The Guardian (Nigeria)

Finance experts chart course for data analytics adoption

- By Geoff Iyatse

INTERNATIO­NAL finance experts, including executives of the Associatio­n of Chartered Certified Accountant­s ( ACCA), have made a case for a change of orientatio­n among peers, saying technology has altered the course of profession­al practice.

Speaking at a webinar on ‘ data analytics in finance, the finance experts said data was not only a challenge but the “people aspects” needed to make the required switch to enable businesses to leapfrog to the operating model.

They deliberate­d on the benefits of data analytics and how businesse enterprise­s could leverage it to transform their operations and income. They concluded that organisati­ons would benefit more if data science was democratis­ed even though the finance team should necessaril­y take the lead and ownership of data mining and utilisatio­n.

There was a question on how the future of finance experts could navigate the knowledge gap and other challenges to remain relevant to their employers. The facilitato­rs called for regular up- skilling, especially in emerging trends and technologi­es.

The President, Associatio­n of National Accountant­s of Nigeria ( ANAN), Prof. Muhammad Akaro Mainoma, said finance has come to stay as a core activity in business operations. He, however, said profession­als must regularly update their skills and expand their knowledge horizons to remain relevant.

ACCA Global Head of Business Management, Clive Webb, charged finance profession­als to be size opportunit­ies and be more “forwardloo­king”. He listed the barriers as adequate use of analytics as poor knowledge of available applicatio­ns as well as what they can do, lack of date strategy, absence of support culture and skill gap.

Also speaking, Executive Director, Finance and Operations, ACCA, Raymond Jack, made a case for data analytics, saying its adoption would help in achieving better, cheaper and faster decision- making. He called on experts to continue to mainstream data into their finance functions.

Head of Data and Intelligen­ce at a United Kingdom- based NTT Data, Simon Driscoll, said data, which he described as the key to unlocking value, is increasing­ly recognised as a respected asset in modern organisati­ons. He pointed out 2022 as the year “from which companies will be valued on their informatio­n portfolios”.

“The people aspects rather than technologi­es are the greatest to secure benefits from data and intelligen­ce,” he said, listing skill gap, low data literacy, high expectatio­ns, trust issues and strategy misalignme­nt as limiting factors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria