A practical, step-by-step guide explaining how to move from being an IFRS Specialist to a data-driven FP&A Analyst, with real-life examples, mindset shifts, and hands-on insights from real business experience.
A practical, step-by-step guide explaining how to move from being an IFRS Specialist to a data-driven FP&A Analyst, with real-life examples, mindset shifts, and hands-on insights from real business experience.
Let me start with a very real question I hear all the time:
“I’m strong in IFRS, I understand the standards, I’m good at reporting…
But how do I move into FP&A? Is this a career change or something else?”
The short answer:
It’s not a career change. It’s an upgrade.
The long answer?
Let’s walk through it step by step, the same practical way I always explain it in my training sessions.
First: Understand the Real Difference Between IFRS and FP&A
- Before making any move, you need to understand this clearly:
- IFRS Specialist focuses on:
- The past & present
- Accuracy
- Compliance
- “Are the financial statements correct?”
- FP&A Analyst focuses on:
- The future
- Insights
- Scenarios
- “What will happen next, why, and what decision should we take?”
Hesham’s Insight:
The most successful FP&A professionals I’ve seen started as strong accountants but they changed the way they think.

Step 1: Change the Questions You Ask (Before Changing Your Job)
An IFRS mindset asks:
Is this number right or wrong?
An FP&A mindset asks:
What is this number telling me, and what happens if it changes?
A Simple Real-Life Example
Revenue is 10% below budget.
- From an accounting perspective:
-The number is correct
-The variance is recorded - From an FP&A perspective:
- Is the issue volume or price?
- Is it temporary or a long-term trend?
- What’s the impact on cash flow and year-end profit?
That’s where the real shift starts.