• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Revelwood Logo

Revelwood

Your SUPER-powered WP Engine Site

  • Who We Are
    • About Us
      • Our Company
      • Our Team
      • Partners
    • Careers
      • Join Our Team
  • What We Do
    • Solutions
      • Workday Adaptive Planning
      • IBM Planning Analytics
      • BlackLine
    • Services
      • Implementation Services
      • Customer Care
        • Help Desk
        • System Administration as a Service
      • Training
        • Workday Adaptive Planning Training
        • IBM Planning Analytics / TM1 Training
    • Products
      • DataMaestro
      • LightSpeed
      • IBM Planning Analytics Utilities
  • How We Help
    • Use Cases
    • Client Success Stories
  • How We Think
    • Knowledge Center
    • Events
    • News
  • Contact Us

FP&A Done Right

FP&A Done Right: Financial Modeling – Your Superpower

 

FP&A Done Right

March 6, 2020

By Revelwood

This is a guest blog post from our partner Workday Adaptive Planning, written by Gary Cokins. Cokins explains financial modeling.  

Financial modeling is like a superpower—one that lets you test your assumptions and hypotheses across dimensions, versions, and time before executing budgets and plans. A well-formulated model lets you run unlimited scenarios across any program, department, or business unit, according to your fiscal calendar or other business milestones. In other words, dynamic financial models show you the probable results of pulling various levers (e.g., adding headcount, reducing production time, expanding sales territories) to see likely outcomes.

Not exactly X-ray vision, but close.

Yet if financial modeling is a superpower, outdated tools and manual processes that limit the number and types of scenarios you can run are kryptonite.

Let’s take a look at how to generate flexible and robust financial models powerful enough to drive strategic decisions and help your business leap over the competition in a single bound.

Manual processes undermine your models

Ideally, financial models should be robust and flexible enough to accommodate current circumstances and multiple queries. If your team is bogged down aggregating data from multiple sources and making sure spreadsheets are accurate, modeling takes a back seat to fixing errors and broken formulas.

According to an Adaptive Insights CFO Indicator Report, 71% of finance teams manage data from at least three sources. When data is aggregated manually from multiple sources and managed in spreadsheets, it’s often laborious, error-prone, and inaccurate.

Financial modeling that works in today’s fast-paced business models should automate these processes and free your time to test your hypotheses.

Properties of robust models

Robust models should let you model everything, everywhere—expenses, capital, headcount, revenue, projects, grants, quotas, and territories—across any department, entity, or function.

Your financial model is an opportunity to check in with stakeholders, gather information about priorities and plans, and create a set of assumptions that improve decision-making throughout your organization. Done well, financial models teach you and the people in your organization something: a new way of doing business, in-depth information about the competitive landscape, or the factors that might support or detract from corporate objectives and KPIs.

Robust and effective financial models should accomplish the following:

  • Establish a single source of truth

A single source of data truth that is accessible, relevant, and flexible enough to respond to emerging market conditions ensures that there’s a united front and full alignment behind the same objectives. When everyone agrees on the validity and accuracy of the data, there is less bickering over the numbers and more collaboration between business units.

  • Build confidence in the numbers

If everyone is fighting about the validity of data sources, the process will be caught up in arguments instead of strategic decision-making. From extensive cost allocations, multiple budget versions, and a variety of organizational structures, your financial models and analytics should build confidence in the numbers and the models.

  • Automate calculations

Outdated tools and manual processes take too much time to generate insights. By automating planning, budgeting, and forecasting tasks, your team will have more time to run unlimited what-if scenarios and answer multidimensional queries in real time.

  • Enable collaboration

Everyone in your organization is modeling—whether they know it or not. By making financial data modeling tools broadly available to business units and ensuring that tools are user-friendly, you’ll allow everyone to weigh in—on assumptions about headcount, product releases, and more. After all, true collaboration results in better financial models.

Modern modeling requires modern tools

Modern businesses require modern financial modeling and analysis capabilities that enable on-the-fly queries and limitless what-if scenarios and testing. Proliferating data, outdated tools, and a rapidly changing market make continuing with the same-old, same-old a strategic mistake.

The solution? An intelligent, scalable, and comprehensive cloud-based planning platform that gives you the power you need to support the sophisticated and robust financial planning, modeling, and analytics modern businesses require.

Gary Cokins is an internationally recognized expert, speaker, and author in enterprise and corporate performance management (EPM/CPM) systems. He is the founder of Analytics-Based Performance Management LLC. Gary can be reached at gcokins@garycokins.com

This blog post was originally published on the Workday Adaptive Planning blog.

Author

  • Revelwood

    View all posts
    • Categories

      • Accounting and Accounts Receivable
      • Awards & Recognition
      • Data Analytics in Finance
      • Financial Close & Consolidation
      • FP&A Done Right
      • IBM Planning Analytics Tips & Tricks
      • News & Events
      • Success Stories
      • Tech Bulletins
      • Workday Adaptive Planning Insights
      • Workday Adaptive Planning Tips & Tricks

    Popular Posts

    Authors

    Adam Riskin
    Adam Riskin
    Brian Colucci
    Brian Colucci
    Brian Combs
    Brian Combs
    Cameron Burke
    Cameron Burke
    Dave Miersch
    Dave Miersch
    Ivan Cepero
    Ivan Cepero
    John Pra Sisto
    John Pra Sisto
    Jonathan Dunn
    Jonathan Dunn
    Ken Wolf
    Ken Wolf
    Lee Lazarow
    Lee Lazarow
    Lisa Minneci
    Lisa Minneci
    Luke Griffie
    Luke Griffie
    Marc Assenza
    Marc Assenza
    Mary Luchs
    Mary Luchs
    Michael Mari
    Michael Mari
    Michelle Song
    Michelle Song
    Revelwood
    Revelwood
    Robert Nordhagen
    Robert Nordhagen
    Simon Foley
    Simon Foley
    Thomas McDade
    Thomas McDade

    Sign up for our newsletter

    Connect

Footer

Revelwood Overview

Revelwood helps finance organizations close, consolidate, plan, monitor and analyze business performance. As experts in solutions for the Office of Finance, we partner with best-in-breed software companies by applying best practices guidance and our pre-configured applications to help businesses achieve their full potential.

EXPERTISE

  • Workday Adaptive Planning
  • IBM Planning Analytics
  • BlackLine

ABOUT

  • Who We Are
  • What We Do
  • How We Help
  • How We Think
  • Privacy

CONNECT

World Headquarters

Florham Park, NJ | 201 984 3030

European Headquarters

London & Edinburgh | +44 (0)131 240 3866

Latin America Office

Miami, FL | 201 987 4198

Email
info@revelwood.com

Copyright © 2025 · Revelwood Inc. All rights reserved. Revelwood® and the Revelwood logo are registered marks of Revelwood Inc.