How successful indirect tax teams evolve into strategic advisorsLearn how corporate tax professionals can elevate their role from tax filing and compliance to become strategic business advisors.
To investigate further, we scheduled in-depth interviews with 30+ tax directors around the world who oversaw their company’s indirect taxes.
Corporate indirect tax teams are over-burdened and under-resourced
The number one concern for most indirect tax managers was the pace and scale of regulatory change. This was especially true for companies operating in multiple jurisdictions with a wide variety of products and services.
Technology and talent are key enablers of a more strategic indirect tax function
Many of the tax directors we interviewed discussed their desire to evolve the indirect tax function into a more strategic role. When asked about their five-year goals, more than 60% planned to increase automation as a way to improve the analysis and reporting they could offer the business.
Indirect tax teams work with almost every other department in the company. The wealth of data these teams manage can provide unique insight into a company’s supply chain, customer behaviours, and cashflows – that is, only if the data is accessible and reliable. That’s why the right investment in talent and technology is critical for indirect tax teams that want to raise their standing in the broader organisation.
Further topics we explore in our indirect tax report:
- Regulatory change
- Digital tax reporting
- Data confidence
- Internal stakeholders
- Skills gaps
- Software investment
- Implementation tips