Request to partner

Request your invite

Call to action
Your text goes here. Insert your content, thoughts, or information in this space.
Button

Back to speakers

Diya
Sagar
CFO
AWA Studios
Diya Sagar is the Chief Financial Officer at AWA Studios, a Lupa Systems portfolio company, where she leads finance, strategy, operations, and technology for a fast-growing media and entertainment business. Her career has spanned a range of finance roles in the media and technology sectors, including as an investor at Lupa Systems, leading corporate development & strategy at Endemol Shine Group, and investment banking at Deutsche Bank. Known for her collaborative leadership style and commercial mindset, Diya plays a critical role in aligning financial strategy with business objectives, with a focus on capital allocation and value creation ​in growing creative businesses. Her work as a CFO has been featured in Forbes and CFO Brew, and opinion articles published by CFO.com.
Button
07 May 2026 10:50 - 11:35
Panel - Building the modern finance operating model, freeing capacity while strengthening control
With more than 70 percent of CFOs saying operational workload limits their ability to focus on strategic priorities (Deloitte), finance teams are under constant pressure to move faster without letting standards slip. Most CFOs agree the operating model needs to change, but far fewer feel it actually works cleanly in practice. This panel gets into the real, sometimes messy decisions behind modern finance operating models, what CFOs choose to centralise, what they deliberately push closer to the business, and where automation genuinely helps versus where it quietly creates more work. Expect an honest conversation about trade-offs, false efficiencies, and the changes that actually create space without introducing new risk. Rather than theory, the discussion focuses on what has worked, what hasn’t, and what CFOs would do differently if they were redesigning their finance function today. Key takeaways: - Which operating model choices genuinely remove bottlenecks, and which ones tend to resurface elsewhere as rework or escalation. - How CFOs set guardrails that reduce dependency on finance leadership while protecting accuracy, compliance, and audit readiness. - Where automation reliably gives time back, and where human judgment still needs to stay firmly in the loop. - Practical levers CFOs use to create capacity for planning, partnering, and growth leadership without making the function more fragile.