The Indicee Blog

Reflecting upon Sage Insights 2010

by Scott Pledger on May 22nd, 2010

I am back in the office after a whirlwind trip to Denver for the annual Sage Insights conference. This 2010 edition was my first as a Sage alumnus and I came away with a feeling that not only is Sage, and its ecosystem of partners, world-class in business but also as people. I guess I knew this all along, but sometimes it takes time away to truly appreciate it.

Here are a few of my conference observations:

Cloud computing is moving to the forefront of the Sage product strategy. In his keynote presentation, Himanshu Palsule, EVP of product strategy and marketing, called cloud computing one of two major trends to capitalize upon and introduced Sage North America’s cloud-based “connected services” as a key product strategy pillar. Connected services take “the richness of on-premise applications and connect to the reach of cloud-based services.” The launches of Sage SalesLogix Cloud and Sage Fundraising Online are examples of Sage dipping a toe in the “cloud” water (does that make it “rain”?)

Visitors at Indicee's booth at Sage Insights keenly interested in Cloud BI....or maybe Craig was sharing another uproarious story from trade shows past.

Business intelligence continues to gain in prominence within the Sage community. This year’s conference featured an entire presentation track dedicated to business intelligence, analysis, and reporting. And if the buzz at the Indicee booth was any indication, the opportunities for cloud-based analysis and reporting solutions are immense. Business partners outlined the challenges that clients are facing when it comes to creating and updating reports especially when the data resides in multiple systems such as Sage ERP MAS or Sage ERP Accpac and SageCRM. Conversations also revealed that the complexity and costs of typical on-premise BI solutions are often barriers to adoption.

Sage ERP Accpac – still near and dear to me – continues to garner much attention as the ERP of the future (very near future with Version 6 beta just around the corner); the slick user interface and improved workflow continue to impress. Kudos to the product team under the leadership of Scott Zandbergen, Erik Kaas, Alok Tyagi, and others.

The Simply Accounting group under the stewardship of Jamie Sutherland continues to be one of the most innovative teams in the Sage family. They have followed up on the success of Billing Boss, the online invoicing tool, with a mobile payment processing solution called Payment Boss.

Sage continues to be the “partner’s choice” for top vendor–forthrightness, integrity, and accessibility are a few of the words that come to mind to describe Sage. Speaking with fellow attendees and trolling the online forums, common themes are the positive feeling about the Sage team and a real bullishness about the Sage strategy.

A big shout-out to the entire Sage team for pulling off another successful Insights conference. Can’t wait until Sage Summit 2011 in DC.

Keep dialed into this channel for more Indicee news including the upcoming launch of our iPhone & iPad mobile reporting application (incidentally, Himanshu indicated that mobility was the other key trend influencing Sage product direction).

Scott Pledger

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The Roots of Business Reporting Technology

by Geoff Devereux on April 15th, 2010

Last week, I wrote a guest blog post for the accounting news website Going Concern.  The post centered on an old accounting book (circa. 1968) that I happened upon in a used book store up in British Columbia’s version of Cottage Country.

Reviewing this relic got me wondering about what technology might have accompanied the practice of accounting detailed in the book.

Ready?

Here it is guys:

And:

That’s it.

But where the principles of accounting have remained substantially unchanged over the course of the intervening years, the same cannot be said for business technology.

According to the timeline provided on www.oldcalculatormuseum.com, the development of electronic calculators really only just started to take off around 1961 (you can thank the invention of the integrated circuit - the microchip).  This was BRAND NEW technology.  Previous calculator technology had been manual.


Manual Calculator; Photo: Christos Vittoratos (via Wikimedia Commons)

By the time this book was written, there were a dozen companies creating and innovating new models and the competition to capture the new market was fierce.  Casio, Sharp, Sony, Toshiba, Texas Instruments, Canon, and of course Hewlett Packard; all of these guys were battling it out.  Numerous others are buried in technology’s graveyard.

