|
|
|
It's Budget Time Again

Many companies
are coming to the conclusion that traditional planning and budgeting
just don't work. A recent survey suggested that 80 percent of
companies are dissatisfied with their current processes, and
financial directors ranked budgetary reform as their top priority.
Another survey suggested that up to three-quarters of all plans are
never executed—and planning is nothing without execution. Among the
top problems associated with traditional approaches to planning and
budgeting is the fact that these processes are rarely viewed as
strategically focused and are often misaligned with strategy. If
corporate strategy fails to drive the planning and budgeting
process, all of the effort is just "huffing and puffing."
How can something as important as a company's budget not tie
directly back to the strategy? In most companies, budgets are built
from the department level up instead of from the senior management
level down. In constructing budgets, the tendency is to build up the
expense assumptions first. What can happen in this approach,
however, is that departments may develop undue protection for those
expenses and try to construct income projections that will fit the
expenses. Thus, the income assumptions are built to generate enough
income to cover projected expenses, rather than reflect what is
realistically possible.
As they start working on their budgets, how many front-line
managers have a clear understanding of their company's strategic
plan? Do they understand the need for strategic alignment, which
includes aligning all parts of the organization in a common
direction as required by customers and the marketplace, future
trends in the industry, and the goals of the company's stockholders?
Have they seen the company's plans for marketing, operations,
technology, and human resources? Unless this strategy is understood
by all employees involved in the planning and budgeting process,
"gaming" is encouraged between superiors and subordinates during
target setting.
The company must be strategically aligned, with all areas
planning and budgeting for common goals; otherwise, the process will
continue to be viewed as adding little value, especially given the
considerable amount of management time required. Conversely, there
are three common attributes among the companies that view planning
and budgeting as valuable tools: 1) strategically aligned, 2) driven
by senior management, and 3) trusting. We'll leave #3 for a future
discussion.
|
|
|
|

|
|
Previous Nolan
e-Newsletters Online
Past articles
of Bank Statement, as well as Nolan's other e-Newsletters—Nolan
Spotlight and Trend Line—are now available on our website. Follow
the link below to browse the archives.
|
|
|
|
2008 Nolan
Events and Sponsorships
|
|
|