Business
Looking into the lens of 2023
Published
3 months agoon
By
admin
Predictions for the year ahead by Christian Müller, Chief Financial Officer of Moss, the innovative fintech platform enabling businesses to spend smarter.
2022 was the year businesses emerged from the shadow of the pandemic and the many disruptions it caused. While life has returned to normal for many companies, and some even discovered new growth opportunities, unfortunately, the light at the end of the tunnel is not in reach just yet.
As we look into the lens of 2023, the same questions around financial uncertainty linger: How long will inflation continue? Will there be a recession? What measures should be put in place to protect the future of a business?
It’s challenging to find clear answers. Still, the past few years were focused on responding and surviving. With that in mind, 2023 looks to be the time for business leaders to leverage technology and build long-term resilience, achieving sustainable growth for their organisations.
Here are my top 5 predictions for the year ahead:
Greater focus on spend control
2023 is sure to be the year of frugality, and the pressure will be placed heavily upon the shoulders of CFOs to provide financial stability as the economic downturn hits.
The impending recession highlights the need to prepare for future economic uncertainty and streamline processes wherever possible.
Business approaches have been changed forever in the past couple of years thanks to rapid digitisation, with markets becoming a more level playing field and competition increasing. As a result, companies are encouraged to seek innovative ways to achieve a competitive advantage, despite the new and continually changing circumstances.
To best prepare for future economic battles, businesses should start exploring now how to manage spending in a recession and operate beyond just looking at budget cuts. For example, establishing internal controls that monitor spend approvals, improving visibility across all company outgoings and automating time-consuming tasks that don’t add business value.
Accurate tracking tools
Financial tracking and spend management tools will prove their weight in gold for the year ahead. Finance leaders require the best tools to help them confidently make informed decisions, particularly regarding cost control and cash flow visibility.
As we approach 2023, it’s clear that the world’s business leaders will continue to grapple with economic, political, and environmental uncertainty. The good news is that dealing with uncertainty does not mean operating our businesses blindly.
Digital processes have created a new era of visibility, collaboration and strategic decision-making based on real-time and accurate data. With the right technology, finance professionals can access an integrated view of total business spend and deep visibility into their supply chain. This advancement enables improved inventory management, predictable lead times, cost savings and, crucially, more accurate financial reporting. It also helps businesses tackle some of their most complex challenges, such as achieving sustainability compliance and building long-term resilience for their company.
Streamlining processes through automation
Acceleration of automation is a safe bet in 2023, allowing finance teams to automate their day-to-day tasks and remove the notoriously labour-intensive month-end processes and management of accounts payable.
In a nutshell, automation increases productivity, frees employees from manual tasks and allows them to concentrate on strategy and innovation. Automated spend management processes empower teams to add more value to the bottom line instead of wasting days pulling together spending data.
Manual tracking and auditing spend to increase the risk of mistakes, repeated entries or gaps in the data. By reducing these risks, businesses can make significant cost savings.
More visible spend data leads to precise predictions and better decisions. With the right spend management software, you can make light work of previously laborious manual tasks, get complete control and visibility and have more time to focus on growing your business, even in difficult times.
Streamlining software integrations
We now see a trend towards integrating software stacks via interoperability of systems with high-quality tech integration or even with multi-purpose software that solves multiple problems at once.
With all the software systems we use today, things can get messy and complicated with so many tools, especially when synchronicity between software is not guaranteed.
An increase in tech stack integration means all tools complement each other, working together to provide seamless access to relevant data. The beauty of accessible data is that everyone in the business can get involved at any stage, which can help streamline production and delivery.
Instead of having to rely on IT to provide information, with tech stack integration, all your tools work together, so it’s easy to jump in at any point and get the information you need to make a decision.
With this kind of functionality, you can avoid all types of bottlenecks, as no one has to wait for data provision before moving forward. It also creates a single source of truth for financial reporting, reducing the likelihood of costly errors.
If everyone on your team is empowered to make decisions based on accessible data, you’ll also see massive productivity improvements.
