This isn’t your father’s CFO role. No more bean counters or number gatekeepers. Today, the CFO and finance function are about driving value. They partner with the CEO and leadership to scale advisory firms. Across industries, CFOs are increasingly stepping into CEO positions. That shift signals a deeper truth.
Finance has transformed from a back-office task into a forward-looking navigator. It leverages real-time data, analytics, and AI to uncover opportunities and inform decisions. CFOs now oversee tech investments, hiring strategies, and even acquisitions. This change positions finance as a strategic force, aligning resources with growth ambitions.
For RIAs scaling from $200 million to $2 billion in AUM, this evolution is critical. At smaller sizes, finance feels simple, almost routine. As complexity mounts, clinging to an outdated cost-center view limits potential. Leaders who rethink finance gain a competitive edge, using it to chart the future and strengthen their firms.
In this piece, I’ll reframe that old mindset and guide you high level through the $200M-to-$2B journey. We’ll explore what changes, the hurdles you’ll face, and how a modern finance setup fuels success. Let’s dive in.
Reframing Finance From Burden to Driver
The Cost-Center Mindset
At $200 million in AUM, finance for most RIAs focuses on the basics. It handles bills, taxes, and standard reporting. Someone keeps the operation humming, which suits a smaller firm. This aligns with the historical view of finance where the priority was about keeping costs in-check rather than helping expand horizons.
But scaling to $2 billion shatters that framework quickly for a need for something more. Sticking to a backward-looking view keeps finance tallying expenses instead of shaping strategy. Cash flow becomes harder to gauge intuitively with ongoing investment costs. Decisions feel uncertain. Firms that stay in this mode chase minor savings while missing larger opportunities. Growth adds moving parts, and a basic finance setup struggles to keep pace. Delaying the shift only steepens the challenge ahead.
The Value-Driver Reality
Picture finance as your growth opportunity identifier. It digs into both financial and operational data to reveal what’s thriving and what’s faltering. The introduction of expanded data and better tech to track said data has been big driver of this shift. For instance, finance can break down client profitability to highlight top revenue sources, sharpening your focus on high-value services. It might also track advisor performance, spotting underperformers for coaching or reassignment. These insights keep you proactive.
The role extends further, linking every part of your firm to the broader vision. Finance becomes a guide, placing smart bets on people and plans. Early on, every dollar matters. Later, every choice carries impact. A finance team built this way accelerates progress and keeps you moving forward.
The Scaling Journey from $200M to $2B AUM
Here’s how finance evolves as RIAs scale from $200 million to $2 billion in AUM. Each stage brings new demands, pushing finance from a basic task to a strategic powerhouse.
$200M AUM: Reactive Roots
At $200 million in AUM, generating $1.5 to $2 million in revenue, finance stays lean and reactive. A bookkeeper manages all the necessities. Some firms outsource this, or the owner handles it. They are using their basic accounting systems to get by. Cash flow tracking isn’t complex yet, though it lacks strategic depth.
The focus is on just getting it done: pay bills, file forms, keep going. Scaling exposes the limits fast. The owner’s time grows scarce, shifting toward business-building. Here’s my recommended team:
- In-house or Outsourced Bookkeeper
- Fractional CFO
A full-time CFO costs too much at this stage. A fractional CFO, working a few hours weekly, can map your future, not just report numbers. Choose one that’s finance-forward, not accounting-backwards and that acts as a partner, not a service. Start laying groundwork like:
- A functioning firm forecast model
- A budgeting process
- A strategic planning framework
Waiting builds technical debt, so begin early. Finance starts hinting at what’s next, planting seeds for growth. Every dollar counts here. Let finance nudge you forward instead of just logging history.
$500M AUM: Proactive Foundations
At $500 million in AUM, with $4 to $5 million in revenue, finance holds steady but feels pressure from mounting needs. A bookkeeper, possibly in-house now, is completing all the requirements yet processes and procedure are not built out or optimal. Financials remain clear, yet strategy lags. The firm is becoming a true business, not just a practice.
