What does good financial leadership actually look like inside a growing business?
Many founders reach a point where bookkeeping is under control, management accounts are being produced, and year-end compliance is taken care of, yet they still feel uncertain when making important business decisions.
They know the numbers exist.
They receive reports.
They have visibility of revenue.
But they still don’t feel fully in control of profitability, cash flow, hiring decisions, pricing, or growth plans.
In this episode of The Fractional CFO Show, Adam Cooper is joined by Heidi Armstrong, Fractional CFO at ACC Finance Solutions, for a practical discussion about the role financial leadership plays in helping founder-led businesses improve profitability, strengthen cash flow, and make better decisions.
This is a particularly special episode as it marks the first time a member of the ACC Finance Solutions team has joined the show.
Drawing on her experience working with businesses across recruitment, beauty, media, professional services and other founder-led organisations, Heidi shares what she sees when businesses begin to outgrow basic finance support and require more strategic financial guidance.
The conversation explores a common challenge faced by many SMEs.
Business owners often know they need “better finance”, but they’re not always sure what that means in practice.
Is it better reporting?
More detailed management accounts?
A bigger finance team?
More software?
Or is it something else entirely?
Throughout the discussion, Heidi explains why good financial leadership is often less about producing more reports and more about helping business owners understand what their numbers are telling them and how those insights should influence future decisions.
Topics covered include:
What a Fractional CFO actually does within a growing business
- Why many founders feel disconnected from their numbers despite receiving regular financial reports
- The difference between financial reporting and financial leadership
- How financial forecasting helps business owners make decisions with greater confidence
- The role of cash flow forecasting in supporting sustainable growth
- Why revenue growth does not always lead to improved profitability
- How management information can become a genuine decision-making tool
- The importance of monitoring financial KPIs that actually matter
- Common reasons margins deteriorate without founders noticing
- Why pricing reviews should be a regular business discipline
- The impact of inflation, supplier costs and overhead increases on profitability
- How hiring decisions affect cash flow, capacity and future growth
- The financial implications of expanding too quickly
- Why business owners should place a value on their own time
- How scenario planning supports better strategic decisions
- The hidden cost of difficult clients
- Why client profitability is about more than revenue alone
- Lessons learned from working across multiple industries and business models
One of the most interesting parts of the conversation centres on client profitability.
Many business owners evaluate clients purely based on the revenue they generate.
However, Heidi discusses why some clients can consume disproportionate amounts of management time, operational resources and emotional energy.
A client may appear profitable on paper but become significantly less attractive once the true cost of servicing them is taken into account.
The discussion highlights why founders should regularly assess not only what clients pay but also the time, complexity, interruptions and stress associated with managing those relationships.
The episode also explores the connection between financial visibility and confidence.
When founders lack clarity around cash flow, profitability or future financial performance, decision-making often becomes reactive.
Businesses delay investments.
Hiring decisions become difficult.
Growth opportunities are missed.
Cash flow concerns create unnecessary stress.
By contrast, businesses that embrace financial forecasting, scenario planning and regular performance reviews are often able to make decisions earlier, with greater certainty and lower risk.
Heidi shares practical examples of how she helps business owners understand the numbers behind their businesses, identify potential issues before they become serious problems, and create financial plans that support both growth and profitability.
The conversation also touches on a challenge many founders face but rarely discuss openly: the value of their own time.
Business owners frequently make decisions without fully considering the opportunity cost of their involvement.
Tasks that appear profitable on paper can become far less attractive when the founder’s time is properly valued.
Understanding this often changes how businesses think about delegation, recruitment, pricing and operational structure.
Whether you’re running a recruitment business, professional services firm, agency, consultancy, creative business or another founder-led organisation, the principles discussed throughout this episode are widely applicable.
If you’ve ever wondered:
- What does a Fractional CFO actually do?
- When should I hire a Fractional CFO?
- How can financial forecasting improve decision-making?
- What financial KPIs should I be tracking?
- How can I improve cash flow visibility?
- How do I increase profitability without simply increasing sales?
- How should I assess client profitability?
- What does good financial leadership look like in practice?
This episode provides practical, experience-led answers.
The Fractional CFO Show is hosted by Adam Cooper, Founder of ACC Finance Solutions, where each week he speaks with founders, operators and business leaders about the financial, operational and strategic decisions that shape successful businesses.
Subscribe for more conversations covering financial leadership, business growth, cash flow management, profitability improvement, financial forecasting, strategic finance, management reporting, founder decision-making and the realities of growing a business.