613: Helping Others Get the Big Picture | Anders Fohlin, CFO, Medius

Published: July 5, 2020, 6 p.m.

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Early in his finance career, Anders Fohlin discovered that he could ratchet up his capacity to consume information and problem-solve simply by drawing pictures.

However, what had originated more as a personal observation would eventually evolve to something more as he discovered that his visuals could serve others. \\xa0

\\u201cI started to regularly draw processes on white boards and paper to make things very visual for everybody and help others to get the full picture,\\u201d explains Fohlin, whose knack for creating visuals and goal of making things more visible \\u201cfor everybody\\u201d led him to begin viewing routine meetings as opportunities for visualization.

Says Fohlin: \\u201cI found that process maps and gathering people in the same room was a really good way to spark energy and collaboration and have people feel that they were important and doing something more than just shoveling coal.\\u201d \\xa0\\xa0

Fohlin adds that his early efforts to create greater collaboration and inclusion ended up opening the door for him to various senior finance roles and eventually led him to the CFO office at software developer Medius.

Among the guiding principles that Fohlin says have influenced his leadership style and approach over time is the notion of transparency.

Ten years ago, while a senior finance executive at NASDAQ, he participated in a series of meetings to discuss the adoption of an activity-based costing model. \\u201cWe would sit around the table and go product by product to explore ways in which we could improve,\\u201d he recalls, \\u201cand this was done with representatives from all of the different functions.\\u201d

Part of the approach involved sharing numbers more widely across the organization and downward to the workforce at large.

\\u201cIf each employee can see the overall picture and what aligns their daily activities with the strategy and vision of the company, then they make better decisions,\\u201d explains Fohlin, who adds that today\\u2014as a CFO\\u2014he\\u2019s still drawing pictures.\\xa0\\u2013Jack Sweeney

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