Why Finance Needs to Rethink the Reporting Process
With data visualization and real-time dashboards, CFOs and finance teams are able to better understand what their data is trying to tell them.
With data visualization and real-time dashboards, CFOs and finance teams are able to better understand what their data is trying to tell them.
The office of finance has a vital role to play in the world of big data. FP&A teams are being asked to collect more and more finance data, while CEOs are starting to regularly ask CFOs for data on factors like payroll, sales, and productivity that can serve as leading indicators of business performance. And it’s only going to increase in volume: According to a Workday Adaptive Planning survey, 58% of CFOs expect the amount of data they process to continue to increase.
Another report found that with one-quarter of finance teams already spending up to 30% of their time on just reporting, finance departments need to think about how they are going to fix their source system challenges and data gathering issues if they have any hope of understanding what the data is trying to tell them.
Right now, there’s a lot of talk about financial transformation. Usually this is in the context of finance departments moving from a static, spreadsheet-driven process to a modern, cloud-based process. However, the finance department is also being asked to transform its thinking from being mere collectors of financial data to guiding strategic decision-making across the organization.
To do so, the finance department needs to rethink its reporting process. Today’s CFOs say too much of their team’s time is spent collecting data, and not enough on strategy. By automating data collection with cloud-based financial software, companies save countless hours by eliminating manual processes and preventing errors from mistyped data.
Once finance department members have a handle on collecting data, they need to level up their skills in interpreting it. It’s no longer enough to think like an accountant who just delivers a spreadsheet of numbers. The finance department needs to think like strategists and designers by analyzing and visualizing the numbers to help leadership make sense of the information.
Here’s the thing: Not all of us are number people. A CEO or operational manager doesn’t need a list of 100 numbers; she needs to know the five that matter most and what she should do about them. By visualizing the data, your report can quickly explain the story the numbers are trying to tell, letting leaders better listen and act.
The data visualization transformation is already underway. In yet another CFO Indicator report, more than half of CFOs say that data visualization is an initiative their team plans to undertake. There will come a time when “data visualization engineer” will be as common of a role in the finance department as bookkeepers, accountants, and analysts.
In addition to formal, scheduled reports, the finance department is often asked to create dozens of ad hoc reports a month. For example, a board member might request a customized report incorporating nonstandard information while an operational leader might want a report measuring a specific initiative. While valuable to the end user, these reports can take up a massive amount of the finance department’s time, keeping people from doing their normal work. In addition, the user often must wait days or weeks to get the information he or she needs.
With real-time dashboards accessible to all, your operational managers and leadership can have instant access to what is going on in the business at that moment, all visualized in a way that’s easy to interpret. By removing the finance department from the user’s desire for data and its delivery, you can empower the entire company to become a truly data-driven organization.
Ready to get more out of your reporting? Download the eBook, “Your Top Four Reporting Challenges.”
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