CFOs Report All Kinds of Difficulty Finding Talent

June 15, 2012 8:34 pm 0 comments Views:

Share this Article

  • TwitterTwitter
  • Facebook
  • DeliciousDelicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleuponStumble
  • RedditReddit
  • Follow Me on PinterestPinterest

Tags:

Author:

 Ken Tysiac

Sixty-nine per cent of US CFOs surveyed for the staffing services firm Robert Half’s Professional Employment Report forecast for the third quarter of 2012 said it is challenging to find skilled accounting and finance professionals today.

That’s an increase of seven percentage points over the previous quarter. In the survey forecasting the second quarter of 2011, with the economy beginning to emerge from the recession, just 37% of executives reported difficulty finding skilled accounting and finance professionals.

“It’s actually amazing, the increase in CFOs who are really talking about how hard it is to find the right talent,” said Ryan Sutton, senior vice president for the New England district for Robert Half.

After a busy end to 2011 and start to 2012 in terms of expected hires and cuts, CFOs overwhelmingly reported for the second straight quarter that they expect their staffing levels to remain unchanged. For the second consecutive quarter, more than 90% of executives surveyed do not expect to add or reduce accounting and finance staff.

It’s not clear from the survey whether the increased difficulty in recruiting qualified professionals has caused a drop-off in hiring and a stabilising of staffs. The economy also may be a factor, as the overall US unemployment rate has essentially remained unchanged (between 8.1% and 8.3%) for the first five months of this year, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Datareleased Friday showed a civilian noninstitutional population unemployment rate of 8.2%, up from 8.1% the previous month.

Ninety-three per cent of those surveyed said they expect no changes in accounting and finance personnel in the third quarter of 2012. In the previous quarter, 91% did not anticipate changes in staffing levels in accounting and finance.

The third-quarter forecast shows that 4% of CFOs expect cuts in accounting and finance staffing, and 3% plan increases.

Those numbers in the last two quarters are widely divergent from the previous two quarters. The report for the first quarter of 2012 showed that 20% of executives expected to increase accounting and finance staff and 11% planned decreases. The previous report, for the final quarter of 2011, showed that 12% of executives planned increases and 7% expected decreases in accounting and finance staffing.

On-the-job training provides one possible answer for executives who are struggling to find qualified staff, Sutton said. He said employers who can’t recruit staff accountants with Oracle experience, for example, might need to hire them based on their other skills and help them develop their business-systems skills.

“Obviously, we all would like to pick up the free agents who can come in and hit the ground running,” Sutton said. “If you’re not able to do that, whether it’s finding the skills, or finding the skills at the price point you want, at some point you need to drop back and really come up with a development programme that allows you to pay the right wages that are in your guidelines as an organisation.”

Accounting and finance professionals who are struggling to find a job can improve their prospects by sharpening the skills that employers want, Sutton said.

“You have to update the skills, specifically those business-systems skills,” he said. “That really is the one thing that differentiates the top candidates from the medium candidates, is the business-systems savvy.”

By Ken Tysiac, from: http://www.cgma.org/Magazine/News/Pages/20125812.aspx?goback=%2Egde_4297170_member_121589439

Leave a Reply



5 × = five

Latest News

  • Biz Intelligence EPM Featured Management Marketing and Sales Analytics Being Wrong Versus Being Confused

    Being Wrong Versus Being Confused

    Which is worse? Being wrong or being confused?

    Let’s start with some definitions. To make a wrong decision means you were mistaken and erroneous. Your decision was incorrect for the problem to be solved or opportunity that could have been realized. (There is also an immoral, unethical, and illegal connotation; but that is a different variation of a poor choice. To be confused means you are baffled, bewildered, and perplexed. You cannot be positioned to make a correct decision because your thinking is muddled and clouded.

    Embracing analytics can resolve both conditions.

    Read more →
  • Biz Intelligence EPM Resources White Papers Are All of Your Customers Profitable to You?

    Are All of Your Customers Profitable to You?

    It is no longer sufficient for an organization to be lean, agile and efficient. Its entire supply chain must also perform as the company itself does. If some of its trading-partner suppliers and customers are excessively high-maintenance, those suppliers and customers erode profit margins. Who are these troublesome suppliers and customers, and how much do they drag down profit margins? More importantly, once these questions are answered, what corrective actions should managers and employees take?

    Read more →
  • Biz Intelligence EPM Featured The ABCs of Enterprise Analytics

    The ABCs of Enterprise Analytics

    “Enterprise analytics” is a widely used term these days. As often happens, though—it’s being used in different ways, by different groups, for different reasons. Enterprise analytics can refer to any or all of these three concepts:

    1. Access to analytics capability (so users throughout the enterprise can perform their own local analytics)
    2. Access to enterprise-level analytics (so some users can see reports or dashboards that incorporate data from the whole enterprise)
    3. Analytics platforms that can function at an enterprise level (working with multiple data sources and formats)

    Consultants, business writers, software companies, and IT execs may all be using the term enterprise analytics to meet their own communication needs—so conversations can get a little complicated, and research can be somewhat confusing.

    Read more →
  • EPM FYI Strategy 8 Rules For Creating A Passionate Work Culture

    8 Rules For Creating A Passionate Work Culture

    Several years ago I was in the Thomson Building in Toronto. I went down the hall to the small kitchen to get myself a cup of coffee. Ken Thomson was there, making himself some instant soup. At the time, he was the ninth-richest man in the world, worth approximately $19.6 billion. Enough, certainly, to afford a nice lunch. I looked at the soup he was stirring. “It suits me just fine,” he said, smiling.

    Thomson understood value. Neighbors reported seeing him leave his local grocery store with jumbo packages of tissues that were on sale. He bought off-the-rack suits and had his old shoes resoled. Yet he had no difficulty paying almost $76 million for a painting (for Peter Paul Rubens’s Massacre of the Innocents, in 2002). He sought value, whether it was in business, art, or groceries.

    Read more →
  • Careers Finance Management One More Reason to Hit the Gym: You’ll Make More Money at Work

    One More Reason to Hit the Gym: You’ll Make More Money at Work

    We don’t need a study to tell us that working out is good for us. But showing us that regular exercise is linked to higher salaries is a different matter.

    In a new study published in the June issue of the Journal of Labor Research, researchers have found that employees who regularly exercise earn 9% more than their lazier counterparts.

    What is it about exercise that will garner you the big bucks?

    Read more →
  • Economy Finance Where Have All The Euros Gone?

    Where Have All The Euros Gone?

    Strange days have tracked us down/ They’re going to destroy/ Our casual joys.

    American rocker Jim Morrison of The Doors has the closest possible link to the eurozone: he’s buried in Paris. Coincidentally, his angst-ridden lyrics sum up the peculiarities of the region’s markets as investors worry that they are approaching the end of days, at least for the single currency.

    Read more →
  • Biz Intelligence EPM Finance FYI Management Gary Cokins, Internationally Recognized EPM and Business Performance Leader

    Gary Cokins, Internationally Recognized EPM and Business Performance Leader

    We are so pleased to Gary Cokins, Rock Star of enterprise performance management, join our Contributors Team!

    Read more →
  • accounting Careers Finance CFOs Report All Kinds of Difficulty Finding Talent

    CFOs Report All Kinds of Difficulty Finding Talent

    Staffing levels in corporate accounting and finance are expected to remain stable in the third quarter, according to a recent survey of CFOs.

    But the same executives increasingly are reporting difficulty finding qualified professionals.

    Read more →