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Inclusive Cultures Don’t Happen by Accident — They’re Built Intentionally

Following International Women's Day, many organisations reflect on progress.But for finance leaders and hiring managers, the more important question is this: What does inclusion mean in practice — and how does it affect performance? Because this isn’t just a culture conversation. It’s a capability conversation. ​Inclusion Impacts Talent Attraction ​The best finance professionals — at every level — have options. They are looking for: Transparent progression pathways Visible meritocracy Leadership that values contribution over presence Environments where performance is recognised fairly If an organisation’s culture unintentionally favours “proximity” — those closest to decision-makers — it narrows its own talent pipeline. ​And in a market where specialist skills are already in short supply, that’s a commercial risk. ​Meritocracy Must Be Visible Many businesses describe themselves as meritocratic. ​But candidates assess that through lived signals: Who is in senior leadership? Who is promoted internally? How are flexible working arrangements handled? How openly are development opportunities discussed? In accountancy and finance particularly — where progression paths are structured and performance is measurable — fairness needs to be both real and visible. ​High performers want clarity, standards and consistency. ​​Leadership Behaviour Shapes Retention Inclusive leadership isn’t about grand gestures. ​It’s about everyday behaviours: Who is invited into strategic discussions Who is given stretch projects Who is credited publicly Who is sponsored, not just mentored Retention in finance teams is rarely lost because of salary alone. It’s often influenced by visibility, opportunity and recognition. ​Businesses that understand this tend to build stronger, more stable finance functions. ​The Commercial Case for Inclusion Diverse and inclusive teams bring broader perspectives to: Risk assessment Strategic planning Commercial analysis Operational improvement For CFOs and Finance Directors, inclusion isn’t a compliance issue. It’s about building balanced teams capable of better decision-making. ​The organisations that approach inclusion intentionally — rather than reactively — are often the ones that outperform in the long term. ​Beyond Awareness Days International Women’s Day creates valuable momentum every year:But sustained progress comes from: Clear promotion criteria Transparent hiring processes Conscious leadership development Ongoing cultural accountability In today’s hiring market, an inclusive culture isn’t just about employer branding — it influences who joins, who stays and how teams perform. ​

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It's time for "The Young Accountant of the Year Awards 2024"

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It’s that time of year again... We're currently looking for our Young Accountant of the Year to award in April at the LCASS Annual Dinner, held at The Queens Hotel in Leeds. 🏆

Each year we ask firms of accountants of all sizes, whether regional, national or international, who have offices in West or North Yorkshire to nominate individuals in their team they feel deserve recognition as "Young Accountant of the Year 2024".

Continuing from 2023, a panel of three judges, including last year’s winner Chloe Sturdyfrom RSM UKand Louise Crossley, Group Finance Director of Inspired Pet Nutritionwill interview 6 finalists, 3 of which will receive an award for one the following:

💼 Independent Firm Winner
📈 Emerging Leader
👩‍💼MVP (Most Valuable Person)

And of course, one of those three will be announced as the overall winner of the Sharp Consultancy Young Accountant of the Year Awards 2024.

Do you think someone in your team has what it takes to be the winner? For more details on how to nominate, get in touch with Lee Sweeneytoday.

lee@sharpconsultancy.com| 0113 236 6300

Image: Accountancy Awards - Young Accountant of the Year. Annual awards show by recruitment company.
Young Accountant of the Year Awards 2024