Bespoke and customised tech solutions
We believe in providing a customised solution for businesses, not a one-size-fits-all approach. Teams should offer a bespoke service rather than only helping with the initial implementation.
A customisable modular solution based on specific needs allows for more flexible issuing of virtual and physical credit cards, better digital invoice management, easier accounting, and more reliable liquidity management.
Prior preparation prevents poor performance.
The new year is the perfect time to review spending insights and correct workflow challenges. By studying and improving spend management in economic uncertainty, leaders can position their businesses to be ready for any future economic challenge and set themselves up for a prosperous long-term future.
Business
How to identify the signs that your IT department need restructuring
Published
2 days agoon
March 29, 2023By
editorial
Eric Lefebvre, Chief Technology Officer at Sovos
For firms to execute transformations and meet their overall vision, it is crucial that their CIOs are able to recognise the signs that their department is in need of some internal change. In the current economic climate, CIOs working to fulfil their organisation’s priorities and meet business goals might hesitate to acknowledge that their IT department needs restructuring, never mind be able to identify the signs.
However, these problems rarely fix themselves and organisational restructuring requires conviction and determination from leadership for it to occur successfully. So, what are some of the key signs that CIOs should look out for?

Eric Lefebvre
Struggling to keep up with industry demands
CIOs unsurprisingly are working in an extremely demanding environment at the moment. Meeting these evolving demands is crucial for companies. When demands are not met and not handled properly, this can have a lasting impact on organisational goals and objectives, and even impact the way in which transformations are put into effect.
Depending on the organisation’s structure, the way in which being unable to keep up with demands manifests itself can differ. Despite double digit reductions across the industry, the search for talent across the tech world continues, project costs continue to rise as the cost of labour has increased and schedules have been disrupted by significant attrition. Many companies will also find business costs, such as that of third-party software, are higher than planned and technology debt continues to pile up faster than it can be sunset.
Whilst leadership teams might dedicate their department’s attention on the factors discussed above, they may find that their team will fall short when it comes to timely deliverables and helping maintain your organisation’s tech stack and guide its business transformations. Looking beyond the immediate problems of high costs and considering an internal reshuffle may be the solution for many IT departments.
Internal conflict within the team
Organisational designs with underlying issues can cause constant friction, especially when they go unacknowledged. An IT department that lives in conflict will certainly be reflected in results and less than successful tech transformations. CIOs will find that by adopting an organisational design which works through staffing issues, will better innovate, especially if they can all work together.
Department leads should have a strong understanding of their team’s work environment and guide them through any long-term or potential problems. When an individual is working in a demanding or complex industry, working well with your team shouldn’t be the main impediment to innovation. By acting quickly to eliminate internal conflict, CIOs can better lead and ensure their team’s focus is entirely on producing more optimal outcomes.
Delays are commonplace
When a large amount of your team’s time is spent setting objectives, budgets and timelines for the projects they are working on, it is vital that they are met. When delays are coming from the IT department, they will inevitably hinder the development of any business transformation, especially if it prompts teams to spend excessive amounts of time rearranging budgets and timelines and therefore hindering innovation.
IT departments are a crucial aspect in many different parts of a company’s transformations, so remaining on track when it comes to timelines and innovation is critical to operational plans. If delays have become commonplace in an IT team, and external factors are impacting projects, CIOs should look at restructuring an IT department to solve these issues.
The strongest team relationships do not happen by accident and are the result of good planning, strong leadership and a motivated team. CIOs can ensure this by providing vision and long-term strategy with clear goals and objectives to produce high levels of quality output.
When internal issues are noticed in an IT department, and are noticeably impacting team morale or productivity, this should indicate the need for departmental restructuring. Be that due to an inability to meet market demands, issues with productivity and meeting deadlines or internal conflict, these issues all risk a department’s functionality and an organisation’s ability to achieve its goals. In short, don’t overlook the warning signs!
