component of intelligence. “Mature business processes and procedures are rarely in place during
the fast-growth stage,” Mackenzie says, “so you don’t want a management team to get bogged
down or tripped up by what’s not in place. Instead, they should have the agility to find a way
around what’s not in place today, and then work on putting in place whatever is needed.”
Mackenzie offers a final piece of guidance for PAIBs evaluating fast-growing opportunities by
interacting with investors, directors and CEOs: keep it simple. “They’re busy, and they don’t
have a lot of time for long explanations,” she says. “Keep in mind that they’re looking for
solutions. You have to be extremely results oriented to get their attention. Once you have it, you
should be very concise and straightforward in your dealings with these types of personalities.”
“These investors are typically looking for a minimum of a five-fold increase within a maximum
of five years,” she notes. “There is a lot of pressure to perform and exploit opportunities as
quickly as possible.”
In addition to funding growth, the top fast-growth challenges Mackenzie typically confronts
include strategic management (including responding to competitive threats), assembling
professional teams with increasingly specialized (as opposed to general) skills, cash management
(i.e., stretching the cash as far as it will go), and implementing more mature business processes.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Each one of those issues requires PAIB skills and experience. One of the key facets of
Mackenzie’s role is to apply greater financial and operational management discipline to each
area. In addition to her funding competence, she regularly calls on her and her staff’s operational
experience and public accounting background to bring accounting processes into accordance
with U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), implement more rigorous risk
management and compliance procedures, establish internal controls and strengthen financial
reporting and auditing processes.
“Things are evolving so rapidly that it is easy to overlook small things that grow into major
issues later on,” she explains. “Down the road, fast-growing companies look for some sort of exit
strategy. Bad contracts, legal or human resources compliance issues and other small mistakes
committed today can have a major impact later. Some of those errors, which are avoidable with
the right processes, can affect the valuation of the company.”
Mackenzie has managed to keep those process and procedural issues top of mind, in large part,
by balancing these activities with her corporate finance activities and by maintaining healthy and
open communications with investors, the board, her fellow executives and her CEO.
“We still have breakfast meetings together on an ongoing basis,” Mackenzie says, referring to
Murphy. “It was a great way to assess a potential match, and it’s a great way to ensure the
success of the match.”
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Key Lessons:
• PAIBs who want to work in a mid-sized, high-growth company will benefit from gaining a
broad range of operational-improvement experience.
• A successful financial manager in a fast growing company should be able to wear many
different hats and juggle many different balls at the same time.
• Meeting with investors and board members gives a CFO a sense as to whether these are
people with whom the CFO can work on a personal level. This sense is important.
• Before joining a fast growing ME, try to find out how open-minded the
founders/entrepreneurs are and how willing they are to turn over more control to a new
management team.
• A management team in a fast-growth enterprise should have the nimbleness to find a way
around what’s not in place today, and then work on putting in place whatever is needed.
• Be alert of minor risk management issues today that can grow into major problems
tomorrow.
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THE CRUCIAL ROLES OF PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS IN BUSINESS IN MID-SIZED ENTERPRISES
Long after he moved on from Zieman Manufacturing Company’s finance and accounting
function, former Chief Executive Officer John Pollara still enjoys sharing the secret of his
leadership success. “I liked to tell people that even though I was the CEO, I still thought like a
professional accountant in business (PAIB),” he says.
The mindset paid off handsomely for Zieman, a privately held maker of manufactured home and
trailer chassis based in Southern California. Thanks to the exit strategy Pollara and his team
executed, Zieman was acquired by Drew Industries in 2004. The deal not only gave all of Zieman’s
private stockholder-employees more money than they would have earned under the previous buy-sell
arrangement (and each of them a position with the newly combined company), but it also benefited
the business. One year after the merger, Zieman posted a 50 percent increase in revenue.
“Sometimes, the best thing that a professional accountant in business can do for a mid-sized
company [and its shareholders] is to get that organization in a position to be acquired so that the
organization has an opportunity to grow even more,” says Pollara. The positioning Pollara
describes, which took place over many years and succeeded in large part thanks to Pollara’s
PAIB skills and perspective, contains valuable lessons for other professional accountants in
business who confront similar challenges at medium-sized enterprises (MEs).
Pollara rose quickly through the ranks at Zieman, to corporate controller in 1974 and then, four years
later, to secretary-treasurer of the company’s sales subsidiary. Although Zieman grew during
Pollara’s initial years there, growth was moderate with periods of stability interrupted by serious
challenges. “The company was not on a fast track,” Pollara recalls, “although it could have been.”
