
I get a lot of sales pitches at the moment from people telling me they can transform my business with AI.
Hardly a day goes by that I don’t see some tech CEO high on ketamine enthuse about robots taking over the world.
And there is no shortage of bots lining up to tell social media users that if they don’t fully give themselves over to AI, they have no future and might as well go and live in a cave now.
I have major problems with all these arguments – mostly because they are all baloney – but there’s one particular problem the world’s tech enthusiasts complete miss. And that’s the fact that any business not being run by amateurs or idiots is going to need a business case, with a bottom-line RoI for whatever you want them to do that’s different to what they’re doing now.
Now it’s possible to lie about the bottom-line benefits. And based on what I’ve seen, that’s mostly the strategy of tech cos nowadays. But even then, the suppliers will be found out eventually, giving them two problems: firstly, they’ll be forever tarnished as liars; and secondly nobody who isn’t an idiot is going to buy from them a second time, even if they claim to have fixed whatever caused the problem the first time.
When I say “lie about the benefits”, that’s sometimes…often, perhaps…a deliberate outright lie.
But quite a lot of the time, it’s because people who think they’re smart imagine they understand things they don’t, and so think what they’re doing makes sense when it doesn’t.
Problem 1: Poor risk/reward ratio
By way of example, let’s look at a field I know well – accounting. Although exactly the same principles apply in every other field too, based on discussions I’ve had with a wide range of experts over the last couple of years.
Firstly, let me say, the AI pitchmen often tell me that their AI system can make it much more efficient to analyse data and convert all the things I do manually into some magic reporting machine which delivers instant results any time I want.
As tech pitches go, that isn’t the most insane one I’ve ever had. And on some superficial level, if you don’t understand what a real CFO does, it sounds like it’s delivering a benefit on some level.
Not a bottom-line benefit, exactly, because no cost has been reduced in this process and no revenue gained. But I acknowledge there’s the hint of a benefit in there.
What that means in practice is that this tech solution provider wants me to give them money and, in the process of doing so, my costs won’t reduce and my revenues won’t increase.
That locks in a negative RoI, to at least the extent of whatever this solution provider wants to charge me. I’m struggling to see the business case here.
The much bigger problem for tech providers is what do they think I do now?
I mean, if I thought about it really hard, I could maybe think of a report I might need for something that I don’t get at present, but by definition (if I haven’t already worked out a way to do it) the impact of knowing that information on the business is marginal at best. We already know that because, if it wasn’t, there would already be a report with that information on it, however inefficient it was to compile.
I mean, if I’ve already got a modern accounting system (even relatively basic packages like Sage and Xero, never mind NetSuite or Microsoft Dynamics) I can produce pretty much any report I want with the in-built reporting tools.
I can set up a live, real-time link to Excel to do any analysis I want. And if I want to do something really fancy, I can always hook up Power BI and produce as many pretty tables and charts as it’s possible to imagine.
So, if I can already get all the reports I need or want, more or less instantly, with the systems I already have, by definition no AI tech solution can provide better reporting than I already have.
As a side note, AI systems are incredibly vulnerable to bad actors, so there is a very real business risk to putting anything on an AI system given how many people can successfully hack their way into AI systems, whether they’ve been coded in Silicon Valley or someone’s back bedroom.
So, not only do I not get anything I can’t already get now. I introduce a whole new set of risks and vulnerabilities into my organisation at the same time. You can understand why I don’t see this as an attractive risk/reward ratio in the context of what we have already established is a negative bottom-line benefit.
Problem 2: Low incremental RoI
The second problem all these AI services have is that they are having to generate an RoI over and above the cost of using them in a field where a huge amount of optimisation has already taken place.
To listen to a tech co’s sales pitch, you’d imagine accountants still used quill pens and handwritten ledger books. Relative to those, of course some new tech would deliver dramatic efficiencies.
The only problem is that’s what everyone already did in the 1980s.
When I was a very, very junior accountant straight out of university, we still had a small number of clients who kept handwritten ledger books (albeit the quill pens were no longer in use). But most of our clients were on a computer system of some sort and those that weren’t soon were.
By the early 1990s everyone was on a computerised accounting system, pretty much, and the days of accounting departments with a couple of dozen ledger clerks, cashiers, and accounts assistants to post all the accounting entries had long gone.
And over time, computerised accounting and reporting systems have got better and better, driving more change and greater efficiencies inside most businesses.
An accounting department which might have been 20-people strong in the 1980s is probably being run by 4 people today – perhaps sales ledger, purchase ledger, payroll, plus someone in charge. That’s about all you need unless you run a massive international business (which most companies are not). And a small business can probably get by with just a couple of people.
So whatever whizz-bang tech solution that comes along isn’t making a business case by comparing itself against an operating model which hasn’t existed since the 1980s. All that does is demonstrate how little most tech cos understand the real world of accounting today and just makes the person delivering the sales pitch look out-of-touch and ridiculous.
While it takes some work, of course, showing a positive RoI based on making cost-savings against a staff base of 20 isn’t the world’s hardest thing to do. But, after 40 years of optimisation, an argument which requires you to fire 3 of the remaining 4 people to generate a positive RoI is unlikely to fill anyone with enthusiasm.
Problem 3: It’s not all the same
Because tech folk don’t understand the real world, they think everyone in an accounting department is a fungible unit of resource – that is, any one of them can be interchanged with any other one of them.
Even thinking that shows how naïve and out-of-touch tech folk are.