Banking
Top banking trends of 2023 and global outlook of banking and fintech for the year ahead
Published
3 days agoon
March 28, 2023By
editorial
Author: Professor Marco Mongiello, Pro Vice-Chancellor, The University of Law Business School
You’d be forgiven for assuming that the global outlook for banking and fintech will be dominated by the usual suspects:
Artificial Intelligence – AI plays an increasingly prominent role in banking and fintech by enabling personalised services, fraud detection, predictive analytics, use of chatbots and robo-advisors.
Blockchain and Cryptocurrency – the secure, decentralised and swift system for financial transactions that blockchain has brought to the fore a few years ago, is now becoming ubiquitous. An increasing number of transactions are recorded through blockchains technology, primarily in the cryptocurrency market.
Digital Banking and fintech – accelerated by COVID-19 pandemic, the adoption of digital banking is a trend that will persist as customers have become accustomed to the convenience and efficiency of digital banking. Moreover, fintech enables access to financial services for previously underserved populations in developing countries or less affluent social groups in more affluent societies. This includes mobile banking services, peer-to-peer lending platforms, and microfinance solutions.
Open Banking – another global trend is the use of open APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) that allow third-party developers to build apps to facilitate customers’ access to financial data and services from banks.
Nonetheless, the challenges posed by these rapid changes are reminders that banking, an industry that by its very nature needs to be conservative, risk averse and solid, wobbles on the unchartered grounds of fast and turbulent innovation, where entrepreneurship instead thrives. The underlying rationales of banking and fast digital innovation are not incompatible but do need solid operations and thought-through decision-making to avoid causing catastrophic collapses.
The recent examples of Silicon Valley Bank, Silvergate, FTX and Wirecard are stark reminders that digital entrepreneurship applied to banking doesn’t just bring to customers the visible transformation of valuable new services, but also dents (perhaps as an unexpected consequence) the rationale itself of the role of banks in the global economy. Moreover, the central banks’ ability to contain the effects of single banks’ defaults is no longer a certainty, as experienced just over a decade ago and more recently. The markets’ sentiments are hardly reassured by the commitments of even the most coveted players, such as the European Central Bank, the Federal Reserve, and the President of the United States himself.
Regulators are lagging behind and their attempts to catch up may cause further seismic shocks to the global banking system. For example, another trend that is emerging is one of artificial intelligence decision-centres (i.e., decentralised offices of banks which take autonomous decisions on behalf of investors) outside the most stringent regulatory environments, enabling banks to operate globally more efficiently and more competitively. And we can expect that regulators will close the gap either abruptly, as it is currently happening in China, where private banks are subject to an escalation of regulatory and monitoring restrictions, or more gradually as it is happening in Europe and in the US.
The questions we face, as individual or trade customers of our high street banks, as direct investors or clients of managed funds, are whether banking will become more user-friendly yet, for our daily use but riskier, too, or is it simply becoming more efficient, transparent and also safer.
I’m afraid that the answer is by no means an obvious one. Therefore, caution, level-headed decision- making and critical thinking have never been as important as these days. Whether you are looking after your family savings or growing your pension reserve, the imperative is that you keep updated about the providers of the financial services you rely upon as well as about the general regulations that apply to your financial transactions. This is where, for example, you need to be familiar with your rights in case of cyber fraud, as well as learning how to minimise the risk of becoming a victim thereof. Also, taking additional steps to evaluate the credibility, solidity and reliability of the online provider of that app that was recommended by a trusted friend, may prove a very good move.
Similarly, whether you are the CFO of a medium or large company, or are a sole trader wrestling with your own business’s finances, you need to reflect on what you really want from your bank in the first place. That is before you started to be swayed by the whirlpool of offers of ‘opportunities’ to multiply your financial investments. Chances are that your initial approach to your bank was dictated by either a need for financing your working capital, as per your budget and strategic plans, or to find a safe place for your temporarily idle liquidity. Perhaps you were also after some basic treasury services such as swift payments and debt collection. Maybe some other financial services closely related to your business operations, e.g. factoring. The advice is to give very careful consideration to services that are more remote from your business, because the trend for the next years is that more and more of those will be offered to you. But many new services will disappoint those who, sadly, cannot afford financial mishaps as they look to run and grow their business.
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