Needless to say, things have never been the same since.

Accounting and business reporting as we know it today has grown from the roots of this technological revolution.

Business technology has continued to grow by leaps and bounds since that time, but don’t be fooled into thinking there’s no room left to branch out.  The fact you are on our website leads me to believe you’re at least willing to entertain the notion of continuing innovation in business technology.  Safe to assume?

The reason behind this little trip down Memory Lane is that everyday here at Indicee, as we innovate for the future, we can’t help but bump up against the past.  Not the ancient history I’ve outlined above,  we’re confronting the incumbent technology.  We’re confronting the stuff that is likely downloaded on your machine today.

In retrospect, it’s easy to see the value an innovation like the electronic calculator brought to the workplace.  It’s easy to look back and immediately recognize how important this innovation was for business.  Had you been there at that time, you would have jumped on it!  Would you not? You would have jumped on it and tossed your old, manual calculator in the first dumpster you could find!  Right?

Yet, this sort of reaction is rarely the case when new technologies come to market, isn’t it?  When new technologies show up isn’t there normally a great deal of fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD)?  Isn’t there normally a great deal of resistance to change?

What’s your view?

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Strategic CFO: Get in the Game

by Geoff Devereux on March 24th, 2010

With all the March Madness going on right now, a basketball analogy seems in order (or at least some pics from my local court).  Like hockey, basketball is a great example of a team sport that benefits from the guys on the bench as well as the guys on the court.  Even though it’s usually not given a real solid acknowledgment in the sports media, all the bench guys are still an integral part of the team and all contribute to the team’s success (when they do succeed).

It’s about the program.  It’s about scrimmage.  It’s about strategy.  It’s about training.  It’s a team.

That said, do you think there’s even one bench warrior who wouldn’t rather be in the game?

To a man, I think the answer is no.

Business isn’t much different, is it?  There are the star players and then there are the guys who “ride the pine”.  You may know them by another name, “Cost Center”.  In Accounting and Finance, we hear that term a lot.  Usually it comes up around budget time.  It comes up around bonus time.  You want headcount?  But, you’re a Cost Center!

So, how does one go from being viewed as a Cost Center to being viewed as a Revenue Center?  From being a Beancounter to being a Strategic CFO?

The distance between the two can seem broad:

Finding actionable business intelligence that will enhance sales and cash flow while hammering down inefficiency and expenses is the mark of The Strategic CFO and it’s the key for getting in the game.

To go from being an observer:

To driving the hoop:

Here’s some resources to get you going:

A High Value CFO is… (CFO Coach)

Strategy on the Morph (Harvard Business Review)

Midsized Companies Need Strategic CFOs, Not Beancounters (Ventana Research)

Can Technology Make CFO’s and Controller’s Jobs More Strategic? (Technology Evaluation Centers Blog)

What does Get in the Game mean to you?

Enjoy!

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Accounting for I.T. in the Finance Department

by Geoff Devereux on March 10th, 2010

An Interview with Wendy Van Donkelaar; CFO at MAKE Technologies

Last week, we were talking with Cheni Yerushalmi, co-counder of Sunshine Suites, about Measuring What Matters.  I think the main takeaway, from an Indicee point of view, is that the company’s Financial Reports were deemed much less important to the running of the business than were Operational Measures.

Today, we’ll move away from some of the broad philosophical implications of the question, “How do you measure success?” that we tackled with Cheni and move into the practical side of what measurement tools are being employed in mid-sized businesses and what measures are considered important in a conversation with MAKE Technologies CFO, Wendy Van Donkelaar.

MAKE Technologies Inc. is a Vancouver based software solution provider that analyzes and modernizes all three aspects of legacy enterprise applications: business processes, source code and data. MAKE’s modernization platform, TLM, helps their global customer base to reduce the cost & risk required to maintain and modernize their mission critical systems.

