1. One Unified Platform
A unified Continuous Planning platform brings together financial planning, close, and reporting & analysis into one platform, which keeps your data centralized and secure, streamlines your budgeting and planning processes, and gives budget owners more confidence in the numbers. The result is what every finance team wants: a higher financial IQ across the entire organization.
2. Designed for Collaboration
Gartner reports that by 2020 at least 25 percent of organizations will conduct more collaborative, continuous, and consistent financial planning. By closely aligning financial strategies and processes across an organization, according to analysts, finance can better manage the performance of the entire business. In other words, keep collaboration and communication in mind as you evaluate Continuous Planning platforms. Any platform should give workers in every department an intuitive, easy-to-use tool to input budget and forecast numbers no matter how or where they work. Finance shouldn’t have to spend time chasing managers, manually gathering data, and bouncing back and forth to ask questions or gain clarity on variances.
3. Continuous Planning in the Cloud
Employee productivity was one of the top 10 CFO concerns in the last quarter of 2018, according to a study by Duke CFO Global Business Outlook. But if your employees are spending all their time gathering, troubleshooting, and emailing data instead of analyzing and strategizing, your productivity is never going to improve.
With a cloud-based Continuous Planning platform, you can increase productivity by simplifying and automating your processes around budgeting, planning, and forecasting. And since finance will no longer have to rely on IT for software implementation, maintenance, or upgrades, you can lighten their load as well, freeing them up to develop and focus on more strategic technology initiatives for your entire company.
4. Intelligent Use of Excel
Departments across the organization have depended on Excel to manage budgeting and planning for years. The interface is familiar, it’s simple to enter numbers into cells, and frankly, it’s always been done that way. But companies are finding that Excel has its limitations and shortcomings.
But even if you’re ready to upgrade to a Continuous Planning platform, you still need to ensure that people will use it. That means adopting an interface that is familiar to employees, regardless of their function or role in the organization. A Continuous Planning platform that uses Excel intelligently is one that gives front-end users the familiar look and feel of their favorite spreadsheet program while reducing the inherent risk of insecure templates and disconnected data.