The growth obstacles were typical. “Our biggest challenges related to constraints in financial and
human resources,” Pollara reports. The closely held private company’s board of directors
consisted entirely of stockholder-managers. Under the succession plan that Pollara inherited, new
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managers were required to buy out existing stockholder-managers upon their retirement.
Consequently, most of the company’s profits went directly to compensation bonuses.
“That antiquated compensation system inhibited our growth because we did not have a lot of
money left over for the things we really needed to do,” Pollara reports. “And bank borrowing and
capital markets were not available to us in the amounts we really needed to grow the company.”
Another major challenge existed. “We had too few people doing too much; we were all wearing
too many hats,” says Pollara, who in addition to leading the finance and accounting function also
headed up the legal and human resources functions. “We probably should have hired
professionals from larger companies, but the salaries they commanded did not fit with our budget
or our compensation system. Our hands were tied to some degree.”
The company and Pollara managed to thrive despite those constraints: he was promoted to CFO
in 1981 and then ascended to vice president, secretary and treasurer in 1983.
Yet the obstacles challenging Zieman’s growth also continued to mushroom. Competition
intensified and the profit margins on many of the company’s product lines shrunk. A theoretical
10 percent profit margin on a mobile home chassis, for example, would drop to an actual profit
margin of 6 percent after unfavorable variances related to material, labor and other realities were
factored into the calculation.
Pollara and his team realized that there was no plan in place for addressing shrinking profit
margins. In fact, strategic planning had not consisted of much more than “making sure we had
the materials available to build products when a new customer came on line,” Pollara says.
In the mid-1980s, Zieman began crafting a genuine strategic plan. “We knew we had to define
the industry that we operated in, look at other products and services we could offer and consider
markets we could enter to add value to the company,” Pollara says.
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The strategic planning process consisted of Zieman’s senior team examining the strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities and threats facing the company. This traditional “SWOT” analysis,
which used accounting analysis as a basis, yielded crucial realizations. “Boat trailers turned out
to be a high-margin product line that we had not given sufficient attention to,” Pollara explains.
“Once we realized that the margins were so great, we gave it much more attention – at the
expense of some of the lower-margin items we had.”
The company also started making trailers for the recreational vehicle industry, which was
beginning to boom thanks in large part to the soaring popularity of jet skis and other personal
watercraft. The theoretical profit margins in this product line could be as high as 35 percent, with
actual profit margins of 25 to 27 percent, Pollara reports.
“Those decisions and actions really changed the structure of the company in terms of profit
margin,” he says. “That really helped us later when we structured the company for sale, and it all
came about because of a more rigorous approach to strategic planning supported by improved
finance and accounting analysis and management.”
“We started doing enterprise risk management before it was called ERM,” says Pollara, who
spearheaded a holistic review of risks, after realizing that the company had barely escaped
situations that could have seriously threatened the company’s future had they played out a bit
differently. An exhaustive review of strategic, operational, financial and hazard risks, for
example, showed that “we were totally under-insured for the business we were in,” says Pollara.
The analysis extended far beyond hazard insurance, and resulted in:
• New product innovations, such as installing disc brakes on many large trailers;
• A business continuity management program; and
• The introduction of numerous new policies and process improvements throughout the
organization.
Pollara also initiated a wide-ranging business process improvement push. Managers throughout
the company documented and reviewed existing processes, identified gaps and potential
improvements, benchmarked their processes against best-in-class processes and then revised
their processes to achieve a best-in-class state. These efforts resulted in better sales, order entry,
procurement, manufacturing, inventory, collections, budgeting, strategic planning and ERM
processes, among other areas.
“I think you can save more money by documenting and improving your business processes than
you can with almost any other initiative,” Pollara says. He also believes that PAIBs can play a
central role in business process improvements. “They have a responsibility to make sure that
business processes throughout the company are correct and working,” he explains. “Now, there
are literally thousands of business processes in a company, and there is no way one person or one
team can handle all of them. However, this is an area in which the PAIB can really spearhead the
movement as a facilitator.”
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The Right Kind of Accounting
One area that required little improvement was Zieman’s philosophical approach to accounting. “I
was always a firm believer that there is only one kind of accounting, and that’s good
accounting,” Pollara asserts.
The privately held company had long adhered to U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(GAAP) and invested in certified audits each year – on an entirely voluntary basis. “I firmly
believe that good accounting and the certified audits paid off for us substantially,” say Pollara.
Those rewards included more favorable banking relationships than privately held medium-sized
companies typically enjoy, smoother dealings with sales and franchise tax authorities and much
more beneficial relationships with vendors.
