A Formula for Success

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As Seen in CFO Studio Magazine Q4 2015 Issue

By James Emmerson Chief Financial Officer, Huntington Learning Center

SURROUND YOURSELF WITH TALENT, AND ENHANCE WHAT THEY GIVE YOU

Your responsibilities as a chief financial officer are probably much like mine: overseeing day-to-day activities regarding accounting, budgeting, tax management, cash management, banking activities, information technology, telecommunication systems, human resources, payroll, employee benefits, legal matters, risk management, facilities, property management, and purchasing. I think of myself as a well-rounded senior financial manager, but I depend heavily on my team.

When you get to a C-level position — and even before that — it is important to surround yourself with expert business partners, either as part of your internal team or your third-party advisors.

The most important role I have, beyond making sure that the company is performing well in all of the above-noted areas, is ensuring that the strategic posture of the company is aimed at growing our targeted product lines or services so the company can achieve the financial and market-share expectations of the shareholders. That means I need data that is accurate and detailed.

In order to ensure access to the data that allows each of us to perform our role as a CFO, we need current financial and operational information. You cannot project tomorrow if you really don’t know where the company was yesterday or is today.

Hire the best staff that you can and ensure that internal controls and auditing are in place to prevent things going off course.

Managing the Team

You need to be able to sleep at night knowing processes are working as they are supposed to.

• If you are not 100 percent sure that you have the right staff, replace them. To make do instead would cost you more in the long run —much more.

• Encourage your staff to attend webinars, seminars, and conferences. There is also a tremendous amount of valuable information on new products, services, and regulations available on the Internet.

• Challenge your staff to find better, more efficient ways to improve your bottom line. Be sure to reward this behavior accordingly.

The same approach goes for third-party advisors. You need to be 100 percent sure that you are being advised on the best and latest trends in the marketplace. It is great to be loyal to those advisors with whom you may have a long relationship. But don’t be afraid to challenge them by getting competitive bids.

We all know service has a value, but don’t throw away an opportunity to improve the bottom line. Just do your homework and make sure that the lower-priced vendor is not going to cost you by providing poor service or products.

Work with your advisors on programs that will provide financial benefits to both parties if you reach or exceed predetermined milestones.

If you don’t ask for better pricing or service levels, the opportunities will not present themselves. Periodically renegotiate your leases, agreements, and contracts. You should usually end up in a better financial position.

Remember to surround yourself with the best talent available. Challenge them, but also, reward them.

The Pitfall of Precision

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As Seen in CFO Studio Magazine Q4 2015 Issue

By Aldonna R. Ambler CMC, CSP, The Growth Strategist

Requiring exactitude about less-important details can kill ROI

We all understand that T’s should be crossed, I’s must be dotted, and rows and columns of numbers should reconcile exactly. But an obsession with absolute accuracy and complete perfection can destroy the ROI of an acquisition or roll-up.

SITUATION #1 Investors were expanding their company to become a multiservice one-stop shop. After two acquisitions of specialized companies, due diligence for a third dragged on for over a year, while the target’s 45 percent growth rate slowed to 25 percent. Valuation was adjusted three times. Some key employees lost confidence in the acquiring company and accepted positions elsewhere. The distraction of the onerous due diligence process increased the cost of acquisition, lost the company opportunities, and slowed integration. The acquirers lost millions as the accounting departments parsed numbers. They would have made more money if their guesstimates had been off by as much as 30 percent! It pays to gauge the pace of the industry involved. Before establishing the budget and timeline for due diligence, it pays to know how quickly a transaction must be completed to achieve the desired competitive advantage.

SITUATION # 2 An investor wanted complementary companies to provide a range of services for corporate accounts. His team ran into difficulties when multiple investors emerged, all courting the same target, but with varying approaches to due diligence, valuation, and integration. One might assume that prospective buyers from Asia, Europe, and South America would use generally accepted accounting practices (GAAP) that would yield comparable valuations. But the variations in what constituted gross profit ranged from 32 to 38 percent, a huge difference. In B2B service businesses, stable, scalable gross profit is central to success, and each prospective buyer expected the target company to invest in additional accounting to match the prospective buyer’s definitions. A fourth buyer, who was able to deal with accounting differences later, bought the target company while the other three were still focused on the definition of gross profit. It often pays to accept different (even less sophisticated) financial reports.

SITUATION #3 Same scenario — a roll-up to become a one-stop shop on a global scale. The buyer’s due diligence process was very precise regarding inventory, backlog, accounts receivable, repeat business, average order size, etc. But little attention was focused on the people. A few individuals in each of the acquired companies had large compensation packages, impressive C-level job titles, and expectations that they would retain authority over their piece of the blended company. The cost, risk, and complexity of leadership integration and/or replacement absolutely dwarfed the precise numbers that were generated about “things.”

It pays to remember the 80/20 rule. Perform due diligence that emphasizes the key factors behind success or failure. Acquisitions often involve “companies in search of a CEO,” so leadership-related due diligence matters.

Rightsizing the Portfolio

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As Seen in CFO Studio Magazine Q4 2015 Issue

By Robert Kossar Executive Managing Director

Real estate plays a role in productivity and innovation

As demands on the C-suite continue to shift, executive leaders are demanding change in the structure and cost profile of their real estate portfolios. Although typical concerns regarding real estate still include whether or not there is too much space, too little space, or the wrong kind of space for the company’s operations and culture, decisions must also be made about the ways employees use the workplace, based on activity.

Today’s CFO helps determine how real estate supports the broader needs of the business, beyond square footage. Working with internal stakeholders, the CFO helps set real-estate objectives and helps determine the financial and operational impact of the company’s portfolio. Organizational success relies on this integration of internal groups across the organization, connecting them to the C-suite, to better empower all levels of workers and drive change.

As CFOs better understand workplace strategy trends, they can also best determine portfolio needs to attract and retain talent who can focus on innovation and increase productivity. Leveraging space-utilization studies and the latest technology to determine space requirements and configurations can help CFOs make real estate an integral part of the business equation. In cases where commercial real estate (CRE) experts are engaged in the organization’s real-estate process, they understand the bottom-line focus of CFOs, and to that end, incorporate tactics to increase portfolio flexibility, improve the environmental efficiencies of each building in the portfolio, and adjust occupational density for the company’s workforce to help reduce cost and deliver savings.

CFOs can rely on CRE experts to provide processes, vendor access, owner/occupier relationships, market intelligence, opportunities for incentives, valuations, sustainability measures, and data technology to provide the company with a competitive edge. The C-suite continues to drive out waste to achieve a competitive advantage in the market. It remains imperative that CFOs constantly evaluate and re-evaluate their business’ real-estate needs, and ensure optimal efficiency and productivity while striving to manage costs.

Copyright 2017