Learned a lot lending an editorial hand here:
Spencer Stuart, December 2024
by Jean E. Chiswick and Lucy Smith-Stevens
A senior leadership position, one pivotal to company performance, has undergone a profound shift.
Today’s chief financial officer (CFO) must influence beyond financial issues and offer cross-enterprise leadership on a range of different challenges. The role requires strong communication — someone able to seamlessly switch from internal to external audiences on a range of contemporary industry themes. They have to deftly navigate opportunities and risks, juggle a myriad of stakeholders and be co-pilot to the chief executive, working shoulder to shoulder in many cases, both inside and outside of the company.
No wonder the CFO so often looms large as a strong candidate when a CEO succession is underway.
But it’s not always smooth sailing.
The last two years have been pockmarked by a variety of economic challenges, increased complexity and ambiguity, as well as intense geopolitical disruption. Perhaps unsurprisingly, we have observed a shift in ASX 100 CFOs appointed with more proven CFO track records, classical accounting backgrounds and established credibility in public markets.
Does this mark a return to linear pathways to ASX 100 CFO succession? Well, not necessarily. We have found that 25% of internal CFO promotions have had exposure to P&L or operational leadership positions. This shows that breadth of experience is still important.
With more proven CFOs appointed in ASX 100 CFO positions, coupled with growing CEO succession from CFO roles, one thing is clear: an experienced CFO is the leadership advantage that counts. (Read the rest here.)
Monday, December 9, 2024
ASX 100 CFOs Unlocked: Identifying the Leadership Advantage that counts
Posted by Theodore Kinni at 1:22 PM
Labels: ASX 100, career, CFO, corporate success, management
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