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SharpCFO Blogs: Insights From the Fastlane

Michael DiSabatino of Sharp CFO™ shares expert insights to help you unlock your business's full potential by delivering proven strategies for maximizing tax savings, streamlining operations, and driving sustainable growth.

The information provided on this site is for general informational purposes only and should not be construed as professional financial, tax, or legal advice. For advice tailored to your specific situation, we recommend consulting with a qualified professional.
Apr
10

Accountant vs CFO: Why Your Accountant Should Not Be Your CFO

Why Your Accountant Should Not Be Your CFO

One looks in the rearview mirror. The other is trying to keep you from hitting the wall.

Most business owners assume their accountant and their CFO serve the same purpose.

They don’t.

It’s not a knock on accountants. It’s a misunderstanding of roles.

One is designed to report what happened.
The other is responsible for what happens next.

Confuse the two, and you don’t just get bad advice.
You get no advice at all, wrapped in clean financial statements.

Accounting Looks Backward

Accounting is essential.

Let’s get that out of the way before anyone starts throwing calculators.

Good accounting gives you:

  • accurate financial statements
  • clean books
  • tax compliance
  • historical clarity

It answers questions like:

  • What did we earn last year?
  • What were our expenses?
  • What do we owe in taxes?

That matters.

But here’s the problem.

None of those answers tell you what to do next.

Illustration

A company generates:
  • $5 million in revenue
  • $500,000 in profit
The accountant delivers clean financials. Everything ties out. Taxes are filed.
On paper, it looks like a solid business.
But what the numbers don’t tell you is:
  • cash flow is tightening
  • margins are slipping
  • one customer now represents 40% of revenue
  • payroll is growing faster than revenue
The business looks fine in the rearview mirror.
Up ahead? The road is getting narrow.

CFO Work Looks Forward

A CFO doesn’t just look at what happened.

They ask:

👉 What happens next if nothing changes?

That question alone separates reporting from strategy.

A CFO focuses on:

  • forecasting cash flow
  • evaluating margin trends
  • planning capital needs
  • stress-testing decisions
  • identifying risks before they show up

Illustration

Same company. Same numbers.

A CFO looks at that $500,000 profit and asks:

  • How much of this is actually cash?
  • What happens if revenue drops 15%?
  • Can the company support its current payroll structure?
  • Is that 40% customer concentration a problem?

Then they model it.

If that one customer leaves, profit doesn’t drop.

It disappears.

And now the business is operating at a loss.

The accountant reports success.

The CFO sees exposure.

The Difference Comes Down to Decisions

Accounting answers:

“What happened?”

CFO work answers:

“What should we do?”

That difference drives everything.

Decision Example: Hiring

Accounting says:

  • Payroll increased by $300,000
  • Revenue increased by $250,000

Looks like growth.

CFO says:

  • You added fixed cost faster than revenue
  • Margins just compressed
  • You’re now more fragile than you were before

Same data.

Very different conclusion.

Decision Example: Pricing

Accounting says:

  • Revenue is up
  • Sales volume increased

CFO says:

  • Margins are declining
  • You’re buying revenue instead of earning profit

Growth without margin is just activity.

Decision Example: CapEx

Accounting says:

  • You invested $1.5 million in equipment

CFO says:

  • Is that equipment flexible?
  • Or is it tied to one customer?
  • What happens if that demand disappears?

That’s not accounting.

That’s survival planning.

Capital: Where Most Businesses Get It Wrong

Most owners don’t think in terms of capital structure.

They think in terms of access.

If they need money, they go find it:

  • loan
  • line of credit
  • investor

Done.

But capital is not neutral.

It comes with:

  • repayment obligations
  • covenants
  • dilution
  • pressure

Illustration

Two companies generate the same profit.

Company A finances growth with heavy debt.
Company B grows more conservatively.

When the market tightens:

  • Company A is constrained
  • Company B adapts

Same business.

Different outcome.

The difference is not accounting.

It’s capital strategy.

Risk: The Thing Accounting Doesn’t Show You

Financial statements are excellent at showing performance.

They are terrible at showing risk.

You can have:

  • strong revenue
  • solid profit
  • clean books

…and still be exposed.

Example: Customer Concentration

A business generates $10 million in revenue.

One client represents $4 million.

Accounting shows:

  • $10M revenue
  • healthy margins

CFO sees:

  • 40% dependency
  • potential single-point failure

If that client leaves, the business doesn’t shrink.

It fractures.

Example: Fixed Cost Load

A company expands rapidly.

New hires. Bigger space. More overhead.

Accounting shows growth.

