Interim Business Controller
Interim Search AB has been commissioned to deliver an interim Operations Controller to an energy company with a turnover of approximately 400 MSEK and 100 employees.
For this assignment, we are looking for a forward-looking business controller who will build a digitized internal controller function in the organizational development project. The company is now taking another step towards the future and creating a new organization that will ensure that long-term goals are achieved and the ambition to become the best in the industry.
Main duties:
- Building and ensuring an efficient process to get full control of everything around projects - from sales to invoicing (internal and external).
- To build up a quality-assured and efficient data management system for monitoring activities, including reports and visualization.
- Building and ensuring processes of accurate input data from operations to financial statements.
- Actively participate in the business planning process together with heads of unit.
- Developing business cases and contributing to profitability issues together with unit managers.
- Analyzing and monitoring the performance and development of activities.
- Challenge and act as support to units and CEO.
- Reporting to the CEO.
To be eligible for the role, you have:
- Relevant training as an economist or other academic degree combined with several years of experience in similar tasks.
- Very good experience in project management.
- High social and interpersonal skills.
- Experience of controlling in plant-intensive project activities in the energy industry or industry that works goal-oriented is an advantage.
- good written and oral communication skills.
- Self-motivated and committed to working actively towards set goals
About the process:
The assignment is full-time, starting immediately and is expected to last 10-12 months.
Do you have the right profile and are available? Apply now but no later than August 26.
The responsible recruitment consultant is Michael Schilling working together with the researcher Ida Eriksson.