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Crunch time for CFOs: Future of finance workforce trends

What’s here and what’s next for work, workforce, and workplace

What do finance workers want? We asked them about topics like flexibility, compensation, and meaningful work. Their answers reveal trends that are forging the workforce of the future. Creating a truly dynamic finance function will require the effective management of this future workforce. It will take an understanding of what they really do—and why.

What we’ve learned (so far)

 

As finance organizations and employees dealt with the ripple effects of the pandemic—from evolution in work to personal challenges—here’s what we found out:

  • The finance workplace isn’t always where the worker is, but it is always where the work is: The shared digital environment and collaboration tools used by a team. That said, it’s still about finding the right balance between virtual and in-person work.
  • Wherever finance leaders and workers land, from fully back into the office, remote indefinitely, or a hybrid approach, the future implications of finance workforce trends will be real and need to be dealt with by design.
  • Freelancing and gigging went from novelty to the mainstream and became on-demand during crunch periods: tax season, quarterly and year-end closes, and more.
  • Organizations have started matching skills to the work that needs to be done.1 This gives the workers more choice, opportunity, and equity (not to mention meaning and satisfaction).
  • Workers want more—but what do they want? Finance leaders need to ask. A standard human resources engagement survey is likely not enough to manage the workforce of the future.

Find opportunity in trends shaping the workforce of the future

 

The past few years of unprecedented change, from social upheaval to a global pandemic, have shown workers what they want and don’t want. This is an opportunity for organizations to reimagine their finance function as a dynamic capability that enables the organization to do more: rearchitect the work by applying technology solutions and achieving new outcomes and value; unleash the workforce and engage them in new ways of working; and adapt the workplace so that it reinforces culture and meets employees’ needs for collaboration, physical and remote preferences, and an inclusive, equitable environment.

Our Crunch time report takes an in-depth look at how finance leaders can evolve the work, workforce, and workplace to meet their workers’ needs and the demands of what the future might hold.

OK. So, what do we do now?

 

To meet your finance workforce where they are, it comes down to one word: reimagine. Take a step back and reimagine your workforce, the work they do, and where they do it—and why. Start by asking yourself a few questions:

  • What does our finance organization actually need to do to deliver the most value now?
  • What don’t we know about our workforce? Are we painting them all with the same brush?
  • What do they consider to be valuable work? And do they understand how their work is valuable to the organization and our stakeholders? Do they know why they’re doing the work?
  • What technologies do they need to stay connected with one another and the organization, and to feel valued?

Imagine this

Imagine this: Flexible but connected

 

We anticipate a bell curve of physical work situations post-pandemic, with most organizations being somewhere in the middle: Offering an ecosystem of hybrid work and a hoteling method of physical workspace, with cubicles on a reservation basis and offices for the day. Gathering for moments that matter will always be important, but we expect hybrid work to stick around for the long term. One last thing: The new rule is, no rules—or maybe just one. Flexibility is key. Here are a few things to think about:

  • Flexible compensation and benefits strategy to attract and retain the workforce of the future by adapting to trends
  • Tax and regulatory concerns associated with a remote or hybrid workforce
  • Plan for change: room for flexibility as workers’ statuses, needs, and priorities shift
  • Plan for the moments that matter to employees in a talent life cycle: onboarding, career mobility, promotions, challenges, and difficult conversations
  • No matter what, change management is key; workplace transformation is never simple, and leadership will need to stay engaged with their employees as the transition rolls out

 

Imagine this: Finance as storyteller

 

Finance workers have historically been engaged in looking back to tell the story of what happened through periodic reporting, controllership, and other tactics. By helping to build and tell the story of an organization’s future workforce trends, Finance can be the catalyst for change by showing just what can happen when humans and technology leverage their respective strengths together. Imagine what might happen if finance could bring clarity to challenges, such as:

 

  • The potential financial burden of an increasingly boundary-less mobile workforce (and how to partner with human resources to mitigate it)
  • The potential effects of macroeconomic forces such as inflation and geopolitical unrest on functions across the organization
  • The future effects of a supply chain disruption on vendors, sourcing and procurement strategy, customer behavior, and revenue
  • Cash-flow needs for the week, month, and beyond—even amid disruption

 

 

Imagine this: Humans and machines

 

Finance’s work should evolve for the function to be a truly strategic partner and drive big decisions. Sure, it means that finance workers need to adopt technology—but also that technology should augment the work that only humans can do while helping them do more strategic work that adds value. Try mapping out the work you need done. Then, think about the human skills needed to level up the work and the humans who have those skills—plus the intuition and ability that this new work will require.

Do the same, more efficiently:

  • Manual reconciliations
  • Intercompany eliminations
  • Report creation

Do more, and add value:

  • Predictive forecasting, scenario planning, driver-based analytics and what-if analysis, with the business enabled by data-driven financial decisions
  • Strategic sourcing and vendor management: looking closely at your vendors to identify spend savings and vendor challenges given supply chain disruptions

 

It’s crunch time

 

Finance was on the path to the future of work before the pandemic—then organizations were propelled into it. Going forward, we can keep the things that worked, such as workplace flexibility and seeing workers for the humans they are, and innovate on what didn’t, like burnout and isolation. By building a finance for the future, a future-thinking CFO can be the leader their organization, and their people, require. (And this leadership must come from Finance, not human resources.) A finance workforce of empowered workers, technology that augments, and a purposefully designed workplace is built for results and resilience, not just reaction. It’s built to be dynamic—regardless of what the future may hold.

Explore other reports and guides in our Crunch time series.

Endnotes

1 Sue Cantrell, “Skills: The new workforce operating system,” Deloitte, October 21, 2021.
2 Deloitte. “Deloitte 2022 Finance Workforce survey,” 2022.

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