CFO Role - Cashflow or Profitability ?
James OBrien
Business Acumen Strategist | COO Forum Asia | Value Creation Architect | Operations & Finance Transformation | Certified Chair?
As COVID-19 unfolds CFOs need to be focused on "cashflow" but not take their eyes off "profitability".
COVID-19 got me thinking about Jonathan Byrnes book "Island of Profit in a Sea of Red" in which he contends that nearly 40% of the average company is unprofitable, and 20 to 30% is so profitable that it provides all the earnings and subsidizes the losses. At this time CFOs need to be focused on "cashflow" but not take their eyes off "profitability".
Companies suffer from embedded unprofitability. The answer: build grassroots profitability management processes into your company's core management activities
So I thought I'd re-share the chapter titled "New CFO Role Chief Profitability Officer" in which Byrnes suggests Embedded Unprofitability is a huge issue in every company and it causes three enormous problems:
- reported profits are much lower, often half of what they could be;
- the best customers generally receive only average service, which raises a critical risk competitors picking off the profitable piece of business by offering better service; and
- the company loses the opportunity to shift resources to the highest payoff activities
He suggests "with the insights that profitability management provides, a company can secure its best business, focus on finding more of the best business, devise targeted measures to turn around the marginal business, and steadily shed the residual unprofitable business that can't be fixed. Not only is it very realistic to eliminate embedded unprofitability but it generally costs almost nothing and quickly generates large amounts of new profits and cash".
"Why isn't this an essential business process in all companies ? Why isn't the CFO - and other top finance managers - involved in driving this ?
The paradox is that there are Barriers to profitability management:
1st - Financial and management control information is not structured to surface the problem and opportunity areas.
2nd - Everyone is doing something but we miss the huge opportunity that comes from getting the day-to-day activities of the business right all the time.
3rd - Many businesses have strong investor pressures that can often constrain managers
4th - in most companies, no one is responsible for systematically analyzing and improving profitability.
Sure, a CEO or a general manager is responsible for profitability but most of these individuals are focused on major strategic initiatives, important customer relationships and making sure their key management make budget. The problem of analyzing the profitability of orders, accounts, products and services and improving them through precisely targeted measures, falls between the cracks. This problem has been magnified since function structures have taken the focus away from different stages in the value chain.
So what about CFO's? Well virtually all CFO's, and other top finance managers, are very focused on profitability in terms of meeting revenue and earnings targets. Managing cashflow, acquisitions and divestments are always are play. However its very unusual for a CFO to focus systematically on identifying and rectifying embedded unprofitability, and on building this process into the company's core set of ongoing management activities.
Introducing the New CFO Role
Business must overcome this logjam and overcome the barriers to effective profitability management - they can by defining a powerful new role for the CFO: Chief Profitability Officer.
To be successful the CFO must become very skillful at co-ordinated change management in order to be a successful chief profitability officer. He or she must join with other top finance managers to create a new culture of profitability and new business process to support it. The payoff in results and satisfaction is enormous.
My question for you: Where are your opportunities to find your company's hidden profits (and cash) ?
James O'Brien is the Founder of CFO Accelerator which offers exclusive mentoring and coaching to CFO’s across Asia Pacific.
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2 年James, thanks for sharing!
Divisional CFO , GM Finance & Commercial
4 年Good article James. Cash is king at the moment...for at least the next 6 months...then the drive towards profitability
Managing Partner @ Fisher Cut Bait | Overcoming mediocre performance
4 年Very good summary. I can't help but chuckle a bit as I've been having precisely this conversation with a client - managing cashflow and profitability are two different things.
Principal Consultant at A.T. Houston
4 年Profit is the measure of how well you managed cashflow. Focus on the race, not on the prize.
“Cash” for rebuilding teams and relationship -.......to generate profit