Case Study: Maersk - Future of the CFO and Finance Function
Presentation by Rex Gu, CFO, Maersk Far East Operations
|A.P. Moller–Maersk is an integrated container logistics company headquartered in Copenhagen Denmark with 76,000 employees in 130 countries (2019 revenue $41 billion).
It serves customers with frequent departures on all major trade lanes and inland services. Its main business lines are ocean, logistics and services, terminals and towage, and manufacturing (e.g., producing containers).
Maersk’s finance function transformation journey started five years ago with the advancement of an ERP system that has allowed transactional work to be fully managed in global shared service centers in the Philippines, India and China (where the majority of its finance employees are based).
The retained finance team is positioned as a business function to drive value creation in a trusted business partner role.
The finance team has achieved status as a trusted finance business partner in three areas:
Finance: “provide and recommend”
Business: “ask and drive”
Partner: “challenge and own”
The finance team’s involvement in value creation focuses on the tangible and actionable areas to create and protect value, and the specific activities they can perform as partners. The actionable areas are captured in a value creation framework for the finance team that provides inspiration and direction on
Rex provided a specific example in relation to achieving cost leadership. Key actions from the finance team captured in their value framework are in the table below.
Data |
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Reports |
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Analysis |
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Insight |
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Influence |
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Impact |
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The finance talent compass helps identify required talent and potential future finance business partners and leaders. It covers five key areas:
A competency framework identifies four core competency areas finance business partners need to create value:
Finance transformation has been accelerated by the mindset of experimentation which is encouraged throughout the organization.
Experimentation is how Maersk validates new ideas – de-risking the exploration of opportunities by validating the most fundamental aspects in terms of desirability, feasibility and viability of the project.
The key experimental mindset principles that its finance staff have embraced in their work are:
Two examples of this mindset approach and the finance team’s digital and data competency below demonstrate how the finance team is delivering its value creation promise in business partnering.
Combining financial and non-financial data has been a priority in operational and contingency planning, particularly in relation to adverse weather events or COVID-19 related restrictions, and in enhancing procurement contracts.
In one example, Far East Finance has enabled the business to improve its operational planning by combining cost information related to changes in routing with customer experience data on customer preferences in terms of how they wish their containers handled. They have been able to provide data-driven insights in a “sandbox” environment to help operational managers apply their judgment in dealing with particular events in a way that maximizes customer satisfaction and optimizes cost . Finance team has truly breathed life to the culture of making informed decisions on daily basis.
In another example, Far East Finance has been able to help significantly reduce the $1.5bn procurement budget by implementing a digitized contract repository and algorithm that supports live scenario and sensitivity simulation and evaluation that helps support contract negotiations. A digital “total cost of ownership” tool was developed to:
The tool allows the identification of scope, targets and team members; variables sensitivity analysis; scenario simulation; and evaluation.
This was a presentation to the IFAC Professional Accountants in Business Advisory Group during their September 2020 meeting. See here for the full meeting report: Accountants Supporting Sustainable Recovery