If you’re a business owner, there’s a question worth asking yourself: are you getting your money’s worth from your finance team?
Plenty of businesses employ “an accountant” and think they’ve got a CFO. Others hire a “CFO” but find themselves paying top dollar for what is essentially accounting work.
Neither scenario is ideal.
So what’s the actual difference between an accountant and a CFO? And, more importantly, why does it matter to the performance and future of your business?
→ The Accountant: Keeping Score Accurately
→ When an Accountant is Enough
→ The CFO: Making the Score Mean Something
→When It's Time to Engage a CFO
→Why This Matters for Business Owners
→ The Outsourced CFO Advantage
→ Final Thought
At its heart, accounting is about keeping an accurate scoreboard for the business.
The accountant's role is to ensure that your P&L (Profit and Loss) and balance sheet are correct, timely, and reliable. They'll tell you what you own, what you owe, and whether your business made a profit or a loss in any given period.
The accuracy of your accountant is essential, as without it you will most certainly be driving with a blindfold.
However, even on a good day of perfect reporting, all you've got is accurate historical reporting. The blindfold is off, and you're driving using the rear-view mirror.
An accountant makes sure the scoreboard reflects the game you've played. That's the first step.
Now here's the thing, it actually might be perfectly fine for your business for the time being to just have an accountant
I know, a CFO provider saying not to engage their services might sound strange on paper, but utilising what we're best at, let's be realistic with the numbers you have.
If you've got a grip on your financials, know your margins, and your operations are running smoothly, then sometimes what you need most is someone to simply take the day-to-day accounting burden off your plate.
By doing so, you free your personal time, make life easier, and give yourself confidence that the basics are being handled properly.
There's nothing wrong with that. Every business has a journey, and not every business is ready for (or needs) the strategic layer of a CFO right this second.
However, there is a catch: make sure your accountant is giving you value for money. If all they're doing is the bare minimum or charging CFO-level fees without delivering CFO-level insights, then you're being taken for a ride.
When you're ready to move from 'keeping score' to changing the score, that's when it's time to start thinking about hiring a CFO and giving us a call.
A CFO goes further. Much further.
When the accountant says, "here's the scorecard", the CFO says "here's what the scorecard means and how we change it".
That involves two big shifts:
That's why communication is the defining skill of a CFO. They don't just crunch numbers. They turn them into language your team understands, and then proceed to use hat language to drive change.
How do you know when it's the right moment to bring in a CFO?
Here are a few tell-tale signs we've seen that usually make it very clear:
That's when a CFO shifts from 'nice to have' to 'critical'. They don't just keep you compliant, they help you to compete.
Quick note: You don't need to jump to a $250k+ full-time hire to get there. An outsourced CFO like us here at CFO Dynamics, gives you the elite capability, the strategic influence, and the cross-industry insight, without any of the overhead.
Here's the kicker: many business owners think they're hiring a CFO when they're really just paying for a senior accountant.
If all your "CFO" does is hand you reports, you're overpaying. The value of a CFO is in the bridge they build between financial data and business performance.
A CFO should be showing you:
Here's where firms like CFO Dynamics come in.
Hiring a full-time CFO can be expensive, often upwards of $250k+ a year once you factor in salary, super, and overheads. But like we've just discussed, most business don't actually need a full-time CFO. They just need the right expertise, applied at the right moments.
That's why outsourcing makes sense.
With CFO Dynamics, you'll get:
In short, you get the value of a proven and experienced CFO without the overhead of a full-time hire
An accountant will help keep the score. A CFO will tell you what the score means, how to shift it, and then lead your team in making those shifts happen.
The question for you as a business owner is simple: are you paying for the role you think you're getting?
Keep in mind with business, the scoreboard doesn't just need to be accurate. It needs to be actionable.
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