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The corporate CFO was once confined to financial gatekeeping and oversight. But for some time now CFOs have been taking on wider and more strategic corporate responsibilities. Today’s CFO needs to partner with the CEO on strategic leadership of a company through budgeting and planning, while taking on greater responsibilities in daily operations and even functions such as enterprise content management. Indeed, CFOs are making more decisions in real-time in areas new to them, and they are relying on volumes of new information.
This report, commissioned by Qlik, finds that having to use so much new information to shape corporate strategy is a double-edged sword. The growth of non-traditional information sources, such as social media and location-based data, offers more potential opportunities for CFOs to generate important insights about their businesses.
Yet many CFOs believe their decision-making speed is actually slowing down, despite a need to make real-time or near real-time decisions based on multiple data sets. They feel they are often constrained by inaccurate or obsolete information and that valuable data stuck is in organisational silos.
In managing these challenges, CFOs believe they have not been adequately supported by incumbent IT vendors, who are seen as reluctant to make software that simplifies data problems. They continue to look for technology-based solutions, but find most data management tools fall short by not providing the flexibility CFOs expect to aid in short-term operational and long-term strategic decision-making.
Why read this report:
- 47% of Asia’s CFOs say decision-making hindered by information overload.
- 52% of CFOs also see data accuracy as the biggest obstacle to doing their job.
- Nearly all (94%) say they will need more IT expertise in the next three years.
- CFOs feel let down by IT vendors, with 44% saying their suppliers are purposefully not making data tools easy to use.