In this second report of the Tax Transformation Trends survey series, we tapped into the perspectives of 300+ tax and finance leaders with a focus on talent transformation. As companies look past the pandemic, they are asking their tax functions to play a bigger advisory role—with less resources and more responsibilities. In this era of change, leaders will need to think differently to stay ahead of the curve.Get ready to reimagine your tax function, today.
Rethinking the work, workforce, and workplace
As companies look beyond the pandemic, they are asking their tax functions to play a bigger advisory role. Tax leaders have been asked to provide strategic counsel on emerging issues on everything from new digital business models to sustainable transformation. They need to transform their technology infrastructures to free up team capacity, operate more efficiently, and use data more effectively. Meanwhile, all this change is happening during an unprecedented global shift to remote and hybrid working. These trends have profound implications for the future of the tax function: how the work gets done, the skills that make up the workforce, and how the workplace is defined.
Mike Munoz, VP Tax and Treasurer, Suncor
Increased automation and reliance on shared service centers are the top choices for tax leaders looking to leverage lower cost resource models for routine tax compliance work.
Global Head of Tax, Global Bank
Tax leaders recognize that their teams need entirely new technical skills, with data analytics (45%) and technology transformation (43%) at the top of their wish lists. However, these team members also need to flex their cross-business advisory (39%) and interfacing and education (35%) skills. This means they must upskill and diversify the roles on their teams to meet increasing business advisory demands.
Tim Rupert, Professor of Accounting at Northeastern University
Developing more tax hybrid professionals means that tax and finance leaders need to think much differently when it comes to recruiting and professional development. The ideal professional will have a blend of these skills and will aspire to grow in areas where they need to develop.
Global Head of Tax, A global bank
Whichever route companies take to develop hybrid tax-technology professionals, it will take time. But few tax leaders can wait two or more years for this—their digital challenges are urgent. So, some are doing the next best thing: pairing technology specialists with business analysts or other specialists in the wider finance team to combine their expertise on specific projects.
Examples of pairings that work:
Mike Munoz, VP Tax and Treasurer, Suncor
The tax function as we’ve known it is becoming a thing of the past. For tax function leaders, it is essential to build tax teams that meet the evolving demands that the business requires—in a time where the nature of tax work is changing. It is no longer enough to be a master of one or in multiple areas of tax. Professionals must also move out of their previous comfort zones to engage systematically and strategically with other parts of the business to provide the tax advisory expertise needed. They need to think hard today about the what, the who, and the where of their tax operating model and how they will find and develop the people to deliver on the function’s elevated objectives. Many of the tax leaders taking part in our research are doing just that—and in several ways.
Automating compliance and reporting work and/or migrating it out of tax to shared service centers (SSCs) and outsourcers, in the process freeing up their talent to perform higher-value advisory work.
Developing hybrid tax-technology professionals internally by encouraging tax specialists to master selected technology skills; this bypasses the imperative to hire ready-made professionals (who will not necessarily be widely available in the market) with this skill mix.
Pairing their technology specialists with business analysts to address immediate tax challenges demanding technology solutions.
Sourcing specialist tax-technology expertise from external consultants to execute specific projects or work longer-term in tandem with in-house specialists, in the process helping to develop the latter’s hybrid capabilities.
Reconfiguring their teams more efficiently, recognizing that not all their resources need to be full-time employees. Some are finding it easier and more effective to buy access to external talent with specialized tax-technology skills, rather than trying to build it internally by recruiting and training their own in-house teams.
Upgrading team members’ advisory capabilities and communications skills, through training and other measures.
Taking organizational steps to bring team members into closer proximity with other parts of the business.
Devising ways of ensuring team cohesion, knowledge sharing and full data accessibility as remote and hybrid working regimes become the norm.
Re-thinking which expertise is core to their business, deciding whether they need niche expertise in-house or whether they are better off buying access to it through external advisers who are specialized in the topic.
In the first report in our three-part Deloitte tax transformation trends series, we learned that the tax department has reached a tipping point—forcing leaders to rethink their tax operating models. We learn in this second report that these changes have had a “butterfly effect” on the tax talent experience. In this report, we’ll discuss how the tax function has not been immune to these external forces of change—and give some practical advice on what to do about it.
Emily VanVleet, Partner of Deloitte Tax LLP, discusses how companies are turning to the tax function to play a more strategic advisory role post-pandemic on Accounting Today, read here.