Doug Bonthrone, Coca Cola

Member Article

CFOs must take hands on approach to innovation

A new report from AICPA and CIMA reveals how finance professionals at Coca-Cola, Royal Dutch Shell and other global innovation leaders help to drive new advancements.

Add another duty to the expanding role of CFOs: Innovation catalyst. New research from the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA) and the American Institute of CPAs(AICPA) finds that management accountants, led by the CFO, play a vital and growing role in driving advancements at some of the world’s most innovative companies.

In those businesses, the CFO and finance team are deeply embedded in the process of innovation and have a clear framework to let new ideas take shape. They partner early with other departmentsto identify concepts with market potential, replace rigid financial metrics with staged measurements to avoid eliminating ideas too soon, and accept that failure is a tolerable outcome for projects along the path to commercialisation.

The conclusions are captured in a new Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA) report, “Managing Innovation: Harnessing the power of finance,” and based on interviews with global finance leaders at companies including Coca-Cola, Royal Dutch Shell and BT Group.

“The role of finance in all of this is multifaceted,” Royal Dutch Shell CFO Simon Henry FCMA, CGMA, explains in the report. “A finance function needs to be able to understand the business well enough to know what is a worthwhile activity but also, in this part of the business, to have a bit more of an open mind. It is less mechanistic and has the ability to live with ambiguity, to identify risk and to manage it.”

“There’s an art to innovation but there needs to be some science that goes with that: understanding the forward-looking side of strategy, being able to scope the opportunity,” adds Doug Bonthrone, ACMA, CGMA, and recently director of global services strategy at Coca-Cola. “In all these areas, the management accountant is really critical. Whether it’s a new product, process or business model, the management accountant can help assess the results, evaluate how things have gone and learn lessons.”

The report recommends five areas where finance professionals should take action:

  • Create an innovation-centric mindset. Develop a framework in which innovation can thrive and accept that sometimes projects will fail.

  • Nurture creativity. Explore ideas like ring fenced budgets that offer more flexibility for the innovation process.

  • Prepare the path to profits. Finance can be a valuable part of innovation teams – for example, helping build more robust business cases to secure further backing.

  • Match metrics to the stage of development. Finance leaders shouldn’t put metrics used in the operational business around nascent or experimental initiatives. Consider a phased approach to give an idea room to breathe.

  • Take a balanced view on innovation risk. Companies increasingly employ a portfolio of strategies to drive innovation. Management accountants should seek to create an opportunity framework that promotes clarity, transparency and discipline across the total portfolio.

The report can be viewed at [http://www.cgma.org/Resources/Reports/Pages/managing-innovation.aspx?token=cf1d4d4c-e8ac-4a89-a89e-cb3003011314](http://New report from AICPA and CIMA reveals how finance professionals at Coca-Cola, Royal Dutch Shell and other global innovation leaders help to drive new advancements. Add another duty to the expanding role of CFOs: Innovation catalyst. New research from the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA) and the American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) finds that management accountants, led by the CFO, play a vital and growing role in driving advancements at some of the world?s most innovative companies. In those businesses, the CFO and finance team are deeply embedded in the process of innovation and have a clear framework to let new ideas take shape. They partner early with other departments to identify concepts with market potential, replace rigid financial metrics with staged measurements to avoid eliminating ideas too soon, and accept that failure is a tolerable outcome for projects along the path to commercialisation. The conclusions are captured in a new Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA) report, ?Managing Innovation: Harnessing the power of finance,? and based on interviews with global finance leaders at companies including Coca-Cola, Royal Dutch Shell and BT Group. ?The role of finance in all of this is multifaceted,? Royal Dutch Shell CFO Simon Henry FCMA, CGMA, explains in the report. ?A finance function needs to be able to understand the business well enough to know what is a worthwhile activity but also, in this part of the business, to have a bit more of an open mind. It is less mechanistic and has the ability to live with ambiguity, to identify risk and to manage it.? ?There?s an art to innovation but there needs to be some science that goes with that: understanding the forward-looking side of strategy, being able to scope the opportunity,? adds Doug Bonthrone, ACMA, CGMA, and recently director of global services strategy at Coca-Cola. ?In all these areas, the management accountant is really critical. Whether it?s a new product, process or business model, the management accountant can help assess the results, evaluate how things have gone and learn lessons.? The report recommends five areas where finance professionals should take action: Create an innovation-centric mindset. Develop a framework in which innovation can thrive and accept that sometimes projects will fail. Nurture creativity. Explore ideas like ring fenced budgets that offer more flexibility for the innovation process. Prepare the path to profits. Finance can be a valuable part of innovation teams ? for example, helping build more robust business cases to secure further backing. Match metrics to the stage of development. Finance leaders shouldn?t put metrics used in the operational business around nascent or experimental initiatives. Consider a phased approach to give an idea room to breathe. Take a balanced view on innovation risk. Companies increasingly employ a portfolio of strategies to drive innovation. Management accountants should seek to create an opportunity framework that promotes clarity, transparency and discipline across the total portfolio. The report can be viewed at http://www.cgma.org/Resources/Reports/Pages/managing-innovation.aspx?token=cf1d4d4c-e8ac-4a89-a89e-cb3003011314)

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by CIMA UK Regional News .

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