CFOs are rising stars of corporate America
Ruth Porat has been on a tear since joining Google in May as its chief financial officer. The former Morgan Stanley CFO was cheered by investors after the company’s second-quarter earnings report, when her remarks — which included hints about more fiscal restraint — helped send its stock soaring 16% the next day, reaching a record high.
Then, when the company surprised many last week with the news that it was restructuring itself in a way that could give investors more insight into its businesses, some speculated that Porat may have influenced the move. Whatever role she played, Porat will now be CFO of the new holding company, Alphabet, as well as remain CFO of its core Google business — a huge job by any measure.
Porat’s prominence is just one example of the ascension of the CFO. More and more chief executives have CFO experience on their résumé — United Technologies CEO Gregory Hayes and Oracle CEO Safra Catz are two named last year.
Chief financial officers have increasingly seen their job description expand far beyond number-crunching to include such things as supply-chain logistics and data security. Twitter CFO Anthony Noto, also thought to be a candidate in the company’s CEO search, was recently given responsibility for marketing, an atypical job for any finance chief.
Meanwhile, the demand for good CFOs to fill these broader roles has grown intense enough that it appears to be thickening their wallets. New data reported by the Wall Street Journal find that raises for CFOs outpaced those for their bosses, growing 13.9% last year, compared with 6.9% for CEOs.
“In the past, everybody said ‘bean counter’ when referring to a CFO,” says Peter Crist, chairman of executive search firm CristKolder Associates. Now, he says, a common refrain is to “find a leader in finance who can do a lot more than finance.”
Recruiters say this shift began with the introduction of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002, which required both CEOs and CFOs to sign off on financial statements, raising the profile of financial chiefs with their companies’ boards and putting more pressure on directors to get involved in their selection.
Since then, the prevalence of chief operating officers has dwindled, driven in part by board pressure on CEOs to get involved in operational details and by declining interest in publicly broadcasting the company’s heir apparent. That has led to the ascension of the CFO, Crist says, as the chief executive’s right-hand man or woman. “Nature abhors a vacuum,” he says.
Probably even more influential is the growing involvement by activist investors and private-equity players in corporate finances, as well as the growing demand to manage risk and data security.
Jeremy Hanson of the executive search firm Heidrick & Struggles, said, “It’s not uncommon for the IT function itself and data security to fall under the CFO’s domain.”
In addition to the security of customers’ data, increased focus on using analytics to make business decisions is putting CFOs in the sweet spot when it comes to corporate intelligence. Sergio Monsalve, a partner with Norwest Venture Partners, says he’s seeing his portfolio companies give CFOs more power and responsibilities.
“The world is moving to caring a lot about two things: money and data,” Monsalve says. “There’s only one person in the company who touches both in an intimate way, and that happens to be the CFO.”
One result of the CFO’s growing power, Hanson says, is that companies now want CFOs to have diverse backgrounds. For the first time since his firm began tracking such data, in 2008, Heidrick & Struggles found that those in non-finance jobs — operations, strategy or general management — are more likely to be tapped as the next CFO than the company’s top accountant or controller.