The following is an unedited abstract* from the CFO Thought Leader

The following is an unedited abstract* from the CFO Thought Leader podcast featuring Carrie
McIntyre, CFO of Interstate Hotels & Resorts, and Jack Sweeney, co-host of CFO Thought
Leader.
CFOTL: Can you share a story of a time in your finance journey when you had an ah-hah
moment, a moment of strategic insight that may have led you to change an approach or drive
change within the organization at large?
MCINTYRE: Definitely. We were a public company until 2010 and at this point I was
treasurer in the company and we were acquired by a joint venture that is owned 50% by a private
equity company based in the United States, Thayer Lodging and 50% by a Chinese hotel
company, Jin Jiang Hotels which is publicly traded on the Hong Kong exchange. So, there was
obviously a lot of learning curve with what they were looking for and how to report to them.
And at a certain point since they acquired us, we came to the realization probably mid-year that
what we were reporting to the Chinese company was something more of a cash-driven analysis
and income and what they were interpreting it to be was more of a gap analysis.
And so we realized through the process of discussing the results that what we were saying was
different than what they were interpreting that to be and so it gave us kind of mid-year which
was a point where you had time to affect change to get back in line with what they were looking
for. It was a realization of what their mindset is and what their culture is and what's important
for their organization as it goes up their chain to where they're traded. And so we had time at
that point to stop and say, "Okay, how do we need to look at our business? How do we need to
look at opportunities that we see that we've been looking at for more of again a cash, maybe
operating income-driven perspective and incorporate their perspective to make a decision that
works for all party. And so that was an interesting moment I have to say but it all came out great
and now we understand each other's perspective so that moves forward nicely.
CFOTL: In regards to becoming more global and how you're getting your finance team out into
the geographies, is it done through an acquisition, suddenly you have three extra geographies and
yes they have existing finance, executives already there, it's just a matter of bringing them
onboard with your approaches and best practices?
MCINTYRE: It's a little of both. We've been in Russia for 15 to 20 years so we've kind of
homegrown that branch. So, we have a branch office there and we've been there for a while so
we've been able to cultivate and hire and breathe kind of that branch office from in country. The
UK is another example where we acquired two companies in 2013. Both of those companies had
finance executives that were the head finance person of that individual company. So, we've
acquired some platforms but then as you grow and you transition, you enhance and change, et
cetera, but you have something to start with. Then we have other countries that are kind of
plugging in to those. So, we've got a couple hotels in Ireland and we've got a hotel in Hungary
and a couple in Belgium that we've managed from those brands, from either Russia or the UK
branch office. So, it's a little bit of a hybrid but once you're in the country and typically you start
with expertise in there, then you obviously rely on them and utilize them to enhance what you've
got.
CFOTL: Those executives, is it a dotted line to local management and back to you a straight
line?
MCINTYRE: So they have a straight line from a finance organization perspective. I have an
EVP of international finance hotels in the US and he oversees all of the branch office finance
people and they have a dotted line to the operations in-country which that was what I was
alluding to with the reorganization. We created this international finance executive person here
because we realized that we needed somebody who was kind of that middle of the wheel that
was understanding all of the disciplines here in the US and kind of our needs enabled to take
those and efficiently communicated out to the branch offices and then going in the other
direction too versus all of us kind of crossing over and hitting each individual person with
individual requests. It became very inefficient we realized. This finance person is the core to all
disciplines, as a central point to kind of challenge and communicate and drive what we need
back and forth the most efficient way.
CFOTL: Our final question, what is the one thing that's really exciting you about finance and
business right now?
MCINTYRE: There's a lot of capital out there right now. We're at a part of the cycle that there's
money from the lending perspective and there's money from an equity perspective that wants to
be put to use, so there's a lot of opportunities to grow the business and that's fun and exciting and
allows you to think strategically and look forward and kind of put it together, so that's what's
exciting to me.
CFOTL: Carrie McIntyre, thank you for being with us on CFO Thought Leader.
MCINTYRE: Thank you.
*Note: This unedited abstract may contain electronic transmission errors, resulting in inaccurate or
nonsensical word combinations, or untranslated symbols which cannot be deciphered by our
transcription process. This abstract may differ from an edited transcript of the same interview in content,
page and line numbers, punctuation and formatting.