This is a guest blog post from our partner Workday Adaptive Planning, explaining why xP&A is the future of planning.
With its promise of extending FP&A principles beyond finance and into other areas of the business, xP&A (extended planning and analysis) is the future of enterprise planning.
But don’t take our word for it.
In Gartner’s 2020 Strategic Roadmap for Cloud Financial Planning and Analysis Solutions report, the analyst firm proclaimed “By 2024, 70% of new financial planning and analysis projects will become extended planning and analysis (xP&A) projects, extending their scope beyond the finance domain into other areas of enterprise planning and analysis.”
We agree. In today’s market, planning and analysis is no longer just about financial planning. It’s about creating true enterprise-wide impact, by bringing continuous, comprehensive, and collaborative planning to every part of an enterprise has not only arrived, it’s ascendant.
Of course, it’s not always easy to engage other departments in the planning process. Don’t fret. Here are five tips to spark cross-functional, companywide engagement for a future-proof planning process.
1. Define Your Strategy
In an often-cited Harvard Business Review article, “The Big Lie of Strategic Planning,” well-known business strategist Roger Martin argues that putting the words “strategic” and “plan” together only leads to both being ineffective. Rather, he says strategy should focus solely on how to most effectively generate revenue or achieve the company’s highest priorities. Once a clear strategy is established, then the annual financial planning process takes on the now-relevant role of assessing the costs and resources required to best achieve those goals.
Not only does this approach provide more clarity, but it also ultimately aligns budgeting and planning with the revenue-generating or high-priority goals of the organization. Finance can take a step toward this culture shift by playing a leadership role in encouraging development of a coherent strategy so financial planning becomes more relevant and connected to top priorities. This sets up finance for more productive conversations with business leaders as functional plans align to the corporate strategy.
2. Take a Rolling Approach
Why put time and effort into an “annual plan” that will largely be outdated and irrelevant by the end of the first quarter? That’s the thinking of many business line leaders. The reality is that the pace of change today is such that locking in a plan for an entire year often only assures cynicism from those enlisted to help create it.
There is a better way. Rolling forecasts occur on a regular cadence instead of being once-a-year exercises. Unlike budgets bogged down with hundreds of line items, rolling budgets focus on key business drivers. Rolling forecasts are forward-looking and can act as an early warning system when you’ve drifted off course, so you can quickly adjust the levers that drive performance.
3. Increase Transparency and Visibility
If you only reach out to business leaders in November each year and they don’t hear from you again, it’s little wonder that they become skeptical and cynical about the process. Successful financial planning requires engagement throughout the year, and an essential way to encourage that is by providing greater real-time visibility into analytics, trends, and results.
Finance can leverage new technology solutions that offer a dynamic 360-degree of the business and feature dashboards that can provide a full spectrum of customized data and insights in real time. When the tired, dust-collecting budget in a binder transforms into a dynamic electronic window into the organization, your business partners are bound to become more engaged in the process in a meaningful and ongoing way.
4. Go Beyond the Usual Suspects
Once a more dynamic rolling plan emerges, there is significant opportunity to dig deeper into the organization to more clearly identify key drivers of results and revenues—as well as issues and programs that are elevating costs. A key way to deepen engagement and get more relevant data and insights is to tap the knowledge and expertise of those who are closer to the front lines of the business or operation. Work with business leaders to identify the people on their teams who have hands-on insight into the challenges and opportunities they deal with every day.
5. Communicate Early and Often
As with just about any major business initiative, communication is the key to driving long-term engagement and results. Adopt an approach that ensures communication touch points throughout the year to encourage input and refine processes and workflows. As engagement deepens, more on-the-fly communications and connections should emerge. By evolving your process from a dreaded once-a-year event to an ongoing conversation about the business and how to get the best results, you will build relationships and trust that assure a more relevant plan emerges.
No doubt, these changes won’t happen overnight. Yet by systematically developing a new, more dynamic, and flexible approach to annual planning, you will get deeper engagement, more timely information and insights, and better results.
This blog post was originally published on the Workday Adaptive Planning blog.