“We received better terms and higher credit limits from our vendors than our competitors did,”
Pollara reports. “And, equally as important, we generated high levels of trust among all of our
stockholders, who received a copy of our certified audit each year.… Probably the biggest
benefit from our dedication to good accounting was the sale of our company. Having all of those
years of certified audits and having strong internal controls over our processes played a major
role in getting a higher valuation and in cutting out a lot of the costs more typically associated
with selling a company.”
Looking back at his career with Zieman Manufacturing, where he remains a consultant, Pollara
clearly sees how his PAIB skills guided his decision making as he rose from an accounting clerk
to CEO. He especially appreciates how his early management training experience added a
valuable dimension to his accounting expertise.
He concludes: “By learning how the business ran at the ground level, I understood how the
various departments of our business operated. As a result, I was able to help these departments
and challenge them to be better. Too many finance and accounting professionals today don’t
understand their business from the ground up. Yet that insight is necessary as they want to
venture into non-financial decisions as business partners.”
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Key Lessons:
• Sometimes the best thing that a professional accountant in business can do for a mid-sized
company is to get that organization in a position to be acquired so that the organization can
grow even more.
• You can save more money by documenting and improving your business processes than
you can with almost any other initiative. The PAIB can really spearhead the movement as a
facilitator.
• Good accounting and certified audits can lead to more favorable banking relationships,
smoother dealings with sales and franchise tax authorities, much more beneficial
relationships with vendors and higher levels of trust among stockholders.
• Learning how the business runs at the ground level is necessary to venture into more non-
financial decisions as business partners.
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Profile: Roel van Veggel
When Roel van Veggel was asked to consider working for globally renowned Dutch violinist and
conductor André Rieu, his immediate reaction was, “Does he want me to carry his violin?”
Actually, Van Veggel’s finely tuned finance and accounting skills attracted Rieu’s interest. Their
ensuing collaboration during the past seven years has helped Rieu focus more energy on
performing for audiences, leading the highly talented musicians in his orchestra and conceiving
new ways to make classical music more accessible to his fast-growing worldwide audience.
“André has a unique vision with regard to where he wants to take his orchestra and music,” says
Van Veggel, André Rieu Group CFO. “It’s my role to inform him about the risks involved in
executing his vision and to identify ways to manage these risks.”
Because he successfully fulfils his primary (CFO) responsibilities, Van Veggel’s role has
expanded beyond the traditional boundaries of the chief financial officer in a mid-sized
enterprise (ME). In addition to serving as a trusted advisor to his CEO and the business, he has
taken on business-executive duties by managing the fastest-growing and largest source of
revenue, concert touring. These combined activities explain why Van Veggel possesses perhaps
the most musical title among any professional accountant in business (PAIB): “CFO and Concert
Tour Director.”
Van Veggel then joined a private importer of Swiss watches as its finance director. The move
was well-timed: the company’s growth during Van Veggel’s tenure resulted in its becoming part
of the Swatch Group, one of the largest watchmakers in the world. During his eight years with
the Swatch Group, Van Veggel again accumulated a variety of PAIB experience, including
financial reporting, post-acquisition integration and staffing management activities, that helped
tune him up for his current role.
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When Rieu recruited Van Veggel, the André Rieu Group was already a thriving company
contending with the same challenges that most fast-growing MEs encounter. Rieu’s talent,
success and rocketing global popularity helped sell more than 23 million CDs since his
breakthrough album, “From Holland with Love,” was first released in 1994. His concerts
currently rank as the 16th top-grossing act in the world, and he stages about 120 concerts
annually. The quick growth required new staffers and new investments to support a heavier
touring schedule; however, accounting and some other support processes were struggling to keep
pace. Van Veggel was hired to instill more sophisticated financial management capabilities and
controls in the organization.
“I joined the company, in large part, because it was completely unique,” he recalls. “You don’t
see anything like it in the accounting textbooks. And I soon realized that you can create your
own job. You’re expected and encouraged to look for potential needs throughout the company; if
you see a challenge you can address, you pick it up.”
One of the challenges that provided the greatest allure to Van Veggel was an issue that
commonly confronts finance executives in fast-growing entities: injecting greater finance and
accounting discipline into managing growth, but doing so without stifling the founder’s vision,
creativity and success.
“So many mid-sized companies become successful because the founder has a great idea that
really takes off,” explains Van Veggel. “When the company just starts out, the founder hires a
handful of people to help with the details. All of a sudden, they have a mid-sized company, yet
the same people are doing the accounting. And now they have a range of challenges that they did
not anticipate when they joined the company.”
His first move after he came aboard was to revamp the organization’s financial information
systems. The bulk of the existing accounting department’s time and energy was devoted to
accounts payable – processing the invoices and cutting checks. A more sophisticated finance and
accounting system would equip the business with greater visibility into its costs and revenue.
