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Friday | 5 December, 2008
CIO
Close Fast, Close Smart
When it comes to closing the books, the benefits of speed are undeniable. And CIOs are uniquely positioned to help their organizations reap them
Galen Gruman 26 February, 2007 11:24:37

Go Fast for the Right Reasons

A faster close is a good indicator of successful financial processes, says PricewaterhouseCoopers' Harries. But going faster for its own sake should not become an enterprise goal. "If you improve quality and cost, [speed] usually improves, but if you drive for [speed], the others may not improve," he says.

"When we think about closing, quality comes first," says Dow Chemical CIO David Kepler.

"In no way should speed ever sacrifice quality. If there's one lesson learned over the last several years, it's that the integrity of financial reporting is paramount," concurs Harries.

"Garbage in, garbage out," warns KPMG's Kuehn.

When it comes to a fast close, the bottom line is to empower companies with trustworthy, current information. "Yes, we close faster today, but what we really did is to get information to people faster," says Kepler, drawing an important distinction for all CIOs and enterprises chasing the faster close.

SIDEBAR: Speeding Alignment

When the CIO and CFO work together, you get a better-managed company, not to mention a faster close

As companies accelerate their close, improve the ubiquity of the ­financial process and lower their costs, "you move to a shared service centre," says Peter Harries, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers. And that evolution depends on business and IT being closely aligned.

The benefits of alignment go beyond increasing the likelihood of identifying opportunities or dangers earlier, says Terry Flood, COO of IT integration provider Logicalis Group. "Good relations between the CIO organization and the CFO organization just cost less. You'll have infrastructures that save the company money, and you'll get focused on how to make the company money," he says.

In this partnership, though, the CIO is typically the junior partner. "For financial reporting, the buck stops with the CFO and other executive management, so they drive the show," says Steven Kursh, executive professor of finance and insurance at Northeastern University.

That doesn't mean, however, that the CIO is merely an executor.

"Having a CIO who understands the needs of finance for reporting and daily financial needs will help the CIO bring the right technology and packages to meet these needs," says Joe Kuehn, an advisory partner at accountancy KPMG. He's seen simple examples of that with his clients. For example, reports are historically created monthly, and people have grown accustomed to waiting for the next report before formulating their strategies. "No one ever asks for more frequent reports," he says, but a tuned-in CIO will notice that decisions are being held up and use automation to make reports available more frequently.

And sometimes the CIO takes a larger role. For example, at paperboard manufacturer Rock-Tenn, CIO Larry Shutzberg was heavily involved with defining the financial process. "But if I followed the traditional role of the CIO, I'm not sure I would have had the same role in the revised financial process," he says.

— G GRUMAN

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