The subscription and recurring revenue business models became a significant part of the economy this century with the advent of streaming services for entertainment and software as a service. They have grown in popularity because they enhance customer lifetime value by evolving what had previously been a one-time-sale relationship into a delivery of ongoing services which can create a more loyal customer relationship as well as provide a regular, more predictable revenue stream. I recommend that corporations that have adopted or are planning to adopt either of these business models take a continuous accounting approach to managing their record keeping. Ventana Research asserts that by 2026, one-half of subscription organizations will use continuous accounting to remove constraints limiting sales and marketing flexibility, streamline back-office processes, shorten the accounting close and improve customer satisfaction.
Subscriptions are a well-established business model, but what has historically been a relatively simple accounting process for newspapers, magazines and other periodicals (straight-line amortization of the up-front
Continuous accounting enables companies to achieve four main objectives that improve performance in handling subscription or recurring revenue arrangements. First, managing the flow of business and financial
Second, straight-through processing eliminates period-end bottlenecks because data doesn’t need to be reconciled all at once, and transactions can be reviewed whenever necessary, at any time. What has been regarded as a given set of monthly, quarterly and annual routines is not set in stone but is rooted in centuries-old limitations imposed by paper-based systems and manual calculations. Today’s business applications can continuously process data end to end so work schedules can be restructured to better distribute workloads to eliminate the period-end “crunch” time and increase operational efficiency. This enables companies to close their books sooner, which promotes agility in operations. Our Office of Finance Benchmark Research finds that 62% of companies that close within six business days have timely information compared to 39% that take longer.
Third, reporting and responsiveness can be improved because technology provides executives and managers the ability to track performance and progress toward objectives continuously, using dashboards tailored
And fourth, a lack of data integrity and the resulting need for checks and reconciliations before invoicing and billing often has the underestimated impact of limiting the flexibility of sales and marketing as they create and, crucially, change offers and terms. To make accounting workloads manageable, companies either try to limit the complexity and variability of the offers or they put up with some degree of inaccuracy in billing. However, it is possible for both the front office and back office to get what they need when the organization deploys a billing system that delivers data integrity using straight-through transaction processing. Rather than always finding themselves behind the curve, sales and marketing can respond to better- or worse-than-expected results, even during the middle of a month, by modifying an offer or increasing some incentive without having an impact on back-office workloads.
Corporations with a subscription or recurring revenue business model should adopt a continuous accounting approach to manage these transactions. Technology has made it possible to not only remove operational constraints that once limited sales and marketing flexibility but also to streamline back-office processes, shorten the accounting close and improve customer satisfaction. Organizations that were established around subscriptions or a recurring revenue arrangement with customers very likely have a financial management system that is designed to support this model. However, those product companies that have adopted a hybrid approach or are now considering it must assess whether their existing system can easily support subscriptions and a continuous accounting approach. I recommend that they consider using dedicated subscription management software that also automates revenue recognition processes. This sort of system operates in parallel with the main financial management application, creating a sub-ledger that easily meshes with existing accounting methods. They may find that this approach is faster, easier and has a lower total cost of ownership than modifying their existing software.
Regards,
Robert Kugel