In 2016 Unit4 acquired Prevero, a financial performance management software company. The acquisition reflects a trend toward the convergence of transactional and analytical business applications. ERP and financial management software vendors increasingly are adding analytic capabilities – especially in financial performance management (FPM) – to the core functions of transaction processing and accounting in order to broaden the scope of their offerings. The integration of transaction processing and analytical software is especially valuable to Unit4’s core customer base of midsize organizations, which we define as those with 100 to 1,000 employees. Midsize entities have almost the same systems requirements as larger ones but lack the resources the latter enjoy.
Prevero is an especially useful tool for financial planning and analysis (FP&A) groups. It provides a practical alternative to desktop spreadsheets for planning, budgeting, forecasting and analysis. It is designed to be consistent with Unit4’s design philosophy of “self-driving” software; as a result, although analysts need to be familiar with the basics of multidimensional systems and modeling, Prevero is much easier to master than the most popular business intelligence tools. This is in large part because it uses forms, formulas and contexts that are familiar to an advanced spreadsheet modeler. It doesn’t require mastering a programming language or programming constructs. At the same time, the software eliminates issues inherent in desktop spreadsheets, notably their lack of dimensionality, referential integrity, data integrity and controls. These defects prevent those relying on spreadsheets from viewing planning and budgeting as a more useful business tool. The technical limitations of desktop spreadsheets diminish the effectiveness of any collaborative company-wide process because dealing with the shortcomings inevitably is time-consuming.
Because it doesn’t have spreadsheets’ limitations, Prevero is able to support what I call “continuous planning.” This is a highly collaborative approach to planning that relies on frequent short cycles to create and rapidly update integrated companywide operational and financial plans. Embracing continuous planning makes it easy for individual business units and departments to create their own plans while enabling headquarters to connect those plans to create a unified view.
Our business planning benchmark research finds that companies that maintain persistent links between functional plans have a planning process that works well more often than others that do not. In addition, the research shows that two-thirds (66%) of those that maintain such links have a planning process that works well or very well, compared to 40 percent that copy information from individual plans into an overall plan and just 25 percent of organizations in which plans have little or no connection. Having direct links between departmental and business unit plans also makes for a better process. Our benchmark research reveals that to be accurate, most (77%) planning processes depend to some degree on having access to accurate and timely data from other parts of the organization.
To make planning a useful business and financial management tool and readily support continuous planning, a system must have the following capabilities:
Prevero has all these capabilities and also offers a broad set of administrative and reporting capabilities, including spreadsheet-like report design, automated report distribution and flexible and easily administered permissions for viewing information and reporting, among other features.
As I write this in August, for many companies the annual budgeting process is either underway or just about to start. There will be the usual amount of grumbling about the time required to produce a budget and its value to managers and executives. But nothing will happen. It brings up the quip attributed to Mark Twain: “Everyone talks about the weather but nobody does anything about it.” Companies that plan and budget using desktop spreadsheets can’t easily change because of the limitations that spreadsheets impose when used in any collaborative, repetitive enterprise-wide process. These limitations make it infeasible to implement continuous planning.
Companies have many options to consider when assessing tools for planning and budgeting as well as other elements of financial performance management. Prevero competes with a large number of budgeting and planning software vendors. Because Prevero is now part of Unit4, users of the latter’s ERP software are likely to find it an attractive option for budgeting and planning. For everyone else looking for a relatively easy replacement for spreadsheets that provides a unified multidimensional platform, I recommend they investigate Prevero.
Regards,
Robert Kugel
Senior Vice President Research
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