The reality is, if you have a four person team in the structure outlined above (sales ledger, purchase ledger, payroll and someone in charge), you almost certainly have four entirely different personality types and skillsets, none of which you can eliminate entirely from your business.
A good sales ledger person is likely to be more like a salesperson than an accountant. They have to sell, persuade, cajole, and encourage payments out of their customers in a way that a tech solution of just sending one Dunning letter after another could never hope to do.
I’ve only worked with a small number of truly exceptional credit controllers over the years and the people who do this well are an incredibly rare breed. However, good credit controllers accelerate your cash flow like nothing else on earth. You would need to be insane to get rid of one of those, if you’re lucky enough to have one.
Your purchase ledger person will be very focused on transactional processing, but they play a key role in managing your expenses. Particularly in making sure your expenses are correctly categorised – if they are wrong at this stage, any downstream reporting will be incorrect, so they need a level of focus and attention to detail which most people outside accounts departments don’t have.
They also have to deal with a barrage of suppliers wanting to be paid, queries internally and externally, balancing supplier statements to the purchase ledger accounts and more.
This sounds like the sort of thing tech would be good at, but it isn’t particularly as there is a lot of fine judgement involved. To give one simple example, buying a pen would have an entirely different accounting treatment depending on whether that pen was something for your warehouse team to sign delivery notes with, an antique Montblanc pen you’ve bought as an investment, or one of a batch of pens you intend to sell in the normal course of business as a stationery supplier.
Machines aren’t going to guess the right account code between those scenarios just based on the knowledge that a pen has been bought any time soon.
If you have a dedicated payroll person, you’re running an organisation with a large and complex payroll. That requires deep expertise in HMRC’s ever-growing and ever-more-complex rules and regulations which nobody can pick up instantly, and tech solutions can’t understand the nuances, and oddly inconsistent rules, involved in our tax system.
They will also be creating a range of legally-required returns to a variety of official bodies and fending off queries from your staff who don’t understand their payslip or think they’ve been underpaid or overpaid.
Because of the legal and financial consequences of getting this wrong, if you outsource this area of your business to an AI robot, I hope you enjoy prison food.
Finally, your “person in charge” is compiling all the reports, doing the monthly accounts, liaising with the auditors and dozens of other things. Anyone who thinks this is a purely mechanical process either doesn’t understand nearly enough about how accounts are prepared or they’ve worked with a lot of third-rate accountants.
While of course, some of this is relatively mechanical, it’s often in the process of doing the mechanical work that you notice anomalies which require further investigation before you can be sure the accounts are right. A tech tool which just reports the numbers as they find them is of very little use at this stage in the process – human insight is what you really need at this stage.
Which, by definition, is something you can’t get from something, er, a non-human.
So, when accounts departments have shrunk to perhaps 20% or less of the number of people they would have had before computerisation came in, any new tech service has to justify an RoI from removing people who are, to a large extent, un-removable because you need them, and their respective skillsets, within your business.
And if you don’t have an accounts department which looks like that, whoever has been running it clearly hasn’t been doing a great job over the years. In this scenario, you don’t need a new tool. You just need to make sure you’re getting the value out of the tech you already have and your costs will drop away instantly, without any further investment in new tech.
All the benefit of using the tech you already have better flows straight to your bottom line.
All the areas where you bring in a new system are taking away from your bottom line and, in the absence of offsetting cost-savings, represent a drain on your bottom line, not an addition to it.
In a nut-shell
I realise this looks different if you’re some Silicon Valley wunderkind who doesn’t know what they’re doing, but every AI pitch for “transforming my accounting system” looks the same.
They provide zero functionality over and above what I already have with my existing tools.
They offer no realistic cost-saving opportunities because we’re not in the 1980s any more and I’ve got an accounts team of just 4, not one of 20.
If I really pushed it, I might get that down to 3 (at the cost of some significant loss of valuable skills), but then a tech solution has to cost significantly less than one full-time person’s salary, or there’s no RoI on the investment.
I genuinely believe you’d be insane to get rid of a £30k salary to spend £100k on a tech solution, but tech people don’t understand how accounting departments really work, so they think spending £100k on tech “will make you more efficient”.
It doesn’t. At best it’s a naïve misunderstanding. At worst, it’s an outright lie.
And given that one of my fundamental operating principles is not to deal with naïve people, idiots, or liars in any field, that makes the tech co’s sales pitches hard to take seriously.
It’s not that I’m against tech or don’t think there are further efficiencies out there somewhere. I spent most of my career from the 1980s onwards implementing new systems and driving efficiencies to improve bottom line performance. So I’m not against the principle of this at all.
But on a practical level, AI solutions which claim to transform accounting departments just don’t.
Their “solutions” are inefficient, packed full of additional risks, generate no real-world cost savings anywhere which isn’t still using quill pens, and delivers no meaningful features which aren’t already available to an averagely-competent accounts team through their existing systems.
One day, in light of evidence to the contrary, I might change my opinion. But right now, despite ketamine-fuelled tech CEOs’ claims, there is no compelling case to replace any accounting system with an AI one.
And an even less compelling case to add it in as an extra layer on top of systems which can already do everything you need and which you’re already paying for.
If you really care about your bottom line, think twice about you fall for the tech cos’ sales pitches. They are mostly not true – your only job is to decide whether they are deliberately lying or if they just don’t know what they’re talking about.








