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Excel’s powerful capabilities, integrations and flexibility make it a favored tool for all financial and accounting professionals. Like many middle market companies, we considered moving from an Excel dominated financial planning and reporting process to an “enterprise grade” solution. A very difficult decision, we set aside Excel for a unified financial planning tool, also known as Enterprise Planning Management (EPM) systems.
After a review of solutions and recommendations, we decided to move our financial planning to Workday’s Adaptive Planning (WAP). Our financial forecast in Excel is a complete system: It handles recurring revenue waterfalls, consolidations by products and business units, eliminations between business units, balance sheet forecasting, among other complexities. Nevertheless, the transition, despite a good plan on paper, became never ending.
We faced two core problems, which we thought we could overcome. First, the precision and complexity of our Excel forecasting model was hard to replicate in WAP. Second, our lack of deep knowledge in WAP modeling, forced heavy reliance on consultants and a time-consuming iterative process to make any headway. To minimize the obstacles and make some use of WAP, we paused our forecasting transition efforts and focused on WAP as a reporting tool. We had modest success, but we ended up having a hodge-podge system of exceptions and frequent error checking that was worse than the status quo.
During this failed transition period, the analytics team, which is part of our finance team, dramatically increased its expertise and capabilities in PowerBI. (While I am going to focus on PowerBI, I encourage the finance pros reading this to think about this solution using whatever business intelligence platform that is available. This should work with any BI platform.) PowerBI’s integrations with Excel and our accounting system (Microsoft NAV) provided the light-bulb moment for moving forward with an in-house automated financial reporting system connecting our Excel forecasts to accounting results and producing polished reporting in real-time.
In order to get there, we assigned a skilled data analyst to work directly with accounting and FP&A to create an ETL (extract, transform and load) template in PowerBI that could take our GL-coded accounting records and match them to financial reports that were business friendly and consistent with our forecasting templates. Here are the key success criteria that made this possible.
The above process took about 120 days to get through Step 8 and then another 60 days (2 reporting cycles) to get through Step 9. All of this was achieved with one resource dedicated to the project and all other FP&A and accounting teammates being on call as needed.
With our financial reporting now published in an automated way, we have dramatically reduced the processing time and eliminated exceptions handling for information flows from accounting to financial reporting. While the EPM also promised financial modeling automations, we never went back to that. Instead, we have improved our Excel-based forecasting models in ways that would be hard to replicate in a new system given the resources we have and the connections of these models to our PowerBI reporting system.
If you are considering an EPM, especially for reporting, it might be worth looking at your existing business intelligence platform for an easier and more manageable solution.
See my post on Lifetime Customer Value here.
With a focus on strategic financial leadership, my role as a CFO has been pivotal in guiding companies through periods of growth and transformation. My proficiency in analytics and data science empowers me to drive informed decision-making and optimize financial performance. Let’s connect on LinkedIn to discuss how my Fractional CFO expertise can contribute to your company’s success with CFO PRO+Analytics.