How to hire a financial controller who owns the numbers
A complete playbook — sourcing strategy, boolean strings, screening, interview stages, a close-and-reporting exercise, reference checks, and a weighted scorecard. Built for B2B SaaS hiring teams.
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- Sourcing strategy + boolean strings + GAAP filters
- LatamCent's initial screen questions
- Hiring manager interview guide
- Close & reporting exercise + rubric
- Exec / culture round questions
- Reference check script
- Salary bands + weighted scorecard
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Talk to LatamCent →Where US-GAAP-fluent, SaaS-literate finance talent lives in LATAM
The single biggest mistake in hiring a LATAM controller is assuming accounting is universal. It isn't. A US SaaS company runs on US GAAP and subscription-revenue accounting, and many otherwise-excellent LATAM accountants have only worked in IFRS or local standards. Filter hard for GAAP fluency and SaaS-metrics literacy up front. Big 4 audit alumni who served US tech clients, and shared-services hubs like Costa Rica, are where this talent concentrates.
US GAAP is the real filter
Many strong LATAM accountants know IFRS or local standards but not US GAAP. For a US SaaS company, GAAP fluency — revenue recognition (ASC 606), accruals, deferred revenue — is non-negotiable. Big 4 audit alumni who served US clients are the gold standard.
SaaS metrics literacy
A controller for a SaaS company must speak ARR, MRR, deferred revenue, and the difference between bookings and revenue. A generalist accountant who's only done manufacturing or retail will struggle with subscription accounting.
Systems & certification signal
NetSuite or Sage Intacct experience is a strong marker for SaaS-stage finance. CPA, ACCA, or a local Contador Público with US-client experience. Bill.com, Ramp, Brex familiarity for AP/expense workflows.
LATAM-specific
Colombia (Bogotá, Medellín) and Mexico have deep bilingual finance talent serving US companies. Argentina has strong technical accountants. Costa Rica is a shared-services hub (Intel, Amazon, P&G finance centers) with excellent US-GAAP-trained controllers. Look for Big 4 trained, US-client experience.
The 30-minute call that separates a SaaS controller from a bookkeeper
This screen does one job: confirm US GAAP fluency, SaaS-metrics literacy, and real ownership of the close before the CFO or founder invests time. Title inflation is rampant here — "controller" on a LATAM résumé can mean anything from a true finance lead to a senior bookkeeper. English is tested live; this role presents to leadership.
Keep going if they
- Owned a full month-end close on a real timeline
- Explain ASC 606 / deferred revenue cleanly
- Speak fluently in SaaS metrics (ARR, MRR, bookings)
- English B2+ and comfortable presenting numbers to leadership
Hard stop if they
- Only know IFRS or local GAAP, no US GAAP
- Can't distinguish bookings from revenue
- Have only done bookkeeping, never owned close or controls
- Uncomfortable presenting in English to a US founder
Block 60 minutes with the CFO or founder. Go deep on the cleanup-and-first-90-days scenario and revenue recognition — that's where a controller proves they can do the job, not just describe it
You're separating controllers who can stabilize and scale a finance function from accountants who can only maintain a tidy one. Push on the cleanup scenario and the rev-rec questions until you see how they actually reason. The best candidates think in systems and communicate in plain English.
Functional assessment (close & reporting exercise)
A realistic close-and-report task on a messy trial balance.
Skip the brain-teasers. This exercise replicates the controller's actual first month: take a messy book, close it correctly under US GAAP, find what's wrong, and produce reporting leadership can use. It reveals both technical accuracy and the translation skill that separates a great controller from a competent one.
The exercise: Send a deliberately messy trial balance and a few sample contracts (a mix of annual-prepaid and usage-based), plus a one-line prompt: "Prepare a clean month-end close summary and a one-page reporting package for the founder, and flag anything that looks wrong." Timebox: 3–4 hours. Allow them to state assumptions. This mirrors the actual first month on the job.
What you're really testing: Whether they catch the planted errors (a misclassified deferred revenue entry, a missing accrual, a contract recognized incorrectly), whether they apply ASC 606 correctly to the contracts, and whether the founder-facing summary is something a non-financial CEO could actually read and act on.
| Dimension | Strong (3) | Weak (1) |
|---|---|---|
| Accuracy & GAAP application | Catches the planted errors, applies ASC 606 correctly, reconciles cleanly. | Misses material errors, mishandles deferred revenue, or doesn't reconcile. |
| Diagnosis & prioritization | Flags risks, separates urgent from cosmetic, states assumptions clearly. | Accepts the data at face value or fixes trivia while missing the material issue. |
| Reporting & communication | One-pager is clear, founder-readable, leads with the metrics that matter. | Dense, jargon-heavy, or just a reformatted trial balance. |
| Judgment | Calls out what they'd need from the team and what they'd fix first. | No point of view; purely mechanical. |
30 minutes with the founder or CFO on trust, judgment, and integrity
The assessment proved technical accuracy. This round answers the question that matters most for a finance hire: can you trust this person with the numbers, the cash, and the hard conversations?
For a finance hire, references are non-negotiable. Verify trust, accuracy, and integrity directly
Ask for a former CFO, founder, or audit partner. The reference for a controller should confirm you can hand them the keys to the books.
- Did they own the close and the books, or support someone who did?
- How accurate were they — did errors surface after they signed off?
- Would you trust them with cash management and AP approvals unsupervised?
- How did they handle a difficult financial conversation with leadership?
- Would you hire them again, today? (Listen for the pause.)
- Confirm comp expectations early; controller comp varies widely by country and US-GAAP depth.
- Clarify scope: pure controller, or controller-plus-FP&A in a smaller company.
- Run references and verify certifications (CPA/ACCA) before the verbal.
- Sell the growth path: a scaling SaaS company offers a real route toward Head of Finance or CFO.
- Move fast — bilingual US-GAAP controllers are scarce and get multiple offers.
US GAAP and accuracy carry the most weight; this is a trust role where mistakes are expensive and communication to leadership is constant
Score independently, then reconcile. A controller who is impeccable on GAAP and integrity but merely good at communication clears the bar; the reverse does not.
| Dimension | Weight | What it measures |
|---|---|---|
| US GAAP & SaaS accounting depth | 35% | ASC 606, deferred revenue, close ownership, audit-readiness |
| Accuracy & internal controls | 20% | Reconciliation discipline, error prevention, trustworthy books |
| Reporting & financial communication | 20% | Translates numbers into decisions leadership can act on |
| Judgment & integrity | 15% | Backbone, tact, financial conscience of the company |
| English fluency (B2+) | 10% | Presents to a US founder and board with confidence |
| Total | 100% | Weighted hiring decision |
LATAM salary bands (annual USD, fully remote, paid in USD). Reflects what US SaaS companies pay LATAM finance leaders in 2026. US-GAAP fluency and SaaS experience push to the top of each band.
| Country | Junior | Mid | Senior |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colombia | $22k–$34k | $40k–$58k | $62k–$85k |
| Mexico | $24k–$36k | $42k–$60k | $64k–$88k |
| Argentina | $22k–$34k | $40k–$58k | $60k–$84k |
| Brazil | $24k–$38k | $44k–$62k | $66k–$90k |
| Costa Rica | $26k–$40k | $46k–$64k | $68k–$92k |
Reality check: A US SaaS controller runs $130k–$200k depending on stage and metro. A US-GAAP-fluent LATAM controller lands around 35–45% of that, often with stronger technical accounting depth per dollar because many trained in Big 4 audit. Costa Rica and Mexico trend slightly higher given the concentration of US-shared-services experience.
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