The company’s revenue comes from three sources: touring, CDs and video specials that it sells to
television stations and releases on DVD.
While the company understood that touring represented its largest source of revenue, Van
Veggel wanted to gain a far more detailed understanding of what drove revenue and costs. “We
were not really focusing on what a concert costs, and that is our core business,” he explains. “I
changed the entire system so it could follow what was truly happening and inform us where our
costs were, how we could save money and what it would cost us to expand into new markets.”
Second, Van Veggel beefed up the accounting department by hiring specialists. “Just as a Dutch
soccer coach always takes his best players along to a new club, I took my best accounting players
with me to my new company,” he notes. Those professionals included a payroll specialist (to
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help manage the complexities of compensating international musicians), an accounts payable
specialist (whose expertise extends to credit and collections) and a controller (who can manage
the accounting department in The Netherlands while Van Veggel executes his new business
responsibilities around the world).
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After Van Veggel dedicated his first two years with the company to bringing its finance and
accounting capabilities in line with its growth, Rieu asked him to lead the U.S. operations. While
he maintains his CFO title and responsibilities, New York-based Van Veggel also became
responsible for devising and executing André Rieu Group’s U.S. touring. The work includes
negotiating agreements with concert venues and television stations – Rieu’s concerts have been
televised on Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) stations throughout the U.S.
“Touring is our main business,” he notes. “It exerts such a strong influence on our finances that I
need to be closely involved with it.” This involvement recently expanded: he is now also
responsible for managing all contract negotiations with promoters around the world.
While Rieu may not have wanted Van Veggel to carry his Stradivarius, he has enjoyed the
rewards of asking his PAIB do almost everything else.
Key lessons:
• PAIBs are expected to establish greater finance and accounting rigor to more effectively
manage growth without stifling the founder’s vision, creativity and success.
• Help the organization conduct administrative matters more efficiently so it can focus more
resources on executing its vision.
• Communications within companies represent one of the most important aspects of a CFO’s
job.
• Financial information systems should report what is truly happening and alert PAIBs to
expansion and cost cutting opportunities.
• Once PAIBs have put in place new information systems, processes and people, the value of
those investments should be clearly demonstrated to the entire management team.
• PAIBs within mid-sized enterprises are expected and encouraged to look for potential
needs throughout the company; if you see a challenge you can address, seize it.
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Appendix: Professional Accountants in Business and Mid-Sized Enterprises
This interview paper illustrates how professional accountants in business are addressing unique
challenges facing mid-sized enterprises. Although the interviews are self explanatory, it is useful
to further define the roles and domain of the professional accountant in business and what
actually constitutes a mid-sized enterprise.
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Strategy • Reacts quickly to • Reacts faster to • Slower responding to
business changes business changes than business change given
large organizations, bureaucracy, yet when
• Managing is intuitive,
though not as quickly they move, they move
seat-of-the-pants, often
as small organizations with great force
no business plan
• Market data and • Formal planning
• Growth is on a
business planning process and business
customer-by-customer
beginning to be plan
basis
employed, often with
• Multi-year forecast
outside help
and written strategic
• Growth is through plan with a three to
concentration on five year time horizon
developing new
• Growth is through
products and expanding
erger and acquisition
into horizontal and/or
of competing and/or
vertically integrated
complementary
markets
businesses
Customer / • Few customers account • Growth of customer • Large, international
Community for large part of base customer base
turnover
• Moving away from the • Success or failure of
• Close to their direct proximity of their the enterprise is felt
customers and clients through the whole
customers’ business supply chain, the
pains employee base and the
wider community
Financial • Capitalization through • Capital structure begins • Capitalization through
private funding, family to become more public investors, IPO,
and/or employee complex. External SEC reporting,
owned funding sought exchange listing
• Reinvestment of profits • Reinvestment of profits • Reinvestment of
is owner centric; focusing on building profits through
personal infrastructure and/or shareholder returns
financial/estate market share to provide (dividends) regain
planning often shareholder value in focus
overrides long-term lieu of cash dividends
• Full finance and
economic
• Annual budget and accounting function
requirements; excess
operating plan for the
funds (if any) invested
current year and
in safe vehicles
perhaps next two to
• Entrepreneur controls three years
all activities. Often no
• Often still weak in
formal budgeting or
applying accounting
business planning
and tax matters with
process
strong reliance on
• Few conformance outside help
requirements – mostly
from the tax authority
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International Federation of Accountants
545 Fifth Avenue, 14th Floor, New York, NY 10017 USA
Tel +1 (212) 286-9344 Fax +1 (212) 286-9570 www.ifac.org
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