
There’s been a lot of noise in the advertising industry lately, from restructuring to consolidation to massive financial recalibrations at the industry’s biggest companies.
It’s easy, in moments like this, to frame finance people as the enemy of creativity, something I’ve been reading a lot of recently. I don’t buy that.
To me, the issue isn’t financial leadership. It’s the posture that financial leaders take.
In a creative business, the CFO doesn’t just manage the numbers. They influence behavior, and their actions shape culture and whether a company builds or simply protects. It shows how they engage: are they leaning into tough conversations, helping solve problems rather than simply measuring them, and making it clear that they stand behind the work?
CFOs AS BUILDERS
I’ve been fortunate to work with some of the best CFOs, and they are builders. They understand that a creative company is not a manufacturing business or a tech company. At a true creative agency, the greatest assets walk out the door every night. And the product isn’t ads, but ideas that create advantage for brands. Which means the focus can’t be efficiency alone. It has to be about raising the bar and improving the work, not simply extracting more margin from it.
That doesn’t mean that there isn’t financial discipline. In fact, discipline becomes more important. But the approach shifts. The question isn’t, “How do we minimize our exposure?” It’s “How do we fund our ambitions responsibly?”
There’s a big difference.
The wrong kind of financial leadership narrows the aperture, and every setback triggers contraction. Profit becomes the headline metric for everything, and over time, the company plays more defense than offense.
The right CFO understands that long-term value in a creative company comes from momentum, reputation, and the ability to attract exceptional talent. None of that grows without oxygen.
Over the past 16 years at Zulu Alpha Kilo, I’ve seen firsthand how powerful this can be. Being an indie creative agency sounds romantic—the creative freedom, financial control, autonomy over your brand and what it stands for. But it only works if financial leadership believes in the mission. If they don’t, independence is just a structure, not a strength.
When your finance team aligns with your ambitions for the company, something different happens. You can invest through a tough month or quarter instead of retreating from it. You can hire that additional creative team or invest in that brave idea that needs some extra love. You can choose to strengthen internal culture rather than cut it to the bone.
CLARITY AND ACCOUNTABILITY
The builder’s CFO doesn’t say yes to everything. They ask hard questions, push for clarity, and hold people accountable. But they understand that the safest path rarely builds the strongest company.
In moments of industry restructuring like the one we’re watching now, consolidation and financial engineering are often positioned as the solution. Sometimes those are necessary actions. But they are defensive plays, not the ones that create long-term success.
Creative companies don’t succeed when they are the most optimized. They are sustainable when the work comes first: in priority, investment, and decision-making.
If you’re leading a creative organization today, whether it’s an indie or part of something larger, the most important financial question isn’t about balance sheets or budgets.
It’s about whether financial leadership believes in the power of the work. Because over time, finance doesn’t just fund creativity. It either fuels it or suffocates it. And in a creative company, that difference defines everything.
Mike Sutton is the president and CEO at Zulu Alpha Kilo.



