Our benchmark research on next-generation business planning finds that a large majority of companies rely on spreadsheets to manage planning processes. For example, four out of five use them for supply chain planning, and about two-thirds for budgeting and sales forecasting. Spreadsheets are the default choice for modeling and planning because they are flexible. They adapt to the needs of different parts of any type of business. Unfortunately, they have inherent defects that make them...
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Topics:
Planning,
Predictive Analytics,
Marketing Planning,
Reporting,
Sales Forecasting,
Budgeting,
Customer Performance,
Operational Performance,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
Business Planning,
Demand Planning,
Integrated Business Planning
Adaptive Insights held its annual user group meeting recently. A theme sounded in several keynote sessions was the importance of finance departments playing a more strategic role in their companies. Some participating customers described how they have evolved their planning process from being designed mainly to meet the needs of the finance department into a useful tool for managing the entire business. Their path took them from doing basic financial budgeting to planning focused on improving...
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Topics:
Planning,
Predictive Analytics,
Human Capital,
Marketing,
Reporting,
Sales Forecasting,
Budgeting,
Customer Performance,
Operational Performance,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
Business Planning,
Supply Chain,
Demand Planning,
Integrated Business Planning,
Project Planning
Business planning includes all of the forward-looking activities in which companies routinely engage. Companies do a great deal of planning. They plan sales and determine what and how they will produce products or deliver services. They plan the head count they’ll need and how to organize distribution and their supply chain. They also produce a budget, which is a financial plan. The purpose of planning is to be successful. Planning is defined as the process of creating a detailed formulation of...
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Topics:
Big Data,
Planning,
Predictive Analytics,
Sales Performance,
Supply Chain Performance,
Human Capital,
Marketing,
Office of Finance,
Reporting,
Sales Forecasting,
Budgeting,
Operational Performance,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Performance,
Customer & Contact Center,
Financial Performance,
Business Planning,
Supply Chain,
Demand Planning,
Integrated Business Planning,
Project Planning,
S&OP
Organizations succeed through continuous planning to achieve high levels of performance. For most organizations planning is not an easy process to conduct. Planning software is typically designed for only a few people in the process, such as analysts, or organizations might use spreadsheets, which are not designed for business planning across an organization. Most technologies only allow you to examine the past and not plan for the future. For decades organizations have tried to focus planning...
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Topics:
Big Data,
Sales Performance,
Supply Chain Performance,
Mobile Technology,
Operations,
Operational Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Intelligence,
Business Performance,
Cloud Computing,
Cloudera,
Customer & Contact Center,
Financial Performance,
Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC),
Information Applications,
Workforce Performance,
Business Planning,
CFO,
finance,
Tidemark,
Workday
Planning portfolio risk follows the same basic tenets as other sorts of business planning. It must be done in the context of a time dimension. In business, short-term plans are developed with a lot of givens or constraints. For example, capacities are fixed, because it’s impossible to wave a magic wand and bring a new factory on line, stuff more machine tools into already jammed facilities or source more raw materials in a capacity-limited supply chain. Short-term plans also incorporate...
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Topics:
Sales Performance,
GRC,
Office of Finance,
Operational Performance,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC),
Information Management,
Business Planning,
Risk
The recent buzz around business analytics has generated resurgent conversation about what businesses need from their data to optimize business processes and make better decisions. Our benchmark research on business analytics in more than 2,500 organizations produced unprecedented information about business and IT usage and competency with analytics. It confirmed that effective use of business analytics requires a balance of people and skills, processes, information and technology not just to...
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Topics:
Sales Performance,
Social Media,
Supply Chain Performance,
Sustainability,
Business Technology Innovation,
IT Performance,
IT Research,
Operational Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Intelligence,
Business Mobility,
Business Performance,
CIO,
Cloud Computing,
Customer & Contact Center,
Financial Performance,
Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC),
Information Applications,
Information Management,
Location Intelligence,
Operational Intelligence,
Uncategorized,
Workforce Performance,
Business Planning,
CFO
Ventana Research has just announced its Value Index for Financial Performance Management (FPM) for 2010. Our value indexes are user-focused assessments of how well software vendors and packages enable companies to improve their execution of core processes. This one is designed to help businesses, especially the finance organization, evaluate the FPM software suites offered by major vendors in the context of their specific needs. Ventana Research defines financial performance management as the...
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Topics:
ERP,
Office of Finance,
Financial Applications,
Business Performance,
Business Technology,
Financial Performance,
Business Planning,
CFO,
finance,
Corporate Finance,
Financial Performance Management
I’ve written quite a bit about integrated business planning (IBP), which is the process of connecting aspects of the planning function across an organization to improve its internal alignment and financial performance. IBP begins with operational – rather than financial – planning (that is, budgeting) because it’s about running the business and figuring out how to make the financial aspects work to support the business plan. IBP is especially important for corporations in which projects can...
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Topics:
Performance Management,
Project Portfolio Management,
IT Performance,
Operational Performance,
CIO,
Financial Performance,
Business Planning,
CFO,
Initiatives Management,
Initiatives Planning,
Operational Planning