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Adaptive Insights

FP&A Done Right: How to Improve Cross-team Collaboration

May 3, 2019 by Revelwood Leave a Comment

FP&A Done Right

This is a guest blog post from our partner Adaptive Insights.

When it comes to business, collaboration is vital. After all, no single department can do its job for long without the other departments pulling their own weight. Sales is no good if shipping can’t deliver; marketing falls flat if customer service keeps alienating users; everything grinds to a halt if human resources doesn’t provide the appropriate staffing.

But for some reason, when it comes to the numbers, it can feel like every department is on its own. Data is often stuck in silos, making it difficult or even impossible for other departments to get the information they need to do their jobs well.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the department that makes numbers its business: finance.

Collaboration can be a struggle

According to an Adaptive Insights CFO survey, nearly 50% of CFOs cited the inability to align with other departments on key metrics as a top issue, while 70% said improving collaboration with other parts of the business was a top priority for the upcoming year.

What makes collaboration with others such a struggle for the finance team? According to the report, 79% said lack of time was one of their most challenging collaboration issues, while 55% cited lack of clarity about who has decision-making authority when collaborators disagree.

It’s no wonder teams struggle to achieve collaborative finance; they don’t have the necessary time, direction, or clarity around KPIs to build the cross-functional relationships required to improve forecasting and reporting. So what should be a team effort becomes a finance exercise, and when numbers change, it becomes finance’s fault. In the end, we lose credibility as a business partner.

Make your data everyone’s data

So how do you get other departments to collaborate with finance? Start by empowering your business partners with more ownership and accountability in the data and your process. For example, many businesses still do most of their forecasting and planning with spreadsheets. Not only is this wildly inefficient (not to mention more likely to include errors), but it keeps all the information bottled up on one person’s screen until they’re ready to share. We all have seen an Excel spreadsheet named finalV2 or Final V3, only to find out our business partners are using FinalV6. This is a leading cause of number mismatch. Using modern finance tools, a finance team can collect and report on the numbers without needing to send and receive Excel spreadsheets. Everyone is on the same version and making the changes together. This just makes the business partners a part of the overall process, not part of the problem.

The more you can modernize your process and increase visibility into KPIs across the company, the more others will think of “our numbers” instead of “finance’s numbers.” When you create a single source of truth and share it, collaborators will be able to move past arguing about the numbers and start working together to decide on next steps.

A strategic bonus to collaborative finance

As a bonus, automation and dashboards for self-service collaborative reporting can vastly reduce the amount of transactional work the finance team has to accomplish each day. This frees up our time for both increased collaboration and providing the strategic, high-level analysis that helps move the company forward.

This blog was originally published by Adaptive Insights.

Home » Adaptive Insights » Page 6

Filed Under: FP&A Done Right Tagged With: Adaptive Insights, Financial Performance Management

Can You Recover From Static Planning by 2020?

March 19, 2019 by Revelwood Leave a Comment

FP&A Done Right

This is a guest blog post from Rob Hull, founder, Adaptive Insights.

Scramble like hell to pull together a budget. Execute against that budget regardless of changes in the business. Repeat the budget scramble in 12 months.

If your corporate planning process still looks like this, then you’re likely stuck in static planning. By that I mean a planning, reporting, and analytics process that’s siloed, largely manual, almost always built around spreadsheets, and constrained by limited insights into the operations of the business.

Static planning may appear to have served you well for years; in fact, for decades it was the standard way for all businesses to plan. It worked, until it didn’t.

In the past few years, the world has gotten smaller, faster, and more data driven. And whether they know it or not, organizations that plan poorly are operating on borrowed time. That’s because the requirements for effective financial and operational planning, reporting, and analytics have risen sharply and suddenly, spurred by compounding changes that threaten to overwhelm businesses that can’t operationalize new strategies to navigate them. These changes include spiraling operational complexity, growing amounts of inscrutable data, disruptive new digital-native competitors, and ever-growing customer expectations.

Navigating constant change

Any one of these changes would prove challenging. All of them together require a significant leap for any business.

Take data growth. As my colleague Tom Bogan noted recently, 90% of all the world’s data didn’t even exist two years ago. So within two years—close to the end of 2020—your business will likely be trying to manage and make sense of twice the volume of data you’re working with today.

Static planning is a poor fit for this new age of data proliferation. Businesses that base their decisions on instinct, rather than data-driven insights, tend to be less agile. They respond sluggishly to changes in the business or market—if they respond at all. Compare that to data-driven businesses, which on average grow a healthy 30% annually. Very few businesses that rely on static planning will successfully navigate our rapidly changing business world. You can’t chart your way forward through constant, rapid change by being slow, rigid, and myopic in your decision-making process.

