First and foremost, I’m not saying that we are heading into a recession. However, there is no doubt that the market is being squeezed, and certain anomalies are coming to light.
Many of you may remember the last time the market took a dive, and some of you may even remember the time before that. Neither were fun, and we’re all hoping it doesn’t happen again or that, if it does, the effect on people and their careers is not felt to the same degree.
Whatever happens, it looks like the role of finance is safeguarded. And this appears to be so for two very specific reasons. If you consider the more technical finance roles, the increasing focus on the regulatory and governance-orientated elements has proved beneficial.
It’s a brave (or short-sighted) FD who decides to recruit a poor financial accountant, and it’s an even braver CEO who doesn’t sign off on the hiring.
The requirement of the external market in public, private or not-for-profit organisations is that the numbers are accurate and have complete integrity. The price for failure in this area is high, and far-reaching. It has serious career implications.
If you think it’s worth saving £10,000 or £110,000 by recruiting a poor chief accountant or no chief accountant at all, then you deserve everything that comes your way. The simple fact is that these roles and the people that do them ought to be as recession-proof as undertakers.
However, my second reason, and the area that has changed most radically, is the field of commercial finance. This role has evolved so much over the last five to six years that I think ‘general management’ perception of it has fundamentally shifted.
In the last two turn-downs, businesses felt they could make do with fewer
people on the planning side what, after all, was there to plan for? Work was
just about treading water, and you could worry about growth when the market
turned back.
Now, the view seems to be that the role of commercial finance is essential to a
business in good AND bad times.
The value commercial finance offers a business includes profit enhancement and cost management relevant to any business in any market. Indeed, in poorer times, it’s even more essential. So let’s cross our fingers the market doesn’t dip horribly. But if it does, then let’s all congratulate ourselves for our choices you for being in what feels like a recession-proof function; and me for recruiting you.
Mark Freebairn is a partner at Odgers Ray & Berndtson

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