Friday

CFOs - Moving From Technical Expert to Leader

As we progress in our healthcare finance careers, we develop new skill sets and don't always retain the old. I leave it to you to determine whether that's a good or a bad thing. In the beginning, perhaps we recorded accounting transactions, prepared financial statements and cost reports or created patient bills. We were technicians, and proud of it.

Assuming we worked for reasonably large organizations, as we moved up the ladder, we began to supervise others who accomplished those tasks. When we rose to CFO, we developed new skills - leadership, mentorship, team building, strategic vision, creativity, communication....I could go on.

I ran across a blog, The CFO Edge, by Jack Sweeney, where he posted a piece called Tapping the Right Side of the CFO Brain. His first paragraph reads "One of the ironies of being a top finance leader is that seldom if ever will you be heralded for your vast technical skills. Instead, you are more likely to be praised for having keen management skills or even imagination." I couldn't agree more.

The longer we've been in leadership roles, the more we've honed those new skills. But what of the technical skills we had in the early stages of our career? Under the theory of "use it or lose it", combined with advancements in technology, reimbursement changes and the other dynamics affecting change over time, most of us can no longer personally accomplish those technical tasks. Nor should we.

I have been a CFO for some time and as I search for a new career opportunity for myself, I understand the far greater importance of leadership skills, but I understand the importance of having had technical experience in the past. Unless you're in a small organization where you're the chief cook and bottle washer, you're supervising direct reports who in turn are supervising the technicians.

To be a "hands-on manager" doesn't mean you need to do the detail work. Rather, you're knowledgable enough to review, correct and advise others in their tasks. You can't do that from your office, and you can't do it if you don't understand the subject matter or the objectives of the work. Thankfully, our earlier technical grounding provides the foundation we need.

So, don't fret that you've forgotten the details of the task. Focus on leadership, vision, motivation and support. As the saying goes (and maybe this is a stretch), "make new friends, but keep the old. One is silver, while the other is gold".

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