This level of change – driven by massive social, economic, and technological shifts – is moving CFOs to relook at the core strategies, competencies, and activities they focus on. This reflection and anticipation have made it clear that the CFO of the Future has to not only protect and drive firm value, but also create and harness new business models and forms of value. As Tracey Travis, CFO of Estee Lauder Companies and member of the Summit Executive Leadership Group framed; “In finance, rather than creating static reports to look at trends, it’s about our ability to help the organization be more predictive in what’s trending and determine what response we can develop to generate new value from that. We have to create more real-time dashboards, understand what’s happening, and be ready to capitalize on that.”
Essentially, the CFO role is changing, and a consistent theme in the Summit is the need for chief financial officers to work hand-in-hand with their chief executive officer to transform their enterprise. As Dr. Christian Campagna, senior managing director for CFO & Enterprise Value at Accenture Strategy, advised during the Summit, “The CFO and the CEO must see the whole enterprise, as it’s only these two that feel the pain when something somewhere is not headed in the right direction. Together, they need to design the future.”
Designing the future hasn’t historically been a focus for CFOs, who traditionally have aimed their attention at retrospective analysis and financial forecasting. Designing and transforming the enterprise requires CFOs to foster “adaptive capacity,” a concept Dr. Antonio Oftelie, fellow at Harvard and Summit faculty chair, defines as “the ability for an organization to strategically fit its structures, capabilities, and resources to the demands of an evolving environment.”