In the dark recesses of their numerical souls, even some accountants may worry that their function is only a necessary evil, an overhead expense that in some organizations is no more than a glorified bookkeeping function. Not so. Sales, manufacturing, research and development, and management all generate raw financial data through their various activities. It’s up to accountants to turn that data into useful information.
A good accounting function—whether in a large company headed by a highly trained chief financial officer (CFO) or a small company with a bookkeeper—produces and communicates information. This information shows department heads how they’re spending the company’s money and whether they’re getting the results they want. Sure, accountants are still number-crunchers and bean-counters, but the true value of what they do is in how they interpret and present the results of all that crunching and counting.
Plain and simple, a company’s accountants, whoever they may be, are guides to its finances. The way this group or this individual organizes figures and turns it into meaningful information provides the measures that help determine the success or failure of the company. Understanding those measures may make all the difference between the manager who’s a well-rounded professional and the manager who’s just another specialist with little sense of the larger financial implications of his or her decisions.