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CFO THOUGHT LEADER

The Future of Finance is Listening
CFO THOUGHT LEADER
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  • The CFO Role in Scaling AI Curiosity
    How are finance chiefs steering the AI revolution? In this fast-paced special edition of CFO Thought Leader, host Jack Sweeney spotlights Packer Fastener CFO Brian Hogeland and LinkedIn’s top AI voice Allie K. Miller. Together they unpack why 2023’s “just try ChatGPT” mantra is obsolete, how agent-orchestrated systems will reshape mid-market operations, and where cash-savvy CFOs can safely place AI bets today. Tune in for fifteen minutes of practical insight, provocative foresight, and career-defining guidance.
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  • 1110: When Leadership Mattered | Amanda Whalen, CFO, Klaviyo
    Amanda Whalen’s first unit CFO role began with a question. “You’re not a finance technical person,” her company’s president told her, “but you’re the strongest leader on my team. Will you be willing to be the CFO and help me transform the finance function?” She accepted.Over the following year, Whalen tells us, her team tackled three major initiatives: fixing broken cost accounting at a dairy plant, realigning sales incentives to drive margin, and overhauling the P&L reporting structure to match the new parent company’s expectations. The team was skeptical—“They said, ‘You’re crazy. There’s no way we can do that all in a year,’” she recalls. But they did. The business became 10% more profitable.That experience, Whalen tells us, revealed finance as a powerful lever to drive business transformation—“You get to work with every function… It’s highly quantitative and analytical, and it involves working with a lot of really great people.”Now CFO at Klaviyo, Whalen brings the same philosophy. In three years, the company more than doubled revenue and improved margins by 20 percentage points. She led Klaviyo’s IPO, expanding the company’s readiness across technical, strategic, and investor-facing dimensions. “It wasn’t just about getting ready to go public,” she says, “but about operating successfully as a public company for a long, long time.”Whether transforming legacy operations or scaling a fast-growing SaaS firm, Whalen’s approach remains constant: think long-term, go deep into execution, and “be kind to your future self.”
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  • From Flailing to AI Forward Motion - A Planning Aces Episode
    In this Planning Aces episode, Jack Sweeney and co-host Brett Knowles spotlight three CFOs who are advancing their organizations' FP&A capabilities through thoughtful AI adoption. Andrea Hecht of CSAA Insurance discusses aligning generative AI with enterprise strategy and efficiency. Matthias Steinberg of MindBridge explores combining machine learning and LLMs in finance workflows. Brian Hogeland of Packer Fastener highlights how AI training and grassroots adoption can foster a tech-forward culture. Together, these leaders offer a cross-industry view of how CFOs are balancing risk, innovation, and ROI while helping their organizations navigate today’s fast-evolving planning landscape.Brett Knowles' Key TakeawaysBrett Knowles emphasizes three recurring themes: the importance of framing AI narratives carefully to avoid workforce fear, the rising expectation among employees for AI-enabled tools, and the need to align AI efforts with real business value. He also highlights the necessity of risk awareness and the evolving role of FP&A as a driver of organizational agility. Across the board, Brett sees finance leaders striving to balance innovation with caution in a way that positions their teams for scalable growth.
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  • 1109: Building Finance Teams for Scale, Speed, and Smarts | Larry Roseman, CFO, Thumbtack
    When the Silicon Valley Bank crisis erupted in early 2023, Larry Roseman was already well-acquainted with market upheaval. A member of the CFO class appointed around 2020—just as the pandemic began—Roseman had weathered previous storms. He began his career amid the dot-com collapse, then advanced through the 2008 financial crisis. “Scar tissue helps,” he tells us.So when he landed in Palm Springs for a tennis tournament and learned SVB was in freefall—taking all of Thumbtack’s cash with it—his weekend plans were immediately sidelined. “Literally getting on the plane and landing, and the whole thing sort of blowing up,” Roseman recalls. “I was holed up in the hotel room for days,” working through how to ensure payroll and access to capital.That crisis became a defining moment. “That was the catalyst for us,” he tells us. Roseman used it to pivot the business away from growth-at-all-costs and toward sustainable, profitable growth. In just a few years, Thumbtack went from -$60 million in EBITDA to +$60 million.His ability to adapt comes from a varied career path—public accounting at Ernst & Young, investment banking at Bear Stearns and JPMorgan, and operational finance at eBay, where he helped spin off PayPal. At Thumbtack, a national home services marketplace, he’s scaled the finance team tenfold and implemented a discipline around contribution margin, hire rate, and CAC.“The P&L doesn’t lie,” Roseman tells us—especially in times of crisis, when it’s clarity, not comfort, that defines the leader.
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  • 1108: Building Value in a Disrupted Industry | Kent Hoskins, CFO, Concord
    Back in 2003, when a recruiter lined up Kent Hoskins for a finance interview at Boosey & Hawkes, he came prepared to discuss guitar manufacturing. Instead, the executive immediately began quizzing him on music royalties—the recruiter had apparently misunderstood the brief. Hoskins didn’t get the job—at first. But two days later, he got a call: the selected candidate had quit after just 24 hours. Hoskins stepped in.That twist marked a pivotal entry into the world of music IP—one that would shape a two-decade career. At Boosey & Hawkes, he saw firsthand how legacy operations could weigh down financial performance. “Fifty percent of revenue came from physical sheet music,” he recalls, “but it only made up 15% of EBITDA.” The company licensed out the segment, cut headcount, and reinvested in IP, increasing both margins and focus. “It stayed with me… if there’s not a path to profitability from revenue, why are you doing it?”Today, as CFO of Concord, Hoskins applies the same operational lens across a $900 million IP portfolio. After joining Concord through acquisition in 2017, he became CFO in 2021. Strategic forecasting now combines AI and streaming data—insights that recently helped identify renewed demand for the Creed catalog. “We could see it from the consumption,” he tells us, which triggered targeted marketing and revenue lift.
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About CFO THOUGHT LEADER

CFO THOUGHT LEADER is a podcast featuring firsthand accounts of finance leaders who are driving change within their organizations. We share the career journey of our spotlighted CFO guest: What do they struggle with? How do they persevere? What makes them successful CFOs? CFO THOUGHT LEADER is all about inspiring finance professionals to take a leadership leap. We know that by hearing about the successes — (and yes, also the failures) — of others, today’s CFOs can more confidently chart their own leadership paths across the enterprise and take inspired action.
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