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PRIVACY
Opinion

Robert Plant, Janet Jackson and Mick Jagger and the allure of accountancy

It might not be rock and roll but accountancy has shed its 'boring tag'

Left to right Mick Jagger, Janet Jackson and Robert Plant.

Mick Jagger, Janet Jackson and Robert Plant.

Three legends from the glamorous world of rock and pop – and they are linked by the curious fact that before stardom struck, they were all destined to become accountants.

And they aren’t the only big names who were lured away from glittering finance careers when fate took them in other directions. We can say the same about comedian Eddie Izzard. Billion-selling thriller writer John Grisham. Tennis ace Venus Williams.

It might be too soon to declare accountancy as the new rock’n’roll, but we are seeing signs that finance professionals are beginning to lose the unfair ‘boring’ tag.

I think this is because the nature of the job is changing so fast.

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The explosion of digital technology around the world has made accountants more important in business, not less as has been predicted. Automation and the rise of artificial intelligence means that much of the routine work once carried out by accountants can now be done quicker, cheaper and just as accurately by machines.

But this hasn’t led to accountants going the way of the top-hat maker, the cooper and the wheelwright – from once-common trade to niche craft. Quite the opposite. It has freed accountants to do more varied work, with more emphasis on strategy, creativity and leadership than the keeping of figures and compilation of reports.

These enhanced finance skills have been in high demand since the pandemic hit, triggering a fiscal squeeze throughout world business. The margins between success and failure were narrower than ever, especially for small enterprises with fewer financial resources and less access to credit as big concerns.