|
The Value of EPM During
Market Downturns
Nearly every CFO I've spoken with since last September
acknowledges taking a very different posture with respect to
spending and investing. Most have radically slashed O&M
budgets and have cut deeply into their CapEx plans to
accommodate today's anemic growth levels. All companies,
however, would admit to taking a more conservative posture
with respect to any spending that looks even the least bit
discretionary.
So where does (or should) EPM investment fall in this mix?
Does it belong in the same category as infrastructure
investments that are of obvious high benefit but long term
in nature? Should it be viewed as "nice to have," to be done
in periods of excess profits and reinvestment? Or is it
something more critical to the company’s ability to generate
value, or more importantly, manage risk in the environment
we find ourselves sitting in?
For those pondering the same questions, here are a few of my
perspectives on why EPM should not only stay on the priority
list, but perhaps rise to the very top in terms of executive
time and mindspace.
1. Value Realization from EXISTING Projects
For years, all of our companies have had improvement
initiative after improvement initiative, program after
program, project after project. We've all seen the value
cases, and we've all become used to seeing many of these
projects receive accolades for being completed on time and
under budget, only to generate a fraction of the
value/savings promised. Putting the right EPM process in
place will immediately force project sponsors to tie
improvement initiatives to clear impacts on your KPI's. Once
that is done, and you can see the landscape of what is
really generating value, you are now in a position to defer
(or kill) projects that are not accretive to immediate
returns, and start "ringing the cash register" on the ones
that do. Sure, this will generate long and sustained impact
on the culture and a new way of thinking across the
enterprise. But it is something that is not too difficult to
do with the right process and tools, and something that can
and will have immediate and significant impact.
2. Compliance with Today's Risk/Performance Controls
Starting with SOxley and today's new transparency mandates,
and looking forward at IFRS requirements, CFOs and other
company officers will be on the proverbial "hot seat" for
the foreseeable future. Unfortunately, the seat only gets
"hotter" with further declines and more market uncertainty,
just at a time when the cost of adding new controls becomes
unbearable. Finding new and less costly ways to achieve
compliance is paramount in resolving this inherent conflict.
3. Lowering Administrative Costs
The cost of management and budget reporting is increasing at
a record pace, which is believed by many to be
unsustainable. Furthermore, the manual manner through which
much of this is coordinated has decreased the reliability of
the information produced. While "cloud" computing has a sexy
new connotation today, most CFOs and CIOs would agree that
without a clear architecture, the current web of worksheets,
source systems and partial BI layers is unsustainable. EPM
focus will begin to clear up this picture by quickly
establishing the right architecture (and foundation) on
which this will ultimately sit.
Those are three of potentially many arguments for moving
faster and moving NOW on EPM as a strategic thrust of the
business in 2009. But even more compelling reinforcement for
this assertion comes from some recently published
benchmarks. According to a recent study from Hackett, world
class EPM companies are consistently generating 2.4 times
the equity returns of peer companies, a potential lifeboat
for a company facing tougher and tougher economic times.
These same companies have 20-30 less volatility in profits,
and more significant operating returns overall.
But here's the kicker for why you want to do this now rather
than later. The very same companies that are achieving the
above gains, are also (according to Hackett) doing so at
roughly 1/2 the cost for performance reporting and
performance management business functions. And they are
radically reducing budget complexity and improving
information access to end users rather than traditional
reporting middle-men. And another nice benefit – a 40%
higher reliability in forecasting. Best of all is that when
this is in place, the company becomes better able to model
and forecast more dynamically, a practice where speed and
flexibility are life saving in down/unpredictable markets.
EPM investments are sometimes significant depending on the
end state you want to achieve and your relative starting
point. And while the EPM journey of best practice companies
can take between 4 and 7 years to achieve full scale
competence, results can begin materializing in months. In
fact, many would say the first 6-12 months are most vital in
creating awareness and a catalyst for real cultural change,
with sizable gains occurring all along the way.
Bottom line: EPM can and will add immediate value, mitigate
current risks, and save on administrative and budgeting cost
in coming years. Starting the EPM journey during a dark time
like this may not be the most intuitive answer you want to
hear. But starting a journey at night is sometimes the best
answer.
Author:
Bob Champagne is a Vice President of Performance Management
Solutions with UMS Group, Inc., a privately held
international
management consulting organization specializing in
Performance Management tools, systems, and solutions.
Included in UMS Group's product portfolio are a wide variety
of performance tracking, reporting, and benchmarking
solutions, as well as customized performance assessments and
diagnostic services. UMS Group has consulted with
hundreds of companies across numerous industries and
geographies. Visit UMS Group at
http://www.umsgroup.com
or contact us directly at 973-335-3555.
|