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Fire fighting, how FDs are struggling to cope

Sarah Perrin, Financial Director, 02 Mar 2006

Many FDs are too busy with the day-to-day stresses of running a business to think about their long-term aims

Are you a fire-fighting FD? Too busy controlling cash, looking for cost savings, managing special projects, fixing IT systems, monitoring controls and reassuring your backers, to pause for breath and think strategically for the long term? If so, stop. It’s time to get tough with your colleagues, your team and even with yourself.

Fire-fighting can be caused by many factors. “If a business is expanding fast, it tends to create fire-fighting because of the need to generate cash to fund the business and the need to grow systems to monitor that trading,” says Mark Blayney, an experienced company doctor. “You are running to catch up. On the other hand, if a business is going down the decline curve, it can cause fire-fighting. If it is generating less money, the balance sheet is starting to erode, you have trouble paying creditors and the bank is asking for more information… When I walk in [to a company] and the FD has gone off sick, I know there is a real problem.”

Paul Brice, a partner in KPMG’s restructuring practice, works with FDs and MDs at times of stress. “During a financial restructuring, the thing that surprises people is how demanding on time the whole process can be,” he says. “FDs typically have to keep a huge number of plates spinning in addition to the normal day job. The restructuring process can take between two and six months. Unless they put the resources and mechanisms in place to deal with these demands, they can become overwhelmed.”

Dealing with such situations calls for early acceptance rather than denial, then seeking the appropriate extra help. Brice also advises developing an effective communication strategy with interested stakeholders such as lenders. “Ideally, an FD needs to put in place an effective and well-managed communications protocol so that there is a clear basis for when information should be expected, and an agreed point of contact for the day-to-day dialogue with stakeholders – often through the company’s advisers. There needs to be a mechanism so that FDs can focus on what they really need to do to help get the company effectively through the process.”

Start afresh

Sometimes newly-appointed FDs can walk into their job, full of enthusiasm, only to get a nasty surprise. “It’s not uncommon to find an accounts department staffed by people scared of using computers, who view spreadsheets with suspicion,” says Jeremy Willmont, corporate recovery partner with Moore Stephens. “They are often long-term employees who are considered reliable. But there’s a huge gap between what they are doing and what you need them to do.” Unfortunately, re-educating staff and improving systems takes time, potentially creating a firefighting environment in the interim.

It is quite understandable if FDs are feeling under the cosh at present. “The burden of regulation is now ever-increasing,” says Vaughan Thomas, a partner from PricewaterhouseCoopers’ performance improvement consulting business. “Individuals are now balancing an enormously demanding and divergent agenda – contributing to the overall business strategy, adding value to ‘business-as-usual’ in an increasingly difficult environment, managing increased regulatory pressure, compliance and governance. Every one of these demands requires the CFO and the finance function to stretch much more than before. This is compounded by the pressure on the back office to become leaner and meaner. It’s not as if you have lots of junior accountants lurking around to whom you can delegate this load. Coping with all of this means that the role and scope of the finance function must be updated to reflect the new reality.”

Company doctor George Moore of Resolution Inc believes a lot of FDs end up fire-fighting because they get landed with too many responsibilities. Depending on the size of the company they may be responsible for environmental reporting, act as the company secretary, be in charge of HR, IT, investor relations and office logistics. “That’s why the average FD is running around like a headless chicken,” Moore says. “A typical FD must be able to negotiate at the very beginning the resources they need, or slough off some of the other responsibilities. Their best chance is when they start a job. Push it [extra responsibility] down the department, or say it’s not going to happen.”

Learn to delegate

As an incoming company chairman, Moore is clear about what he expects of his FD. “I say you are no longer responsible for HR, investor relations, the office, IT or special projects. Give the company secretary role to someone in your office. You have to learn to delegate and let go.” That isn’t always easy. “It takes time to delegate,” says Moore. “It’s hard to find that half-day to show someone how to be the company secretary. But you have to do it.” Moore adds that FDs should try to delegate up, as well as down. “Investor relations is the chairman’s job,” he says.

Fire-fighting FDs could also cut back the volume of data being reported. “You often get reams of detailed reports on who the company sells to and what, and broken down by profit margins and so on,” says Moore. “The only people who need that level of detail are the sales people. So teach them how to find that information and produce it. Sometimes you get lots of specialised analysis of productivity issues that goes to everybody. It’s a waste of time. Most people don’t look at them and don’t know what they mean. So work out what the key metrics are and report on those. Focus on the things you really need to do.”
Manage your time

Moore is firm with any fire-fighting FD burning the late night oil. “I don’t want someone working in their office until nine or 10 at night,” he says. “I go in and say, what’s on your desk? And I put it in the bin. If it’s important, it will come back.”