CFO asks:

👉 What happens if revenue drops 20%?

That’s where the real story is.

Why This Matters More Than Ever

In stable environments, businesses can get away with operating without forward strategy.

In volatile environments, they can’t.

Markets shift faster.
Customers change faster.
Costs move faster.

And by the time the financials reflect the problem, it’s already too late to make easy adjustments.

The Real Role of a CFO

A CFO is not there to replace your accountant.

They are there to interpret, challenge, and guide decisions based on the numbers.

Think of it this way:

  • The accountant keeps score
  • The CFO calls the plays

You need both.

But if you only have one, and you expect them to do both jobs…

you’re playing offense with a scoreboard.

The Bottom Line

Most businesses don’t fail because they didn’t have good accounting. They fail because they didn’t make good financial decisions early enough.

Decisions about:

  • pricing
  • hiring
  • capital
  • risk
  • growth

Accounting will show you where you’ve been. A CFO helps determine whether you’re heading toward growth… or quietly drifting toward a problem you won’t see until it’s already expensive.

And by then, the race is already underway. 🏁


This publication provides summary information regarding the subject matter at time of publishing. Please call with any questions on how this information may impact your situation. This material may not be published, rewritten or redistributed without permission, except as noted here. All rights reserved.

Pull ahead and accelerate your business growth!

The first step toward financial success is scheduling a consultation with our team. Bring your questions and concerns to our attention. Our engines are revved and ready to drive your business across the finish line as the champion of your industry!

Pull ahead and accelerate your business growth!

The first step toward financial success is scheduling a consultation with our team. Bring your questions and concerns to our attention. Our engines are revved and ready to drive your business across the finish line as the champion of your industry!

(855) 922-9336 | This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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Apr
03

Don't Let One Lawsuit Take The Ranch

A CFO’s View of Asset Protection for Legacy Farms and Cattle Operations

Family farms and ranches are some of the most impressive "small businesses" on earth. Multi-generation, capital-heavy, relationship-driven, and held together by grit, duct tape, and a stubborn refusal to quit. Respect.

But from a CFO seat, I'll say the quiet part out loud: a lot of legacy operations are structured like they're begging for one bad day to wipe out 30 years of work.

It's not because folks are careless. It's because when you're busy calving, planting, harvesting, fixing equipment, and keeping the bank happy, legal structure feels like paperwork for people who sit indoors. Then life does what it does: a wreck, an employee injury, a disgruntled vendor, a land dispute, a chemical drift issue, a dog bite, an Ag-tourism visitor incident, a wildfire, a foreclosure domino, a divorce, a partner fallout, a neighbor lawsuit. Pick your flavor.

Asset protection isn't about being shady or "dodging responsibility." It's about making sure that one claim doesn't automatically put everything you own on the auction block.

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Mar
31

Can a Partner Buy a Work Truck Personally and Take Bonus Depreciation?

The Scenario

Two partners.SharpCFO download below splat 225x225
50/50 split - an be any split...
One wants a heavy-duty work truck.
The other does not want the partnership taking on debt.

Classic standoff.

The solution? Structure it correctly and keep the balance sheet clean.

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Mar
20

Tax-Free Reimbursements - Accountable Plans Done Right

What Is an Accountable Plan? - It is all about Tax-Free Reimbursements

Under IRS rules, reimbursements are not taxable compensation if they meet three simple requirements:

  • Business Connection The expense must be ordinary and necessary forSharpCFO download below splat 225x225 the business.
  • Substantiation The employee or owner must document the expense with receipts, mileage logs, dates, purpose, and amount.
  • Return of Excess Any excess advance must be returned within a reasonable time.

If those three rules are satisfied, the reimbursement:

  • Is not subject to income tax
  • Is not subject to Social Security or Medicare tax
  • Is not subject to FUTA
  • Is not reported on Form W-2

Translation: no payroll tax shrapnel.

If those rules are ignored, the reimbursement becomes taxable wages. And the IRS does not debate that.

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Mar
13

Rope the Cash Flow — A CFO's Playbook for Cattle, Crops, and the Real World

If you rope steers, run cows, or grow crops, you already live in a business that would give most "normal" companies a nervous breakdown. Your revenue is seasonal, your costs are relentless, the weather has opinions, and the market can move against you while you’re busy fixing fence.

That’s not a complaint, it’s just the job.

But it does mean you need to manage your operation like a pro athlete: not just strong in the arena, but disciplined behind the scenes. From a CFO perspective, the winners usually aren’t the folks who “work the hardest” (most of you already do). The winners are the folks who control cash, control risk, and make decisions with numbers instead of vibes.

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