Modern CFOs are clear on their priorities but need to free up bandwidth to spend more time on strategy, business partnering and decision support.

The findings of the India Finance Leaders Barometer survey show that strategy and business partnering feature prominently among modern CFO priorities. Strategic planning and decision support rank highest in their top current time allocation (23% rank it top; 62% in top three), closely followed by business partnering with leadership and the board.

But this tells only part of the story. These priorities are competing with operational oversight, reporting, and compliance requirements, which demand significant CFO attention. Nearly half of the CFOs surveyed (48%) rank operational oversight in the top three areas of current time allocation.

The result is that CFOs are doing strategic work, but not at the level, consistency, or intensity they believe is required.

Current vs preferred focus: where CFOs spend their time

The chart shows the percent of CFO time spent on each activity today (Now) versus how they would like to spend their time (Ideal). The gap highlights opportunity to shift focus.

The conversation around the CFO's role has evolved significantly over the last decade. Today, few organisations question whether the CFO should be a strategic advisor, as the expectation is already there. The challenge is that many finance leaders continue to operate within delivery models designed for a far more operational mandate. As business expectations grow, organisations must rethink how finance is structured, governed and enabled so CFOs can spend more time shaping decisions rather than managing processes.
Karan Marwah Partner and Leader, CFO Advisory, Grant Thornton Bharat

The gap is not about intention; it is about the operating model

When asked how they would prefer to spend their time, CFOs are clear about their priorities. Half (50%) say strategic planning should be their primary focus, and 86% place it in their top three areas of focus. Business partnering follows closely, reinforcing the idea that CFOs want to shape decisions rather than report on them. This indicates a clear disconnect between the current and ideal state. CFOs want to operate as architects of business outcomes. In reality, they remain constrained in their ability to run the engine.

What is holding them back?

Operational and reporting drag persists
Operational oversight, reporting cycles, and compliance remain deeply embedded in the CFO agenda. The prominence of reporting, ranked among the top four current time areas, signals that CFOs are spending considerable time translating data into insight for the business.
Compliance continues to escalate to leadership
Despite mature frameworks, regulatory and compliance requirements consume meaningful leadership bandwidth, often due to escalation-heavy processes.
Technology is not yet freeing up leadership time
While CFOs are spending time on automation and systems initiatives, they have not fully embedded these initiatives in their day-to-day activities.

Meanwhile, areas such as ESG and talent leadership are consistently deprioritised, indicating they are still treated as secondary or compliance-led activities rather than core levers of value creation.

While CFOs increasingly aspire to act as architects of business outcomes and trusted advisors influencing critical decisions, existing operating models often require them to remain focused on managing day-to-day finance operations. To enable CFOs to dedicate more time to strategic priorities, organisations must simplify and standardise processes, strengthen governance frameworks, enhance data quality and embed automation more effectively across the finance function. Ultimately, this requires a fundamental redesign of the finance operating model, empowering CFOs to serve as catalysts for growth, transformation and long-term value creation.
Devesh Uniyal Partner and Tax & Finance Consulting Leader, Grant Thornton Bharat

Closing the gap

For organisations, the question is not about what the CFO should focus on, but what needs to change to enable that focus. The future finance model must:

1.

Reduce operational and reporting friction through automation, better processes, and cleaner data

2.

Strengthen governance, so fewer issues escalate to the CFO

3.

Embed business partnering as a scalable capability—not an individual dependency

4.

Use technology as a lever to reduce work, not add another layer of oversight

CFOs want to spend their time shaping strategic choices, enabling faster decision-making, and partnering at the highest levels of the organisation. But realising that shift will depend less on changing priorities and more on redesigning the system around them.

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