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Workday

Fueling Business Agility with Continuous Planning

March 3, 2023 by Revelwood

FP&A Done Right: Finance’s Role in ESG Reporting

This is a guest blog post from our partner Workday Adaptive Planning. The author, Bob Hansen, explaining how continuous planning enables business agility. 

Each finance leader knows the routine. Every year, as budgeting season approaches, the rest of the business turns to finance in order to make sense of the last 12 months and prepare for the next 12.

First, you look backward, to assess the progress toward last year’s stated objectives. You work with manually aggregated data and consolidated spreadsheets (both often error-prone) to discover results and generate reports. You analyze targets, performance, and spending to provide the business with an accurate reflection of its financial position.

And then you look forward, using that information to plan next year’s objectives. You think about future goals and enshrine them in a firm financial strategy. You make choices, assess trade-offs, and accept sacrifices. You settle on a new top-line target and divide it into contributions between different functional teams.

Then—after spending weeks or months laboring over the annual plan—by the time it’s finished, the market has changed dramatically and its assumptions are out of date.

Case in point: The disruption caused by COVID-19. Or even more recently, an economy with surprising, seemingly contradictory indicators. But there’s a better way: continuous planning.

Looking Ahead

Continuous planning gives financial planning and analysis (FP&A) organizations a real-time view of the business. When decision-makers have the ability to understand what’s happening with the business now, they can accurately model what is likely to happen in the future. Unlike outdated, static planning, continuous planning enables agility with plans that are always current, insight with easily created and iterated what-if scenarios.

Instead of being once-a-year exercises, rolling forecasts happen on a regular cadence. Unlike budgets that may have hundreds of line items, rolling forecasts address key business drivers. And rather than focusing on the past, rolling forecasts act as early warning systems when you’ve drifted off course; they help to raise visibility beyond the traditional budgeting “wall.” By continually updating your forecast with actuals, you’ll be able to quickly adjust the levers that drive performance.

Here’s a three-step plan to help you design more useful rolling forecasts:

1. Choose the right forecasting horizon.

A rolling forecast is aligned to business cycles, rather than the fiscal year. To really help senior management look at the future and proactively handle it, a best practice is to forecast at least four to eight quarters past the current quarter’s actuals. However, there’s no hard-and-fast guideline for the time interval included in a rolling forecast. It all depends on your industry, your business needs, and how long it takes to make decisions about operations, capacity, and spending. 

2. Model your course on drivers not details.

Yes, your annual budget lists thousands of line items, but you need to perform rolling forecasts at a much higher level, or you’ll get bogged down in minutiae and your forecast will become a recompilation of budgets. Rolling forecasts based on key business drivers, rather than masses of detail, also become a “light-touch” process and therefore less onerous for everyone involved. Managers may mutiny if they think that rolling forecasts will require the work of a full budget, but they’ll be much more engaged if they know they can zero in on the few key variables that matter.

3. Sound out multiple what-if scenarios.

The beauty of rolling forecasts is they allow you to model what-if scenarios to ensure your business keeps pace with change and is aligned to your corporate plan. By modifying a few key assumptions and drivers, you can see their effect on the overall plan, such as the impact a price change has on headcounts and cash. For example, with what-if analyses, managers can perform studies that translate contemplated changes in product mix, processes, order parameters, and customer service into the implications for changes in resource supply and spending.

Executing Against Your Scenarios

Executing against your what-if analyses and scenario plans shouldn’t only happen once a year as part of a static annual budget and planning process. A changing marketplace calls for active, continuous planning and monitoring that gives decision-makers the real-time information they need to course-correct as needed. The ability to create scenario plans to assess potential outcomes (best case, worst case, most likely case) is extremely valuable when variables are constantly changing around and within your business.

At a minimum, this means continuously monitoring actuals so you can keep an eye on organizational financial health. It also means keeping track of your leading analytics indicators (e.g., pipeline, customer lifetime value, attrition), so you can identify trends and patterns and recommend course corrections when needed.

