Why Accountants Are An Endangered Species
Anders Liu-Lindberg
Leading advisor to senior Finance and FP&A leaders on creating impact through business partnering | Interim | VP Finance | Business Finance
First of all I have nothing against accountants and once or twice I have been called one myself. However, in today’s business environment and with the current trends in Finance as described in the article “Introducing The Finance Transformation Nine Box” the need for true accountants has become less and less. The main driver behind this is no doubt technology as companies in their efforts to automate and digitize are aiming at solutions that will enable the customer to do business with them online without any interaction with company staff. The flipside of this is that when all transactions become automated the debit / credit will also be done automatically. Reconciliations will be automated and whenever something doesn’t match (which btw wouldn’t happen often as no human intervention also minimizes the risk of mistakes) a controller can easily review the unmatched transactions and make the needed corrections.
Not only a large company phenomenon
At my previous job as a finance manager in a small company, I had a team of two accountants. We made a clear strategy on how we could optimize all transactional finance tasks that included.
- Better utilization of the system (despite being a very dated accounting system)
- Clearly focusing on the tasks that really mattered while eliminating all waste
- Implementing cloud-based solutions such as Concur for travel expense management and invoice workflows.
The result was quite clear. During my time in the position the company grew 200% and the number of transactions naturally also grew significantly. However, we didn’t hire any additional accountants.
This harmonizes very well with a recent study done by CFO Research finding that 52% of companies were considering a system upgrade to improve their transactional processes while an almost equal 50% would look to improve their processes.
What the current trend means for accountants
As described in several previous articles the current trend in Finance is to partner with the business to create more value for the company. It is very clear that transactional finance or finance operations is not part of this trend so while optimizing working capital and running lean OtC and PtP processes are certainly still important this is not what is talked about when saying that Finance should create value for the company. The ways Finance will create value are based on bringing analysis to the business and discussing how the business can be improved. I will go much more in depth on this next week, but there is no doubt that this puts extreme pressure on the traditional accountant. (S)he can try and develop to keep up with the trend by developing better analytical skills and communication skills which are not typically associated with accountants. However, the good old bean counter is certainly a threatened species and there is no one coming to save him / her.
A different kind of education is needed
Traditional education in finance and accounting has focused a lot on the basic skills like debit / credit, variance analysis and how to calculate KPIs. Very little focus, however, has been put on explaining all the information derived from this to people outside of finance. These are the people that run the business in the front line yet many accountants simply don’t know how to talk to them. While even the most distinguished business partner still needs to have a basic understanding of accounting it is clear that future education in finance and accounting needs to put a lot more emphasis on communication skills, how to make presentations and how to facilitate running a business. Most job ads looking for finance people these days from CFO and down all want these coveted soft skills, however, only a few companies and educations have put in the needed effort to develop these. No matter what happens though, if you are a traditional accountant i.e. a classic bean counter your days are numbered and you need to figure out fast what you will be doing in the future!
What do you think will happen to the accountants in the future? Do they still have a role to play or will they, in fact, be extinct? What can we do to fix accounting education to ensure that a different focus is applied to cater for future needs rather those of an analog past? Also, if you like what you read why not click the “like” button or share the article with your network? You can also leave a comment in case you want to discuss this topic in further detail and I will be very happy to hear your thoughts.
For previous articles about finance transformation please see below.
Finance Transformation Should Be All About… People
Why We Need Business Partnering Transformation
The Skills Of A Finance Business Partner
How To Speak Finance In A Non-Finance World
3 Reasons Your Budget Is Already Outdated
The “CAO” And The Analytics Analyst
Introducing The Finance Transformation Nine Box
How Finance Can Help When Business Is Bad
Anders Liu-Lindberg is the Regional Finance Business Partner for Maersk Line North Europe and is working with the transformation of Finance and business on a daily basis. Anders has participated in several transformation processes amongst others helping Maersk Drilling to go Beyond Budgeting and transformed a finance team from Bean-counters to Business Partners. He would love the chance to collaborate with you on your own transformation processes to help you stay out of disruption. If you are looking for more advice on how to get the most of LinkedIn Anders also has a few tips to share as well as if you want help in your job search. Don’t be shy! Let’s get in touch and start helping each other.
Originally published at https://www.proformative.com/blogs/anders-liu-lindberg/2015/06/13/why-accountants-are-threatened-species
Team Lead -Record to Report
5 年I accept that accountants will lose value. My concern is that finance profession will lose value with it.
Strategic Finance Professional
6 年The future will be interesting. Whether or not a dramatic change happens soon, it's always important to find unique ways to add value
GCFO @ East New Britain Development Corporation | Certified Public Accounting I Association of International Accountant I MBA
7 年Very interesting post Anders. As I understand in your message is a challenge for those who will not adopt and sync with the current trend. Gone are the days for accounting clerk itself because in this current time analysis is needed. Accounting clerk is no more but Accounting Analyst emerged. Right now, being an accountant in a corporate organization is a misnomer due to the level up of task which involves controllership, reporting, business advisory, contract review and the main customer of IT. Majority of the organizations hope you agree with me, put the IT under Finance so that the design of the IT is tailored to the demand of Finance. I agree with you Anders that focusing on accounting alone can endanger once role. I myself an accountant and I understand adaptability which is necessary. Richard
Auditor
8 年Anders Liu-Lindberg, finance and accounting professionals alike don't have the right balance of skill-sets...the technical knowledge and the creativity to be able to accurately express what the issues are and their corresponding optimal solution. Perhaps some are lacking common sense? Jason M. Jones, LPA (DE, MT), your thoughts?