The good news is you can recover from your static planning environment before it’s too late—before your competitors outpace you or before events overtake you. You can be one of the nimble, data-driven businesses that are the leaders of tomorrow.

The answer is active planning

Active planning is different from static planning in three key ways.

  1. It’s collaborative. It allows everybody in the business to plan and escalates critical decisions to the right people while giving them the information and insight they need to make the right choice.
  2. It’s continuous. Instead of a painful annual planning process that quickly grows stale, active planning is ongoing and infused by a constant stream of trusted, always-current data.
  3. It’s comprehensive. Active planning enables a holistic view of the business, connecting together finance, sales, workforce, and other operational planning, reporting, and analytics and integrating them with ERP, HCM, CRM, and other operational data stores.

Organizations that implement active planning processes are four times more likely to be able to respond to a market change than those still stuck with static planning. That’s a decent definition of agility if ever I’ve heard one.

Active planning by 2020? Start now

If this sounds too good to be true, be assured there are thousands of companies that have abandoned static planning and embarked on their own journey to active planning. They’ve done it by replacing spreadsheets and rigid legacy planning platforms with cloud-based planning solutions built to handle large and varied volumes of frequently changing data, yet are accessible and easy to use by a wide range of business users. And, since they know that their organization and the demands on it will only grow in the future, they’ve chosen technology that scales quickly and painlessly across different systems, locations, and environments. Operating a business is growing more complex, so planning should accommodate that complexity while still being simple enough for virtually anyone to do.

With an active planning environment, you’ll find it far easier to model what-if scenarios so you’ll be ready to course-correct when change happens. You’ll be able to determine your optimal workforce mix while setting sales quotas and drawing territories that keep account reps motivated and productive. And you’ll be able to lower the risks associated with your business decisions because forecasts are based not just on historical trends, but also on real-world, even real-time data and the input of managers closest to each part of your business.

Modern business planning is now a strategic advantage, and in today’s business environment, you need all the advantages you can find. So it follows that outdated modes of planning amount to a competitive disadvantage. Every day you spend mired in static planning is another day you’re allowing your competitors to move ahead, extending the gap between where you are and where the future demands you must go.

2020 will be here before you know it. The 4,000-plus organizations we’ve worked with to adopt active planning will be far more prepared to succeed in a world of constant change. Will you?

 

Home » Adaptive Insights » Page 6

Filed Under: News & Events Tagged With: Adaptive Insights, Analytics, Budgeting, Budgeting Planning & Forecasting, Financial Performance Management, FP&A, Plan to Win, Planning & Forecasting, Planning & Reporting

Revelwood Named Adaptive Insights Partner Rising Star of the Year

February 14, 2019 by Brian Combs Leave a Comment

Awards & Recognition

Last week Revelwood was named Adaptive Insights Partner Rising Star of the Year at Adaptive’s Annual Partner Rally, which took place in Pleasanton, California. When presenting the award, Adaptive cited Revelwood’s determination, passion, thought leadership and overall knowledge and success in the space.

This is a tremendous honor for us as we officially began our partnership with Adaptive Insights last fall. Since then, we have been included in a number of Adaptive events. As part of these events, I’ve had the opportunity to speak to Adaptive clients and prospects about how the Office of Finance can be a value-add to the overall organization, and how FP&A encompasses people, process, and technology. Companies cannot simply think about an FP&A solution as just technology. The most successful FP&A solutions factor in the overall business, business goals, and long-term vision and plans – not just selecting and implementing a technology.

Revelwood CEO Ken Wolf receiving the award

Revelwood CEO, Ken Wolf, receives Adaptive Insights Partner Rising Star of the Year award from the Adaptive executive team. From left to right: Tom Bogan, Mary-Beth Yantz, Ken Wolf, Fred Gewant, Mel Zeledon.

“We’re very proud to have received the Adaptive Insights Partner Rising Star of the Year award for 2019. It is a testament to our deep commitment to our partnership with Adaptive and the value we can offer their customers and prospects,” said Ken Wolf, CEO, Revelwood. “Adaptive believes that our thought leadership and deep understanding of FP&A, coupled with our experience in implementing large-scale FP&A projects, puts us in an excellent position to partner with them as they scale to the enterprise marketplace.”

We’ve invested significantly in our partnership with Adaptive. We’re able to leverage our more than 20 years of experience designing, building and implementing FP&A solutions to the work we are doing with clients using Adaptive.

Additionally, on a personal note, I was very impressed with how Adaptive is building out its partner ecosystem. There is a shared understanding that FPM in the cloud is a very large opportunity for all of us. They have done a great job at eliminating the “channel conflicts” often seen with other software vendors.