The CEO/owner focuses more on strategy. Here’s the team I’d build:
- Full-Time Controller
- Fractional Strategic CFO
A controller strengthens processes, bringing bookkeeping in-house. Pair this with the fractional CFO who plans ahead, supported by the controller. Some firms hire a full-time “CFO” here, but often it’s a controller-level hire due to cost. I’d prioritize a strong COO instead, saving top CFO talent for later.
M&A interest emerges, though not fully in-house yet. Use advisors or fractional corporate development help for deals. Tools like EOS sharpen KPI tracking. Finance begins sketching next steps. Act now to avoid more technical debt. Complexity will rise faster from here, so turn finance into your guide.
$1B AUM: Strategic Leap
At $1 billion in AUM, yielding $8 to $10 million in revenue, finance stretches but pivots to strategy. A controller and small team handle payroll, compliance, and ops data on NetSuite. Cash flow stays manageable, yet growth demands more.
The CEO/owner’s role is all vision now or splitting time with their client book. Here’s my team setup:
- Full-Time Controller
- Full-Time Strategic CFO
- Full-Time FP&A Analyst
- Fractional Corp Dev Manager / M&A Advisor
A top-tier strategic CFO becomes affordable and essential as needs mount. The controller keeps operations tight, while an FP&A analyst supports the CFO’s strategic focus. Don’t overburden your CFO with routine tasks, segment duties. They’re also building dashboards and models for departments to run their areas effectively. Finance now:
- Drives strategy
- Tracks KPIs
- Assesses all potentials costs
- Partners across the firm
M&A leans on external advisors, though full-time corp dev nears if deals are key. Finance steers decisions here. Every move matters, so let it lead the charge.
$2B AUM: Value Engine
At $2 billion in AUM, with $15 to $20 million in revenue, finance powers the firm. A strategic-focused CFO, controller, FP&A team, and deeper analytics across all firm systems. Strategy is central from here. Firms at this point have now made it past most of the buildout of scale costs that it takes to now actually scale their cost structure.
The CEO/owner is hopefully living full-time strategy by now. Here’s the team:
- Full-Time Controller
- Full-Time Strategic CFO
- Full-Time FP&A Lead
- Full-Time Data/BI Specialist
- Full-Time/Fractional Corp Dev Manager
A data specialist bridges tech and finance, laying roots for more business intelligence on your firm’s operational data. Getting access to analyzable data is no easy feat in any company.
If M&A drives growth, a full-time corp dev hire manages outreach and deals. Finance fuels the operation, scaling seamlessly. Every decision weighs heavily. Make it your growth engine.
Embedding the Shift
Finance evolves with your firm: reactive at $200 million, proactive at $500 million, strategic at $1 billion, visionary at $2 billion. It hints at the future with a fractional CFO, sketches steps with a controller, drives decisions with a top CFO, and powers everything with data and deals. Finance fuels scale, not cuts.
Action Steps
Match your stage:
- $200M: A fractional CFO sparks the shift or aids advisor tuck-in structuring.
- $500M: Add a controller and EOS for processes.
- $1B: A full-time strategic CFO and FP&A steer the path.
- $2B: Data and corp dev roles solidify it.
Don’t skimp on talent, but don’t overreach either—match the stage. There are more options that ever to scale smartly with access to talent externally.
Tell your firm: finance is your growth partner, not a line item. Make that stick so they understand finance is their to help them, not manage them.
Bringing It All Together
From $200 million to $2 billion, finance grows from a necessity to your firm’s backbone. It starts basic, shifts to process-building, then steers strategy, and finally powers scale with data and deals. Leaders who embrace this outpace those viewing finance as a chore.
Where does your finance stand? Mapping ahead or stuck behind? Scaling demands a strong platform team in your corner. Whether it’s a fractional CFO early or a full-time corp dev hire at the top, you set the pace. Connect on LinkedIn for more scaling insights. Is your finance team the engine powering your growth, or still holding you back in the back office?