To execute against your scenario plans, you need to have access to easy-to-use, flexible, and robust reporting that captures all of the above, and does so on a continuous basis. And when the gathering, reconciliation, and distribution of your reports is automated, you’ll be able to transform reporting processes from a monthly rote exercise to a dynamic, ongoing driver of organizational change.

With a continuous view of the business, everyone in the company will be empowered to plan and see the results of the implementation and the execution of those plans.This blog post was originally published on the Workday Adaptive Planning blog.

More from Workday Adaptive Planning:

FP&A Done Right: ESG – An Imperative for Growth

FP&A Done Right: Forecasting Revenue for Services-Based Businesses: A Growth Factor

FP&A Done Right: The Changing Role of the CFO

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: FP&A Done Right Tagged With: Budgeting Planning & Forecasting, Financial Performance Management, Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

Rogers & Brown Transforms Finance with Workday Adaptive Planning

March 1, 2023 by Revelwood

Success Stories

How do you evolve from Microsoft Excel-based budgeting and planning, while creating a new FP&A department and reacting to significant changes in the industry? With Workday Adaptive Planning with OfficeConnect.

Rogers & Brown, founded in 1968, is a family-owned business created to fill a service void in the logistics industry. Today the company consists of three entities, with 130 employees, providing a full range of transportation and supply chain services. The company’s mission is to provide the most efficient, reliable, personalized supply chain solutions and information to customers, allowing them to focus on further development and growth of their core business. 

As Rogers & Brown evolved, they realized their existing approach to forecasting would not suffice for a more complex organization. The organization opted to create an FP&A department rather than using its existing Excel and “gut feel” approach to managing the company.

Rogers & Brown worked with Revelwood to set up the new FP&A department, its processes and its approach to budgeting, planning and forecasting. “One of the great things in working with Revelwood was their interest in transferring knowledge,” said Capers Barr, FP&A manager and general counsel, Rogers & Brown. “It’s one thing to have a consultant fix the stuff you need fixed. It’s another thing to have your consultant partner teach you what to do to fix your issues.”

After the initial phase of setting up the budgeting data and processes, Revelwood worked with Rogers & Brown to refine and tweak the process and reporting. 

“I can’t imagine where we would be today without Workday Adaptive Planning and an FP&A team,” added Barr. “We’ve had so much transformation in a short time. Adaptive Planning has made us proactive, rather than reactive. We’re very excited for the future things we can achieve with Adaptive Planning and Revelwood.”

Interested in learning the full story? Read the success story to learn how Rogers & Brown benefits from Workday Adaptive Planning.

Read more blog posts on Workday Adaptive Planning:

Workday Adaptive Planning Tips & Tricks: How to Create a Dimension

Workday Adaptive Planning Tips & Tricks: Reusable Reports

Workday Adaptive Planning Tips & Tricks: Crosstabs – The Significance of and How to Build

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: Success Stories Tagged With: Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

Apex Entertainment Performs Enterprise Planning with Workday Adaptive Planning

February 9, 2023 by Revelwood

Success Stories

How do you move away from spreadsheet-based budgeting, forecasting and reporting for more insight into the operations of the business? With Workday Adaptive Planning.  

Apex Entertainment, headquartered in Marlborough, MA, operates four family entertainment centers in the northeast U.S., including Virginia Beach, Syracuse, Albany and Marlborough. Apex offers attractions that are fun for all ages, with activities such as Indoor Go Karts, Bowling, Laser Tag, Escape Rooms, Ropes Courses, Arcade and Redemption, Sports Simulators, Axe Throwing, Mini Gold, Bumper Cars, Virtual Reality and state-of-the-art event meeting space. Each location offers a full-service dining experience in The Pit Stop Tavern, with a menu that includes 80 gluten-free options as well as vegetarian options. 

