Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) have recently
published an international caliber study on what makes the ‘perfect professional’
in 2016 and beyond. The research findings highlight the fact that an optimum
blend of skills, experience, and intelligence is now needed by professional
accountants.
The seven key skill areas sought by employers now and in the future are
intellect, creativity, emotional intelligence, vision, experience, technical
skills, and mastery of the digital world. The employers currently and in the
future expect skills and abilities to perform activities consistently to a
defined standard which are often based on a professional qualification.
They also require an employee’s ability to acquire and use knowledge
for an existing or new situation especially to explore potential outcomes, and
generate new ideas.
With the awareness and application of existing and emerging digital
technologies, capabilities, practices, strategies and culture, the employers
look for digital competency in their future employees. But most importantly,
the most sought after skill is the ability to predict future trends accurately through
extrapolating existing trends and facts, and filling the gaps by thinking innovatively.
Speaking at the launch of the report, Helen Brand OBE, ACCA’s chief
executive said:
'Over the past decade, the traditional role of an accountant has evolved
into skillful finance professionals who are leaders, trusted expert counsel,
and key strategic advisers to organisations whether in the public or private
sectors.
'With this metamorphosis comes a requirement for a whole new set of skills.
On top of technical excellence, professional accountants now require
creativity, emotional intelligence and the vision to lead.'
With input and insight from over 2,000 business and finance professionals
around the world, Professional accountants – the future is the most in depth
analysis of the profession – and where it is headed – ever conducted says Helen
Brand:
'We discovered a brave new world of more regulation, greater globalisation,
ever increasing risk, and of course, massive technological advancement. The
accountancy profession has to be ahead of the curve on all fronts - trained to
the highest of professional standards, looking beyond the numbers and with a
global mind set.'
According to Helen Brand, her message to current and aspiring accountants is
that a blend of all these attributes makes the perfect finance professional,
ready for the global business challenges they will face:
‘These ‘magnificent seven’ strengths show the way ahead. They are the means
by which accountants use their technical knowledge, skills and abilities
blended with the interpersonal behaviours and qualities to put them to use.
‘Everyone has their own strengths and weaknesses. The key is to recognise
where you excel and where you need to work to build your competency through the
continuous professional development which professional accountants already know
so well.’
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