In our Office of Finance benchmark research 60 percent of participants said it takes their companies six or more business days to complete their quarterly close; that exceeds the best practice benchmark of five days. Consultants, academics and vendors have stressed the importance of shortening the close for almost a quarter of a century. The main reason for doing so is to provide executives and managers with timely information about the company’s performance. Yet our research shows that it’s taking longer for companies to complete their close than it did a decade ago: On average they now finish the monthly process in 6.8 days, compared to 6.5 days, and complete the quarterly close in 8.0 days vs. 7.5 days. The research suggests that the main reason for this increase is that companies use outdated manual close processes, which often are poorly executed and rely heavily on spreadsheets.
For companies that take more than a week
The use of spreadsheets in recurring corporate processes may be the immediate cause of a slower than necessary close, but their use often is the result of bigger issues that should be addressed. For example, heavy use of spreadsheets may stem from poorly structured IT systems. There might be duplicate data sources that must be reconciled or calculations, which could be done automatically in a more capable system but instead are performed in spreadsheets and therefore must be constantly checked for errors. Similarly spreadsheets may be used to collect and derive numbers from multiple systems instead of automating the integration of data as it is passed between systems; this also consumes the time of skilled professionals needlessly. Identifying and addressing this root cause of a tardy close will improve the execution of most finance and accounting department processes. Maintaining data integrity by automating calculations within all financial systems and automating all links between them can improve the quality of any financial and management analysis, reporting, forecasting and planning.
Fixing IT system problems might also inspire broader attempts to improve finance department performance, including those that are the result of a complacent, “we’ve always done it this way” approach. Even something as basic as failing to rethink the process can lengthen the close. It’s not “cheating” to close subledgers before the end of the period, provided it’s done consistently and doesn’t inherently result in a misstatement. Balancing workloads during an accounting period is good management. Setting higher thresholds for reconciliations can save a substantial amount of time without adversely affecting the quality of a company’s financial statements. A relentless drive to shorten the close also requires executives to rethink and question a lot of “givens” that routinely degrade their performance. “Relentless” means that it becomes a high priority that challenges a sense that “we’re too busy to improve efficiency.”
Our research on speeding the close finds that the most effective strategy for shortening the process is to control the process consistently. A large majority (71%) of companies said that doing this enabled them to shorten their close; this is by far the most frequently cited source of improvement. Continuous process improvement is an approach long used in manufacturing to improve the quality of output and, by eliminating the need for scrap and rework, enhancing process efficiency. The same applies in finance departments. Continuous process improvement requires frequent reviews of performance and immediately addressing issues that arise from these reviews. The frequency of these reviews is important: In our research two-thirds (67%) of companies that review their close process monthly said they were able to achieve their goal of shortening their close, compared to half of those that did it quarterly and one-fourth (26%) of those that do not do such reviews.
I propose that every company that takes more than a business week to complete its monthly or quarterly close should set a goal of reducing the time by at least two days over the next three years. If it now takes 11 or more days, the goal should be four fewer days. Making this effort is worthwhile for three reasons. Shortening the close enables a company to provide vital financial and managerial information sooner, and it increases efficiency. Moreover – and possibly of even more value – the process of identifying the issues and bottlenecks that prevent a faster close is also likely to point to other issues involving people, process, information and technology that hamper the finance organization. Fixing the close process issue can be an excellent diagnostic tool for assessing anything else that might be ailing Finance.
Regards,
Robert D. Kugel CFA
Senior Vice President, Research
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