
CFO THOUGHT LEADER
The episode illustrates the critical transition from advisory to operational leadership, showing that financial expertise alone isn’t enough to drive successful M&A integration and scaling. For leaders and finance professionals, these insights underscore the importance of cross‑functional alignment, transparent structures, and a culture that surfaces problems early, lessons that are especially relevant in today’s fast‑growing tech companies.
Toby Driver’s career illustrates why modern CFOs need more than accounting expertise. Starting as an apprentice, he moved through audit, transaction services at RSM and KPMG, and later into private‑equity‑backed operations at Ideagen. Those deal‑advisory roles gave him a deep view of value drivers and the financial health checks buyers demand, while his shift to a group controller and then CFO exposed him to the gritty realities of post‑M&A integration, regulatory compliance, and day‑to‑day operational pressures. This blend of advisory insight and hands‑on execution is increasingly essential as CFOs are asked to scale businesses, integrate acquisitions, and maintain stakeholder trust.
Scaling a finance function now hinges on cross‑functional fluency and empathy. Driver emphasizes that running M&A integrations taught him how finance intersects with sales, marketing, product development, and technology teams. By partnering with CEOs and C‑suite peers across functions, he learned to translate financial data into actionable business language, fostering a culture where teams feel comfortable surfacing problems early. This holistic perspective, combined with a focus on building strong, collaborative finance teams, helps CFOs navigate complex regulatory environments and drive sustainable growth without becoming siloed number‑crunchers.
Artificial intelligence is the next lever for finance transformation. Driver advocates appointing an AI champion to identify automation opportunities—such as reconciliations and forecasting—while reassuring staff that AI augments, not replaces, their roles. Leveraging cloud ERP platforms like NetSuite, CFOs can connect real‑time data to AI models, turning routine tasks into strategic insights and freeing time for higher‑value analysis. As competitors adopt AI, proactive CFOs who embed intelligent tools and nurture a culture of continuous learning will position their organizations ahead of the curve.
At 18, while many of his peers were heading off to university, Toby Driver made a different choice. He joined an accounting practice through an apprenticeship, a decision driven by his desire for a “quick learning curve” and real exposure to business, he tells us. From the outset, he was less interested in credentials than in understanding how organizations actually work.
That instinct carried him through years in audit and into transaction services, where he learned to dissect businesses at speed. In deal advisory, Driver was tasked with getting “under the nuts and bolts” of companies, performing financial health checks with significant value at stake, he tells us. The work sharpened his ability to spot value drivers—but it also revealed a blind spot he wouldn’t fully appreciate until later.
That realization came after he moved into operations at Ideagen. Leading M&A integrations end-to-end meant sitting with the CEO and C-suite to align sales, product, technology, and culture. Bringing two organizations together was far more complex than it ever appeared from the advisory side, Driver tells us. The experience reshaped his mindset, pushing him to think “business first, rather than necessarily finance first.”
As Ideagen scaled from roughly £50 million in ARR to five times that size, Driver faced another inflection point. The company reorganized into regional operating units to restore accountability and clarity, a change finance helped design, he tells us. Today, he carries those lessons forward as CFO—focused on structure, transparency, and creating an environment where people surface issues early. “Bad news never gets better with time,” he says, a principle that now defines both his leadership style and his approach to scale.
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At 18, while many of his peers were heading off to university, Toby Driver made a different choice. He joined an accounting practice through an apprenticeship, a decision driven by his desire for a “quick learning curve” and real exposure to business, he tells us. From the outset, he was less interested in credentials than in understanding how organizations actually work.
That instinct carried him through years in audit and into transaction services, where he learned to dissect businesses at speed. In deal advisory, Driver was tasked with getting “under the nuts and bolts” of companies, performing financial health checks with significant value at stake, he tells us. The work sharpened his ability to spot value drivers—but it also revealed a blind spot he wouldn’t fully appreciate until later.
That realization came after he moved into operations at Ideagen. Leading M&A integrations end‑to‑end meant sitting with the CEO and C‑suite to align sales, product, technology, and culture. Bringing two organizations together was far more complex than it ever appeared from the advisory side, Driver tells us. The experience reshaped his mindset, pushing him to think “business first, rather than necessarily finance first.”
As Ideagen scaled from roughly £50 million in ARR to five times that size, Driver faced another inflection point. The company reorganized into regional operating units to restore accountability and clarity, a change finance helped design, he tells us. Today, he carries those lessons forward as CFO—focused on structure, transparency, and creating an environment where people surface issues early. “Bad news never gets better with time,” he says, a principle that now defines both his leadership style and his approach to scale.
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