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Discuss what your business actually needs from a CFO

Whether you are facing a CFO gap, scaling complexity, performance pressure, private equity demands, reporting issues or a finance transformation that needs more senior ownership, this is the place to start. The goal of the first conversation is simple: understand the situation quickly and determine what type of support makes sense.

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What the first conversation is for

This is not a generic intro call. It is a working discussion to understand your situation, the urgency, the type of support required and whether interim, fractional or advisory CFO support is the right fit.

The best first conversation usually answers three questions:
1. What problem actually needs solving?
2. What level of CFO intervention is required?
3. What should happen in the first 30–90 days if we move forward?

Typical situations where a conversation makes sense

  • There is a CFO gap or leadership vacuum.

    The business needs someone to take ownership quickly across cash, reporting, decision support, investor communication and team direction.

  • The company is scaling faster than finance is maturing.

    Complexity has increased, but the finance operating model, systems, controls or leadership cadence have not kept up.

  • Performance pressure is rising.

    The business needs sharper grip on EBITDA, cash, working capital, productivity or value-creation execution.

  • You are in a private equity or change-heavy environment.

    Board pressure, investor expectations, transformation milestones or integration demands require more experienced finance leadership.

  • You are deciding between interim, fractional or advisory support.

    The core question is not which label sounds right, but what level of ownership and intensity the business actually needs.

Types of support

Interim CFO

Immediate ownership

Best when the business needs full ownership quickly: leadership gaps, underperformance, transformation, integration, investor pressure, reporting issues or a finance team that needs stabilising.

Explore interim CFO →
Fractional CFO

Ongoing senior support

Best when the business needs experienced CFO input on a recurring basis but does not need a full-time Group CFO structure yet.

Explore fractional CFO →
CFO Advisory

Targeted strategic support

Best when the leadership team needs sharper decisions on finance design, performance, transformation, systems, planning or value creation without a full interim mandate.

Explore CFO advisory →
Private Equity

PE-backed situations

Best when the business operates under ownership pressure, board intensity, value-creation plans, financing discipline or portfolio-level change.

Explore PE support →

What happens after the first conversation

Step 1

Context and diagnosis

Understand the business context, the real issue, the urgency, the stakeholders involved and what has already been tried.

Step 2

Fit and support model

Clarify whether the situation calls for interim, fractional or advisory support — and whether there is a good mutual fit.

Step 3

Practical next steps

If there is a fit, align on priorities, scope, pace and what should happen first. If not, the discussion should still leave you with clearer thinking.

Good fit / poor fit

Good fit

Where this tends to work well

  • PE-backed companies
  • Founder-led businesses moving up in complexity
  • Scale-ups professionalising finance
  • Companies in performance, cash or control pressure
  • Transformations, integrations and operating model redesigns
Poor fit

Where this is usually not the best option

  • Businesses looking only for low-cost bookkeeping support
  • Situations where no decision-maker is engaged
  • Mandates with no real willingness to change
  • Very early-stage setups that do not yet need senior CFO involvement