July 20198 IN MY V EWFrom scorekeeper to a strategic partner: Traditionally perceived as "bean counters", the modern age CFOs are fast evolving as strategic advisors to the Board. The future of finance lies with finance leaders who think like entrepreneurs and aim at creating wealth beyond the balance sheet. Today's economic environment is volatile, ambiguous, risky and disruptive. By the time the numbers are reported, they are old already. What the CEO expects is intelligence emerging from the present data to alter business decisions for tomorrow. This expectation is not unreasonable given that with increased innovation and evolving alternative variables, business models are transforming, product life cycles are becoming shorter, the competitive landscape is furious and decisions need to be taken quicker. In this information age, there is an understandable need to operate with speed and efficiency along with intellectual prowess. While the intellect is largely a human skill, digitization backed by RPA and AI equips the finance function with superpowers that translate data into useful information at a much faster pace than before. Digital finance is truly bringing unprecedented opportunities to forward-thinking CFOs allowing them to create value in their business in ways which were to a large extent just "aspirational" in the past. Armed with this power of information, the focus is on future. The modern age CFO is comfortable discussing a new operational opportunity in the morning, modelling scenarios in the afternoon and drawing new business strategies by evening. To sustain this pace of delivery and decision making there is an realistic need for strategic agility as well as strong risk management framework. Balancing speed and sustainability is on every CFOs agenda as the struggle scales with challenges around financial governance, compliance and crime. BY MITSU DOSHI, CFO APAC, FOODPANDATHE MODERN CFO, A DIGITAL SUPERHERODefending against Crime: There is plenty of room for innocent mistakes and intentional crime in an environment that thrives on pace. Digitisation rolls out a red carpet for opportunistic fraudsters. No business can really escape from the risk of fraud and corruption. As long as humans (and not machines) are running businesses, corporate misconduct is here to stay. There is increased internationalization to penetrate new markets, and deliberate localisation to cater to local market demands which brings promising benefits in terms of growth, revenue, and economies of scale. These unchartered territories trigger unknown risks. With digitisation, our supply chains are increasingly transparent which further complicates the risk scenario. The criminal ecosystem is changing. In the past, management largely worried about asset misappropriation as a risk, but today, intangible data is stolen and the invaders are invisible. Cheating to a computer screen or lying to a sheet of paper is way more easier than robbing a bank. Companies, governments, and individuals have all been victims of cybercrime. Everyone is living a life online, whether it is to share holiday experiences on social networks or managing operational information on a cloud. With technology, crime got more sophisticated and complex to detect, but easier to Mitsu Doshi
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