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Country case study: Australia & New Zealand: A siloed future?

ANZ sees one of the lowest responses to those who strongly agree that finance should facilitate collaborative enterprise planning (46% v 57% elsewhere globally).

Compounding this, only a little over a quarter of respondents (28%) strongly agreed that they feel personally empowered to drive strategic decisions across business functions in their organisations, relative to the 45% and 46% who said the same worldwide and in Asia-Pacific, respectively.

Part of the process: Latin American finance executives get involved in operational processes in order to steer decision-making across the businesss

Certainly, finance executives in the region are confident in the near term. Eighty-four percent of the 200 Latin American respondents in a global survey of 800 CFOs and other senior finance executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by SAP, expect their company’s revenue to grow by 10% or more in fiscal year 2018/19. This makes it the most confident region included in the study.

Team players: Investing time and effort into collaboration empowers North American finance executives to drive strategic decision-making

The US Purchasing Managers Index, a leading indicator of business demand, is growing, while Canadian businesses see their near-term prospects as “robust”, according to the Bank of Canada.

Network effects: Finance executives in Asia-Pacific look to peer-to-peer collaboration to help steer decision-making across the businesss

According to The Economist Intelligence Unit’s long-term economic forecast, the region is on track to account for more than 50% of the global economy by 2050, up from less than a quarter in the 1980s.

This growth potential is also reflected in a new global survey of 800 CFOs and other senior executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by SAP. A clear majority  (82%) expect their companies to grow in revenue by 10% or more in fiscal year 2018/19, a degree of confidence beaten only by their peers in Latin America (83%).

Playing it safe: Could EMEA finance departments’ conservative approach to collaboration limit their growth prospects?

But the ability of European companies to capitalise on opportunities for growth may be limited by a conservative and siloed mindset among its finance leaders, a new study from The Economist Intelligence Unit suggests.

Steering through collaboration: CFOs driving new priorities for the future

It is well established that the modern CFO has a more strategic role to play in a business, but a clear action plan to achieve this is lacking. A key element of this is helping the business to deal with change. Some changes are planned: launching a new product or service, setting up operations in a new region or acquiring a competitor. Others may be unexpected: a major disruption to supply-chain operations, the emergence of new regulation and legal reporting requirements or the unpredictable impacts of global economic uncertainty.

Data quality: the foundation of effective data governance

A survey of more than 500 business executives in North America and Europe, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Collibra, finds that the objective of data governance programmes is accuracy above all. Improving data quality ranks as the most important benefit of data governance for 38% of survey respondents, equalled only by the related goal of data security. Fifty-one percent of respondents say data accuracy is an important metric of success for their data-governance programmes, the highest percentage for any metric.
 

Championing data throughout the business

Management considered data governance protocols successful if they protected customer data, complied with applicable law and met basic standards of reliability. Underpinning this approach was the widespread view among executives that data governance was a cost centre rather than value driver. Today, more companies recognise that their vast troves of information represent an untapped source of business value, and as a result they’re looking to data governance with new aspirations.

Infographic: Leadership Amid Transformation: Business opportunities and risks in the Middle East

Leadership Amid Transformation: Business opportunities and risks in the Middle East

Operating a business in the Middle East requires executives to navigate an exceptionally challenging geopolitical and macroeconomic environment while dealing with unique labour and technological considerations on the ground. This often requires managing expectations against reality. The aim of this report is to dispel regional business myths and take an evidence-based approach to assessing business opportunities and risks. We have identified these through a survey of business executives in the Middle East, complemented with in-depth interviews.

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