“Relying on Microsoft Excel to manage our financial processes handicapped us more than helped us,” said Marcus Kemblowski, COO, Apex Entertainment. “We needed a solution that gave us insight into how to fix problems and would enable us to manage our business in real-time.” 

Apex Entertainment selected Workday Adaptive Planning and Revelwood. The goal of the implementation was to easily see how the business is doing, down to the location and the attraction. Now, with Workday Adaptive Planning, Apex Entertainment has the information available to make strategic decisions. The team can analyze and assess potential expenses regarding forecasted revenue by activity. 

“From the get-go, Revelwood clearly understood our business. They immediately knew what we were discussing and hot to get us to where we needed to go,” added Kemblowski.

Apex Entertainment is not done with its plans for Workday Adaptive Planning. “Workday Adaptive Planning can help us to get where we want to go,” commented Kemblowski. “We now can easily perform top-line to bottom-line budgeting and forecasting. The insights generated by the application are invaluable to the company’s growth.  

Interested in learning the full story? Read the success story to learn how Apex Entertainment benefits from Workday Adaptive Planning.

Read more blog posts on Workday Adaptive Planning:

FP&A Done Right: ESG – An Imperative for Growth

FP&A Done Right: Forecasting Revenue for Services-Based Businesses: A Growth Factor

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: Success Stories Tagged With: Adaptive Planning, Planning & Forecasting, Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

Invaio Sciences Sows the Seeds of FP&A Transformation with Workday Adaptive Planning

January 25, 2023 by Revelwood

Success Stories

How do you reduce errors and increase accuracy in financial planning, forecasting and reporting? With Workday Adaptive Planning. 

Invaio Sciences, Inc., a Flagship Pioneering company, is headquartered in Cambridge, MA. Invaio is striving to accelerate the leap to a more nature-positive era for agriculture by solving performance and delivery challenges of traditional chemical and biological crop protection.

Until recently, Invaio was using Microsoft Excel for its budgeting, planning, forecasting and reporting needs. The manual nature of Excel – and the human error that comes with it – became too much of a burden for the company. 

Invaio is a privately held company that relies on private investments and debt financing until it becomes cash positive. The finance team needs to provide senior management with updated and accurate numbers to help management determine when the company needs to raise more money. 

Invaio selected Workday Adaptive Planning with Revelwood as its implementation partner. “A personal connection referred Revelwood to us,” said Ryan Garceau, head of operations & finance at Invaio. “As soon as we met the Revelwood team there was an instant rapport. We’ve since developed a great relationship between the Invaio finance team and the Revelwood team members. The Revelwood team was committed to making this project a big success.”

With its new Workday Adaptive Planning solution, Invaio now has a new approach to managing foreign transactions and financial reporting. “The way we do financial planning, forecasting and reporting are like night and day,” added Garceau. “We’ve gained efficiencies across the board, and we’ve changed the finance team’s value proposition. Our activities are no longer about building the reports, they are about analyzing the data.”

Interested in learning the full story? Read the success story to learn how Invaio benefits from Workday Adaptive Planning.

Read more blog posts on Workday Adaptive Planning:

FP&A Done Right: The Changing Role of the CFO

FP&A Done Right: Financial Forecasting Processes that Guide Business Strategy

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: Success Stories Tagged With: Adaptive Insights, Adaptive Planning, Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

Texans Credit Union Adapts to Market Fluctuations with Workday Adaptive Planning

January 11, 2023 by Revelwood

Success Stories

How do you provide budgeting and forecasting answers on-the-fly in real-time with spreadsheets? You don’t. This is why Texans Credit Union switched from spreadsheets to Workday Adaptive Planning for streamlined and more efficient budgeting, forecasting and reporting.

Texans Credit Union, founded in 1953 by 11 Texas Instruments employees, now serves over 117,000 members. Its mission is to improve the well-being of all Texans. The organization is a full-service, not-for-profit institution with members throughout the Dallas Fort Worth area.

