Part Time CFO – if this is the solution, what’s the problem?

The interim or part-time Finance Director option works well because it is quick to implement and it recognises that once the problems are solved you can go back to a lower-cost level of resource which will consistently get the right job done in the future.

There’s no such thing as a full-time FD role in most small or medium businesses. But if this is true then what can a small or medium-sized business do when it needs some experienced, practical financial input? A part time CFO might be the answer.

The first challenge for the management team is to recognise that they have some problems that can’t be dealt with by the existing finance staff.

This may be tough to do because you don’t know what you don’t know. However, some common indicators that all is not well with your business financials may include:

  • slow payment of your sales invoices
  • cashflow problems
  • inaccurate or late or no management accounts
  • losses
  • unpaid suppliers calling too frequently
  • HMRC not being paid PAYE and VAT
  • surprises in the numbers after the event

If you’re concerned about some or all of these symptoms then what can you do?

The expensive and slow answer is to recruit a senior financial person at Financial Controller or CFO level. A solution that’s quicker to implement and which will most likely turn out to be cheaper is to look for an interim or a part time finance director.

What can you expect from an interim or part time CFO?

Someone who knows what they are doing will have a meeting with you in which they should very quickly get to diagnose the financial issues in your business.  Once identified, these issues need to be prioritised and then resolved.

What you see next will probably include:

  • a cashflow model (this stands out on its own because it will quickly show whether there are very serious problems with the solvency and the future of the business which need to be addressed as a matter of urgency)
  • correct, meaningful management accounts being produced
  • a plan to improve profitability and lower the cost-base
  • changes to systems and processes and the introduction of new ones
  • a to-do list for non-financial staff to get on with to improve other parts of the business – particularly based around the profitability of products, services and customers
  • training of your existing finance staff to be a better job in a slightly different way
  • recruitment plan for the appropriate level of staff

All this can be done quickly, some of it may need to be!

The race is on to get the business working more profitably on “automatic pilot” and once this is in sight the input of the part time Finance Director can scale down and perhaps come to an end.

The interim or part time Finance Director option works well because it’s quick to implement and it recognises that once the problems are solved you can go back to a lower-cost level of resource which will consistently get the right job done in the future.

If a part time CFO could be just what you need

We may be part of the solution for you.

Because we do this work for clients on a regular basis.

If some of the problems described here are achingly familiar and you need some help, please give Michael Austin a call on 020 7125 0270 or email info@bluedotconsulting.co.uk.

Let’s meet, have a coffee and a good, long, confidential chat about your business.

Michael – @bluedotmichael

Related links:

Management information

Switching accountant – you can kiss a lot of frogs

Measure business performance and make more money

© Blue Dot Consulting Limited

Part time finance director – could be just what you need

The ideal progression is for the part-time FD to make most of the job redundant by training other people to do it and ensuring that things which are fixed stay fixed.

A part time FD could be just the short-term financial shot in the arm your business needs right now.

An experienced pair of eyes looking at profitability, cashflow and much more besides could make a real, lasting, positive difference.

Here’s how it works.

 

What are the part time finance director’s responsibilities?

When we launched our part-time Finance Director service we had to ask what a company would need from the role.

There are three main areas of responsibility:

1. Financial performance measurement

  • Management accounts and key performance indicators
  • Forecasting and budgeting
  • Business planning

2. Day-to-day financial control

3. Relationships with third parties

  • banks
  • investors
  • HMRC
  • accountants and tax advisors

Exit planning, acquisitions and raising finance will also come under the FD’s remit as will ad hoc project management.

 

What does the part time FD role look like?

The key objective is to get all the routine financial processes and management reporting to work on “automatic pilot”.

Once this is happening the business should be scalable over a large range of growth. Financial processes and reporting are able to support growth without needing to be redesigned every five minutes.

Whilst ensuring the routine work is happening properly, the part-time FD can also undertake other tasks that the business prioritises and tick them off when they’re achieved.

As each objective is met the MD, and many others in the company, should notice that there are fewer things to worry about. Fewer obstacles to sustainable growth.

 

Less is more for the part time FD

In many ways the ideal progression is for the part-time finance director to make most of the job redundant by training other people to do it and by ensuring that things which are fixed stay fixed.

Over time the FD builds up a vast working knowledge of the business and becomes a very valuable sounding board for important decisions and it’s in this capacity that most value is added going forward.

For example, if the business wants to make an acquisition or expand into a new country or one of its major suppliers collapses, the part-time FD will be one of the first people called for advice.

Having a part-time finance director is a cost-effective and useful resource for a lot of companies and the role will be as varied as the company’s own evolution and development.

Finding the right person and agreeing the scope of the role are perhaps the most difficult challenges for MDs looking for help in this field. After all, most people have never recruited an FD before!

If you are looking for a part-time finance director for your business we would be very happy to help you. Please call me on 020 7125 0270.

 

Michael
Sales | Margins | Profit | Cashflow

 

 
 

To increase profitability – We’re going to purposefully do less!

It’s great to grow sales, increase in size and be busy but do you know where your profit is coming from and where it’s not?

The context of this quote from an MD was that their business is quite capable of winning large, profitable contracts.  But it’s also quite capable of winning much smaller contracts which reduce profitability because they can get in the way of the big ones.

Which means the directors get bogged down with details and problems related to several small projects and have less time to work on the important contracts and new business that’s driving profit.

Their solution? Ditch the smaller stuff – less is more.

Which parts of your business hold your profitability back?

It’s great to grow sales, increase in size and be busy but do you know where your profit is coming from and where it’s not?

Can you measure:

  • profit by client
  • profit by product or service
  • project profitability
  • how much time is being committed to each client, project, sale

If you can’t then you won’t improve profitability and there’s a good chance you’ll trip yourself up on the less-profitable stuff and miss opportunities in the part of your market you really want to be in.

However, once you start to measure the right things you can identify what’s holding you back and make changes that make money.

It’s not always about doing less

There are other solutions available, it’s not always about turning work away.

You can:

  • increase prices to make more profit from the problem contracts
  • train or recruit staff who will handle the smaller contracts
  • start a new business that handles particular products / services

But you can’t do any of it unless you are measuring your business properly – all roads lead back to good management information!

Visit our dedicated Profitability services page to learn more about how we can work out where your profit improvements can be made.

Michael

Related links:

I can have the business I want – by stopping the business I’ve got

Gross Profit Officer – appoint one today

Profit margins: make more money with every sale