Adaptive has made it very clear they are focused on the end user and delivering new, meaningful functionality. That focus aligns nicely with Revelwood and we bring our unique expertise into all client conversations. In some cases, we’ll even push back a bit to ensure that you are building a solution that is scalable and capable of flexing as your business changes in the future.  All in the name of partnering to deliver the best complete FP&A solutions – people, process and technology.

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Filed Under: Awards & Recognition Tagged With: Adaptive Insights, Analytics, Budgeting, Budgeting Planning & Forecasting, Financial Performance Management, Planning & Forecasting

BPM Partners Vendor Landscape Matrix for Financial, Strategic, and Operational Business Performance Management

October 24, 2018 by Lisa Minneci Leave a Comment

News & Events

Each year BPM Partners releases its Business Performance Management (BPM) vendor landscape report. According to the firm, the purpose of the report is to “provide a point-in-time snapshot of all the core players, their status in the market, and the focus of their offerings.” This year’s report found “cloud momentum picked up with the vast majority of vendors seeing their cloud version account for the bulk of their sales.” The report also states that the “focus on the customer has not let up with vendors making their products easier to use, ramping up support, and constantly measuring customer satisfaction.”

Two of our partners, Adaptive Insights and IBM, were among the 18 vendors covered this year. The other vendors were: Anaplan, Axiom Software, BOARD International, CCH Tagetik, Centage, deFacto Global, Host Analytics, Jedox, Longview, OneStream Software, Oracle, prevero, Prophix, SAP, Vena Solutions, and XLerant.

Highlights on IBM from the BPM Partners Vendor Landscape Matrix

IBM is one of six companies in the Upper Midmarket/Large/Enterprise Vendors category. The IBM products included in this assessment include: Planning Analytics, Sales Performance Management, Watson Analytics, Cognos Analytics, SPSS and more. BPM Partners concluded that IBM’s products in the space are a best fit for cloud-first implementations; its Excel user interface; applications beyond finance; powerful modelling; sales planning; BI and data visualization; full mobile access; collaboration; consolidation; scalability and complexity handling; and that it is next generation-ready.

Highlights on Adaptive Insights from the BPM Partners Vendor Landscape Matrix

Adaptive Insights is one of nine companies in the Midmarket/Large/Enterprise Vendors category. The firm assessment included Adaptive Insights for Finance, Adaptive Insights for Sales, and the company’s Elastic Hypercube™ Technology. BPM Partners found that Adaptive Insights products are a best fit for cloud-first implementations; ease of use; its Excel user interface; BI, analytics and data visualization; powerful modelling; full mobile access; collaboration; sales planning; applications beyond finance; scalability and complexity handling; and that it is next generation ready. It has a strong presence in some vertical markets, including non-profits and professional services, among others.

Download your copy of BPM Partners Vendor Landscape Matrix to get a full look at how these 18 vendors match up to each other.

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Filed Under: News & Events Tagged With: Adaptive Insights, Analytics, Budgeting Planning & Forecasting, Financial Performance Management, IBM Planning Analytics, Planning & Reporting, TM1

New Report Details Finance’s Adoption of Automation

October 19, 2018 by Lisa Minneci Leave a Comment

News & Events

CFOs in companies of all sizes are assessing how, when and where they should automate their finance functions and processes. One of our partners, Adaptive Insights, recently surveyed 160 CFOs across the globe for its most recent CFO Indicator Report, Full Steam Ahead: Finance on Board with Automation. Among other things, the survey found that 40% of them consider the biggest driver behind automation is the demand for faster, higher quality insights from executives and operational stakeholders.

The report explains and details these findings:

  • CFOs are not only moving full speed ahead with automation, but also see automation as critical to putting themselves and their teams on track to becoming more strategic and agile.
  • CFOs view automation as a requirement to address the rising volume and complexity of data, while delivering the insights and agility needed to seamlessly guide the business through an often-volatile economic climate.
  • CFOs believe that leveraging new financial systems and software – combined with better collaboration across the business – will most impact their teams’ effectiveness.

The report brings to light some interesting statistics about where most CFOs and finance teams are in their journey to automate finance tasks. For example:

  • 41% of CFOs say that their financial reporting process is either mostly or fully automated
  • 35% state that their period-end variance reporting (budget vs. actual) is automated
  • 25% have automated allocations
  • 22% of CFOs report that they have automated workflow
  • And 21% say they have automated account reconciliations
Download Adaptive Insight's CFO Indicator Report: Full Steam Ahead: Finance On Board with Automation

Download Adaptive Insight’s CFO Indicator Q4 2017 report, Full Steam Ahead: Finance On Board With Automation to learn the key drivers behind the movement to automate FP&A, what skills CFOs are looking for in new hires, and more.

Home » Adaptive Insights » Page 6

Filed Under: News & Events Tagged With: Adaptive Insights, Analytics, Budgeting Planning & Forecasting, Financial Performance Management

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