“A budget built on a series of spreadsheets was not appropriate for a business of our size and complexity,” said Ben Hart, CFO, Texans Credit Union. “Our biggest challenge was that we couldn’t easily pivot and change things on-the-fly.”

Texans Credit Union partnered with Revelwood to build a Workday Adaptive Planning-based budgeting and planning model that included personnel, CapEx and revenue. The data flows into a dashboard for easy visualization. 

The budgeting and planning model enables Texans to see actuals at a department level and branch level. “Adaptive is a very intuitive and flexible solution,” stated Hart. “Revelwood was very creative in how they implemented Adaptive for Texans. We had weekly meetings with Revelwood where they would share their knowledge and even go through technical details with us.”

Interested in learning the full story? Read the success story to learn how Texans benefits from Workday Adaptive Planning.

Read more blog posts on Workday Adaptive Planning:

FP&A Done Right: Forecasting Revenue for Services-Based Businesses: A Growth Factor

FP&A Done Right: ESG – An Imperative for Growth

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: Success Stories Tagged With: Adaptive Insights, Adaptive Planning, Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

FP&A Done Right: ESG – An Imperative for Growth

November 18, 2022 by Revelwood

FP&A Done Right

As part of our series on ESG reporting, we are featuring guest blog posts from our partners. This post from Workday Adaptive Planning highlights thoughts from finance leaders on ESG and more.

How can companies “walk the talk” to create value for society and improve business outcomes by investing in environmental, social, and governance (ESG) efforts? Barbara Larson, a finance leader at Workday, joined McKinsey & Company partner Giulia Siccardo and Ann Dennison, executive vice president and CFO at Nasdaq, to discuss this topic and more at Conversations for a Changing World.

Almost 9 in 10 (87%) people believe a company should create value for society, not only its shareholders. But only half think that companies actually place people over profit, said Giulia Siccardo, partner and environmental, social, and governance (ESG) expert at McKinsey & Company. Siccardo added there’s much at stake in closing that gap, because companies that invest in ESG are able to deliver higher returns to shareholders.

At our digital event Conversations for a Changing World, Siccardo teed up a discussion on how companies can “walk the talk” when it comes to ESG. Ann Dennison, executive vice president and CFO at Nasdaq, and Barbara Larson, senior vice president of accounting, tax, and treasury at Workday, shared deeper insights on how organizations can roll out these efforts. 

Dennison explained that Nasdaq has begun helping to shape ESG reporting in the U.S. “We believe in a sustainable future, and we believe we can be part of helping to build a sustainable future,” Dennison said of Nasdaq, which has been carbon neutral for three years.

As one example of its progress: In August, the SEC approved Nasdaq’s new rule requiring listed companies to annually disclose board-level diversity statistics using a standardized template. “We believe this is about transparency that will help build a better reporting framework for the future, and help drive knowledge and diversity across the listed companies,” Dennison said.

ESG isn’t a nice-to-have. For Nasdaq, Dennison said, ESG is imperative for growth. “Gone are the days of the investor being the only stakeholder,” she said. An organization’s stakeholder base now includes its customers, employees, and communities.

“If you want to grow your investor base, you need to be focused on ESG,” Dennison said.

Nasdaq provides several solutions to help companies do that. With its ESG Data Hub, investment managers enter their diversity data, while asset owners assess that data to determine how to allocate their dollars. Nasdaq OneReport assists corporate clients in navigating the reporting complexity of ESG. And with Nasdaq’s carbon removal marketplace Puro.earth, corporate clients can procure offsets to neutralize their carbon footprint.

To bolster its own ESG reporting, Nasdaq placed its ESG function within its finance function within the past year. That shift in its ESG reporting structure is part of Nasdaq’s long-term vision, Dennison said, “to fully leverage our data across the organization.” For instance, Nasdaq has used Workday data to get a holistic look at its suppliers’ diversity. “Without that data, we can’t have a plan,” Dennison said.

