Skills and Scale Download The New Finance Labor Model Proves Its Real-World Value The finance labor model of the future has passed a major test – and it was a massive one. The results of Protiviti’s latest global survey of CFOs and finance leaders show that finance organisations which leverage a diverse talent pool of full-time employees, contract and temporary workers, expert external consultants, and managed services and outsourcing providers are able to respond to external disruptions, such as the COVID-19 global pandemic, with greater speed and agility. Finance groups with this talent and resourcing approach also experienced fewer compromises to core finance processes during the early stages of the pandemic. In fact, for financial planning and analysis, 18% of CFOs and vice presidents of finance say their organisations rely on managed services providers and 29% leverage staff augmentation to support these activities. Download Topics Geschäftsleistung Real-world tests of the future labor model came fast and furious in 2020. During COVID-19’s initial surge, most finance groups were ready for the transition to a virtual operation. In fact, a majority of CFOs and finance leaders reported that their functions were well prepared to shift to a remote working model in response to shelter-in-place directives enacted in many countries and regions. This capability also enabled finance leaders to stand-up just-in-time finance operations in new locations in response to temporary shutdowns in different regions. Finance teams that were not as prepared found themselves scrambling in more of an ad hoc, do-it-yourself mode. Besides reflecting the difficulty and creative configurations needed to find workable solutions in the daunting early phases of the pandemic, this effective transition suggests that many finance organisations are developing the talent and resourcing capability needed to “skill and scale” at speed. That’s important because remote working models are likely to remain in place throughout much of 2021 and are becoming permanent in many organisations. There is also the very real possibility of future market disruptions that could bring about shelter-in-place orders, either through additional COVID-19 surges, new viruses or other events, further increasing the need for a highly flexible talent and sourcing strategy. Our latest survey results underscore that finance groups are accelerating the development of their next-generation labor models. In the past 12 months, finance leaders have increased their use of managed services providers to perform financial reporting, strategic finance (M&A) and finance PMO, among other processes and activities. As CFOs and finance leaders strive to elevate their flexible finance labor models to the next level, they should: Assess which talent and skills investments are most likely to enable the organisation to operate at the right size, and in the right manner, to best address current and future operations and potential disruptions Ensure that remote working models within the finance organisation as well as throughout the enterprise are supported by optimal investments in cloud-based collaboration, ERP and workflow technologies that tap a diverse collection of internal and external talent sources Look closely at the depth and precision of an external firm’s knowledge of the finance organisation’s operations and culture when evaluating managed services providers (partners offering a blend of full-time staff, surge professionals and third party experts) Transition to appropriate elements within the finance labor portfolio – a highly skilled core of full-time staff, temporary staff, contractors, external consultants, managed services providers, and outsourcers – to optimally to maximise productivity and profitability Interested in learning more? Further insights and our full report, Finance Priorities in the COVID Era: Digital Dominance and Flexible Labor Models, are available at www.protiviti.com/financesurvey.