FDs struggling to manage their time, who seem to be constantly fire-fighting, may be part of the problem. “Some people love to be out there on the edge,” says Alistair Nee, an executive performance coach with Penna. “They have no interest in planning ahead.” Alternatively, some people may keep themselves busy to avoid doing other things. Those who “haven’t got a solution to the bigger picture” may have a reason to always be busy with the smaller detail, Nee explains. “Fire-fighting isn’t necessarily a surprise. It can be planned, even if unconsciously planned.”

Alison Ringrow, a leadership coach with Penna, believes FDs who are constantly fire-fighting could benefit from coaching ­ so improving their own time management, delegation and general leadership skills. By developing greater emotional intelligence (EQ) they are also more likely to understand others and get better results.
“With the development of EQ there come more powerful relationships with the people you work with and who report to you,” says Ringrow. If FDs develop coaching skills, they could help their own team members to develop better time management, delegation or problem-solving skills ­ so providing better support for the FD. “It begins with self-awareness from the individual FD,” says Ringrow. “Only then, when they have worked on themselves, can they expand their influence to the people around them.”

Outsourcing

Assuming the budget allows, FDs might also turn to external help in the form of advisers or consultants. Outsourcing could also be an option, although this may bring its own challenges. “The problem is getting ready to outsource,” says Chris Beer, managing director of Resources Global Professionals UK, a professional services firm that supplies project-focused professionals. “If the processes aren’t in good shape and you are trying to get them off your desk because they are a pain, that’s a recipe for more pain. A good outsourcer probably wouldn’t want to take them on.”

If processes need improving, that might mean bringing in short-term specialist help. In general, in-sourcing expertise for a short period may be a good option for fire-fighting FDs, Beer suggests. “If there’s a burning platform and you know what the root cause is, you could bring in some process expert who can beat down the fire. You can bring in an expert for a discrete period of time to fix the problem.” That knowledge can, in the process, be transferred into the organisation, so improving its resilience for the future.

FDs who survive a period of fire-fighting may emerge stronger for it. “It’s an enormous education process,” says Paul Woodley, a long-time company doctor. “In a warped way, it’s enormously fun for everybody because they find the workplace has assumed a significance that’s greater than in the past. You have to work all hours to solve problems. You have to work with colleagues to implement recommendations and you have to trust people enormously.” For example, the process of trying to tighten cost control can bring the management team closer. “You get a lot of operational management together in a room and discuss what the priority is for spending cash,” Woodley says. “You have the store manager, the sales manager and so on all working together to say where this cash gets allocated. So you end up building a much closer team. Once it comes out of the difficulties, that team goes on and achieves successful things.”

FIRE EXTINGUISHER

Steven Bertram, FD and acting MD at Ramco, the Aberdeen-based oil and gas company, has recently emerged from a period of fire-fighting.

Around 18 months ago, Ramco got into difficulties when the Seven Heads gas field in the Celtic Sea, in which it held a major stake, proved disappointing.

"We were truing to put our first gas field into production," Bertram explains. "We got it on stream almost on budget and on time, but the geology was not as expected, so it didn't produce as much gas as it was supposed to. It was generating less cash. We had bank borrowing to pay for it, so we had the bank breathing down our neck."

Recalling those times, Bertram says, "It's important to keep a cool head and have good advisers and look at all the options available to you. Take things step by step.
Ramco's management first assessed potential technical solutions, such as drilling more wells. It then took the decision to sell the field and some other asset, to free itself from debt. By doing this Ramco is now in a position to concentrate on its exploration interests.

Bertram sees some positives in the experience. "Some investors have said to me that they would rather back a management team that had some experience and seen the rough as well as the smooth," he explains. "And a colleague who has been working hard on the fire-fighting described the last year-and-a-half as 'character-building'. having been through tough times you inevitably learn things, and it reduces the chance of making the same mistakes in future."

The need to delegate some routine functions can also be beneficial to the team as well as to individuals. "It gives the more junior teams a chance to expand and develop their own experience," says Bertram. "So there are some positives, provided you come out the other side."

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