Dennison shared three strategies for CFOs to meet their own ESG goals:

  • “ESG has to be part of your overall business strategy, not a side job,” Dennison said. It should be part of board-level conversations and objectives.
  • Think about the long-term strategy. “Then break that down into smaller pieces in the short term,” shared Dennison. That should include identifying near-term key performance indicators.
  • “Use your data in the most powerful way,” she explained. Automate where you can.

Interested in learning more? Watch the full session here.

Read more in our series on ESG Reporting:

FP&A Done Right: ESG Reporting Tools

FP&A Done Right: Finance’s Role in ESG Reporting

Modern Accounting: Driving Sustainability

FP&A Done Right: The Role of Narrative Reporting in ESG

More from Workday Adaptive Planning:

FP&A’s Role in ESG Planning and Reporting

Planning for a Sustainable Future: How Organizations Can Deliver Data-Driven Results

This blog post was originally published on the Workday Adaptive Planning blog. https://blog.workday.com/en-us/2021/finance-leaders-discuss-why-esg-imperative-business-growth.html

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: FP&A Done Right Tagged With: Budgeting Planning & Forecasting, Environmental Social Governance, esg, Financial Performance Management, Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

BARC Score Report Ranks IBM & Workday as Leaders in Integrated Planning & Analytics

October 28, 2022 by Revelwood

News & Events

The 2022 BARC Score named IBM and Workday as leaders in Integrated Planning & Analytics. BARC (Business Analytics Research Center) is one of Europe’s leading analyst firms for business software, focusing on the areas of data, business intelligence (BI) and analytics, corporate performance management (CPM), enterprise content management (ECM), customer relationship management (CRM) and enterprise resource planning (ERP).

This BARC Score report focuses on the market for integrated planning and analytics (IP&A) products and portfolios. 

“Today, the reality in many companies is that IP&A is an often proclaimed but seldom achieved goal. Reasons such as internal policies or difficulties with historically grown system landscapes could account for this … However, the lack of coherence of data and functionality resulting from using multiple tools for planning and analytics, and using Excel instead of specialized software tools, are frequently cited reasons for user dissatisfaction, inconsistencies and error susceptibility with planning and analytics in companies today,” writes BARC.

BARC Score – IBM

BARC assessed several components of IBM’s “comprehensive portfolio of on-premises and cloud analytics and performance management solutions,” which includes IBM Cognos Analytics with Watson and IBM Planning Analytics with Watson. The BARC Score states:

  • IBM Planning Analytics offers flexibility for business power users to create budgeting, planning and forecasting as well as analytics applications based on a high-performance in-memory database.
  • Comprehensive Excel-based functionality for preparing individual applications in IBM Planning Analytics (modeling, custom planning forms, etc.) and publishing them to the web.

BARC Score – Workday

This report focuses on Workday Analytics Planning, describing it as “a business-user-oriented CPM platform with functionality for various performance management processes.” BARC lists the following among the strengths for Workday Adaptive Planning:

  • Flexibility for a wide variety of planning approaches (centralized top-down, decentralized bottom-up) and planning topics (including operational planning and financial planning) aimed at companies of all sizes and industries.
  • According to feedback in BARC’s “The Planning Survey,” customers are very satisfied with Workday Adaptive Planning, its price to value and its planning and workflow functionality. 

BARC Score Inclusion Criteria

BARC has two categories for being included in this report: 

  • The vendor’s products and portfolios
  • Financial results relating to those products

Vendors included in the report must have functionality for planning, as well as:

  • Formatting reporting
  • Ad hoc query and reporting
  • Analysis 
  • Dashboards

All vendors must generate a minimum of 20 million EUR of software revenue per year, have a presence in Europe and in at least two additional geographies. The product must also have a significant number of implementations.Learn more about BARC’s assessment of IBM Planning Analytics and Workday Adaptive Planning. Download your copy today.

