Ventana Research recently completed an in-depth benchmark research project on long-range planning. As part of the research we had discussions with CFOs and those involved in financial planning and analysis about their company’s strategic and long-range planning processes, which pointed to the need for clarity in using the terms “strategic planning” and “long-range planning.”
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Topics:
Big Data,
Performance Management,
Planning,
Sales Performance,
Supply Chain Performance,
Office of Finance,
Reporting,
Operational Performance,
Business Performance,
Customer & Contact Center,
Financial Performance,
Workforce Performance,
CFO,
CEO,
Financial Performance Management,
FPM
I was discussing the United States Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) mandate with a former head of investor relations at a Fortune 100 company. His take on it is much the same as that of everyone else involved with corporate reporting: it doesn’t produce much value and costs a bundle to comply. I related to him my thoughts on the lack of progress I saw in making the XBRL mandate more useful to corporations and investors alike. Making XBRL...
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Topics:
Office of Finance,
Reporting,
extended close,
US-GAAP,
XBRL,
Analytics,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
CFO,
compliance,
financial reporting,
FPM,
SEC,
Digital Technology
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Topics:
Office of Finance,
extended close,
US-GAAP,
XBRL,
Analytics,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC),
CFO,
compliance,
financial reporting,
SEC,
Digital Technology
Taxes – both indirect (sales or value added taxes, for example) and direct (income taxes) – are one the largest expense items on the corporate income statement. In recent years it has become common for large and even midsize companies to automate their indirect tax management process, but direct tax management has remained a bastion of manual processes built on a heap of desktop spreadsheets. In previous blog posts I discussed this issue and the role of the tax data warehouse as a necessary...
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Topics:
ERP,
GRC,
Office of Finance,
audit,
finance transformation,
Tax,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC),
Information Management,
CFO,
Vertex,
FPM
Human capital is most organizations’ largest investment and one of their largest differentiators against the competition. So it follows that those that take advantage of the compelling, game-changing technology now available in human capital management (HCM) will place themselves at a competitive advantage.
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Topics:
Big Data,
Social Media,
HCM,
Human Capital Management,
Learning,
Office of Finance,
Social Collaboration,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Intelligence,
Business Performance,
Cloud Computing,
Information Applications,
Information Management,
Workforce Performance,
CFO,
Compensation,
finance,
HR,
Talent Management,
Workforce Management
Businesses always see a lag between when technology makes some advance possible and when a majority of companies actually adopt it. There’s even a longer lag between the emergence of an advance in a business process or technique and the time it takes to become mainstream. When we write our research agendas at the top of each year, we have to strike a balance between focusing on the new and different, which is still many years away from general acceptance, and the mainstream, which has been...
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Topics:
Big Data,
Planning,
Predictive Analytics,
Sales Performance,
Governance,
GRC,
Office of Finance,
Budgeting,
close,
Operational Performance,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Performance,
CIO,
Cloud Computing,
Financial Performance,
Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC),
In-memory,
Workforce Performance,
CFO,
Risk,
CEO,
Financial Performance Management,
FPM
This is the third in a series of blog posts on what CEOs (and for that matter, all senior corporate executives) need to know about IT and its impact on running a business. The first covered the high-level issues. As I noted, it’s not necessary for a CEO to be able to write Java code or master the intricacies of an ERP or sales compensation application. However, CEOs must grasp the basics of IT just as they must understand basic corporate finance, the production process and – at least at a high...
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Topics:
Planning,
Predictive Analytics,
Sales,
Sales Performance,
Customer,
Human Capital Management,
Office of Finance,
Budgeting,
close,
closing,
PRO,
Operational Performance,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Performance,
Customer & Contact Center,
Financial Performance,
Information Management,
CFO,
CEO,
FPM,
Profitability,
SPM
Businesses need to simplify HR and compliance processes to save time and reduce risk. Talx, which helps employers address concerns in hiring, pay and compliance, has now assumed the name of its parent company and become Equifax Workforce Solutions [PDF]. HR and finance professionals should recognize the parent company’s brand from its work in the consumer credit industry. The company hopes these professionals will see that Equifax Workforce Solutions offers a better approach to governance, risk...
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Topics:
Equifax,
eThority,
GRC,
I9,
Office of Finance,
Operational Performance,
Financial Performance,
Governance, Risk & Compliance (GRC),
Workforce Performance,
CFO,
Compensation,
compliance,
finance,
Hiring,
HR,
TALX,
Workforce Solutions
Earlier this year we published our Trends in Developing the Fast, Clean Close benchmark research findings. The most significant was that, on average, it takes longer for companies to close their books today than it did five years ago. In 2007, nearly half (47%) we closing their quarters within five or six days, but now only 38 percent can do it as quickly.
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Topics:
Office of Finance,
close,
closing,
Consolidation,
Controller,
effectiveness,
XBRL,
Business Performance,
Financial Performance,
CFO,
Data,
Document Management,
Financial Performance Management,
FPM
I recently started a series of blog posts on what CEOs (and for that matter, all senior corporate executives) need to know about IT. The first covered the high-level issues. As I noted there, it’s not necessary for a CEO of a company to be able to write Java code or master the intricacies of an ERP or sales compensation application. However, CEOs must grasp the basics of IT just as they must understand basic corporate finance, the production process and – at least at a high level – the...
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Topics:
Big Data,
Mobile,
SaaS,
Sales Performance,
Social Media,
Supply Chain Performance,
Customer,
ERP,
Operational Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Collaboration,
Business Performance,
Cloud Computing,
Complex Event Processing,
Customer & Contact Center,
Financial Performance,
In-memory,
Information Management,
Workforce Performance,
CFO,
CEO,
PaaS