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: News & Events Tagged With: IBM Planning Analytics, TM1, Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

FP&A Done Right: Forecasting Revenue for Services-Based Businesses: A Growth Factor

August 19, 2022 by Revelwood

More than half of professional services firms can’t forecast project revenue beyond six months. Workday’s Mark David and Justin Joseph share insights into how organizations can get revenue forecasting right, even when business is anything but usual.

What is it about revenue forecasting that can be so challenging? For people-based industries such as professional services, their project revenue is based on talent supply. And people—including all 109 billion of them who have ever lived on Earth—can be difficult to predict. 

“People are highly variable,” said Justin Joseph, senior director of product strategy at Workday. “They aren’t always available. They go on vacation. And, as we’ve experienced the past few years, people leave, and there can be skills shortages. So there’s a lot of variability in how professional services companies generate project revenue.”

Beyond the variability of their employees and the impact of unprecedented trends and events, professional services firms also deal with different systems in different parts of the organization. These silos can cause data to be inconsistent and inaccurate—challenges that only get worse as an organization grows.

“The larger an organization, the more complex things get,” said Mark David, vice president of solution management at Workday. “Organizations then become more reliant on processes to manage projects and people, but that requires accurate data from disparate places.”

In this episode of the Workday Podcast, we’re 100% focused on revenue forecasting for professional services, with guests Joseph and David. They share trends impacting firms, the pros and cons of different types of forecasting, and how firms can start to solve their challenges to better plan and forecast.  

Here are a few highlights of our conversation, edited for clarity. Be sure to follow us wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts, and remember you can find our entire podcast catalog here.  

  • “The reason most companies can’t forecast their revenue more accurately is because they have different systems and data across their lines of businesses and services. And all those different systems mean that you have data that’s going to be wildly inconsistent. You’ll need a lot of integrations to pull this data together to make sure that you have an end-to-end process for revenue forecasting.” —Justin Joseph
  • “A year ago, a customer who runs a 5,000-employee professional services firm told me the one thing he needed was a good revenue forecast more than anything else right now. As you can imagine, this was especially needed with what’s happened over the last few years, which have made forecasting where your business is going even more difficult.” —Mark David
  • “With unexpected scenarios, you’re following the exact same processes as expected scenarios, but you have to forecast at a much faster pace and much more frequently because your assumptions are changing so rapidly, maybe hour by hour or day by day. How quickly can you pull this data together and then model it and share it out? It may sound contradictory, but they’re similar. Speed is ultimately what’s different.” —Justin Joseph

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

Read more FP&A Done Right posts:

FP&A Done Right: The Changing Role of the CFO

FP&A Done Right: Financial Forecasting Processes that Guide Business Strategy

FP&A Done Right: Continuous Planning Leads to Agile Businesses

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: FP&A Done Right Tagged With: Budgeting Planning & Forecasting, Financial Performance Management, Planning & Reporting, Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

FP&A Done Right: The Changing Role of the CFO

June 17, 2022 by Revelwood Leave a Comment

This is a guest blog post from our partner Workday Adaptive Planning, explaining strategy and vision for the Office of Finance.

Companies are asking more of their CFOs than ever before. They’re expected to lead environmental, social, and governance (ESG) initiatives, oversee finance transformation projects, and ensure their teams have the right skills for the future. That’s why finance leaders need the right technology.

The role of CFOs is changing as their responsibilities keep growing. “Today, CEOs and boards are looking to CFOs to help outperform peers while navigating crises,” said Terrance Wampler, group general manager, office of the CFO, at Conversations for a Changing World, a global Workday digital event. “CFOs are moving from a sole focus of maximizing shareholder value to addressing a much broader set of stakeholder values.”

These broader stakeholder values—and expectations—require a greater focus on sustainability, talent acquisition, and digital acceleration.

Simply put, companies are asking more of their CFOs—especially when it comes to having the right technology.

Growing Revenue

“Revenue is all about growth,” Wampler said. “Successful growth requires striking the right balance between quick wins within three months, medium-term operational improvements spanning three to nine months, and longer-term, more strategic initiatives across one- to three-year plans,” he said. 

There’s a strong correlation between revenue growth and high-performing financial planning and analysis (FP&A) teams, according to a 2021 study by the Institute of Management Accountants (IMA). Companies with high-performing FP&A teams saw a 21% revenue growth, compared to just 4% growth among companies with the worst-performing FP&A teams. 

What does a strong FP&A team do well? 

“One of the most impactful things CFOs and FP&A teams can do is model multiple revenue scenarios,” Wampler said.

Workday can help them do that, Wampler explained: “With Workday, customers model and execute on short-, medium-, and long-term scenarios, incorporating financial and operational data and performing what-if comparisons.”

Controlling Costs

Reining in costs remains a primary concern for finance leaders: In a 2022 PwC survey, almost one-third (30%) of CFOs ranked reducing cost as a percentage of total revenue as a top priority.

When looking at organizations that are successful at optimizing spend and driving predictable cash flow, one of the biggest opportunities to manage discretionary spend lies with their suppliers and procurement practices. 

As they grow revenue while containing costs, CFOs also must ensure that capital investments maximize ROI. 

“A CFO is the guardian of the capital that he or she has been entrusted with,” Wampler said. “Planning in Workday can help organizations get the most return from their capital investments with improved forecasting of capital expenses, effective and efficient capital project planning, and, of course, fast and accurate reporting and analysis for the complete lifecycle of your capital assets. You can also plan and model capital asset acquisitions, automate depreciation methods, and gain complete visibility into the impact of capital on your financial statements.”

Meeting ESG Goals

Organizations and their CFOs face increasing pressure to deliver not only financial impact but environmental, social, and governance (ESG) impact as well. For 58% of corporations, there was a positive relationship between ESG and financial performance, according to a 2021 meta study by the NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business and Rockefeller Asset Management.

Companies that have made ESG factors a priority can benefit from the ability to track sustainability data—not just within the organization but extending to third parties, as well. “Data you could track include things like a carbon footprint, climate change, even risk to the supply chain … all through a configurable dashboard,” Wampler said.

Recruiting and Retaining Talent

As the “Great Resignation” sees workers leaving their jobs in record numbers, CFOs must consider how they can best recruit and retain talent in a rapidly changing economy. Of employed U.S. adults, one in four plans to look for opportunities with a new employer once the pandemic subsides, according to a Prudential survey.

Employers need to leverage technology that can give them an edge in hiring. 

“A good software user experience translates to a great employee experience,” Wampler said. That’s why Workday prioritizes developing products that improve employee engagement, in part by automating processes, he explained. With intelligent process automation, Workday enables teams to work smarter, not harder.

Machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI), along with the opportunity to learn new technology skills, are additional ways to keep employees engaged, Wampler added.

Beyond providing better technology solutions, a cloud-based platform also helps support workers outside of the office. As many employees have adapted to remote or hybrid work environments due to the pandemic, Workday’s robust functionality allows employees to perform their duties regardless of where they’re located and gives them additional flexibility, Wampler said. 

The CFO Stakes

Employees, suppliers, customers, and communities can benefit when companies invest in transforming back-office processes and systems—suggesting that there’s a lot at stake today’s CFO.

The good news: 75% of CFOs say the pandemic has accelerated the digitization of their operations, according to the Hackett Group. “Next-generation technology is now considered table stakes not only to survive but to thrive in the new normal of uncertainty,” Wampler said.

Home » Workday » Page 9

Filed Under: FP&A Done Right Tagged With: enterprise performance management, esg, Financial Performance Management, financial planning & analysis, Workday, Workday Adaptive Planning

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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.

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