Wendy Van Donkelaar is a Financial Executive and Chartered Accountant with over 20 years experience in the technology sector.

I was interested in getting her take on the role of I.T. Systems for keeping tabs on the health of the business through the use of reports and KPIs.  What I found was, 1) she is strapped for time just like every other Finance Manager I’ve met over the past 10 years, and 2) she employs a number of tools to get the answers she needs to effectively manage the company’s finances.

So, here’s the Q & A:

1. How do you analyze operational performance? We use SFA [Salesforce Automation], SA [Simply Accounting] and excel spreadsheets to analyze performance.
2. What are the critical operations KPIs? Net new license and services revenues, Sales Funnel growth, Professional services utilization and G/M [Gross Margin], # of partner deals, # of presales presentations per quarter.
3. Do you analyze results on a project-by-project basis? Yes using an excel spreadsheet we are currently evaluating project management systems.
4. How is the Finance function changing/evolving with the onset of new technologies? The function has changed from one of historic information gathering to one of predictive analysis.
5. How do you view the role of spreadsheets in your line of work? Used for summarizing weekly Dashboard metrics and Board reporting.
6. Has your view of spreadsheets changed over time? How so? In my past, spreadsheets where often used for gathering and collating data so that analysis could then be performed.  It now seems like that step has been taken care of by SFA, SA or ERP [Enterprise Resource Planning] tools and I focus on smaller sets of data for analysis.

What does it all mean, man?

I’d like to highlight a few things in Wendy’s responses that, in my view, have a profound impact on all of us.  Call them sweeping generalizations if you must, but I see these responses as indicative of the typical situation for those of us working in mid-sized companies doing the accounting.

First, we’re living in a multiple-systems world.  By and large, when we are producing reports we are doing so by gathering data from various systems and collating that data into a cohesive picture of the enterprise.  The systems tend to operate independently of each other.  And inevitably, excel becomes the default aggregator.  Is this your experience? Make a comment!  What systems are you running and how do the systems integrate?

Second, inside the business, operations reports trump financial reporting any day of the week!  Check out the answer to question #2.  Of seven measures given, only one is truly a GAAP number.  Compliance dictates spending a great deal of time on Financial Reports, but these don’t provide actionable data in the same way that things like capacity utilization, or net new business, or sales pipeline does.  Share some of your operational measures in the comments!  What’s the focus in your workplace?

Third, predictive analysis has become mainstream.  There was a time that this topic was reserved for B.I. technicians, I.T. analysts, and academics.  More and more it’s becoming a practical requirement from management.  So, how do you management your predictions?  What oracle are you consulting? How many tea leaves must be read?  How can we know the future?

Let’s get some comments going!

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Improving Your Month-end Throughput

by Geoff Devereux on February 3rd, 2010

January is “in the books” as they say.  How’s the month end coming?

This isn’t a month-end tirade.  Instead, I’m feeling nostalgic so I thought I would share a story from my past.  It’s been some time since I’ve been subjected to the time pressure of month-end & period close activities. For as much accounting has its common elements, every company’s month-end experience is different.  I’ve worked for a number of different companies in a number of different sectors, and no two were the same.

One of the things about Accountancy, and it’s often cited as one of the profession’s advantages, is the ease with which one can move between industries.  The common elements enable it; bank rec’s, financial statements, “the binder”, you know the drill.  I think this is true to a point; however, I have also noticed that we can build up domain expertise as well as anyone in an organization. I’d be interested in hearing your thoughts on this bit.

Today, I’m thinking about some work I did for a mid-sized media company here in Vancouver.  I was brought in as a chair-warmer Analyst while the company restructured and relocated its back office to Toronto.  My predecessor had jumped ship early (before his job was scheduled to disappear), but Toronto wasn’t quite ready to steer the department so the local Controller (who was also on the block) needed someone to wait it out with him.

This was not one of those nightmare month-ends ( I’ll save my nightmare stories for closer to Halloween… and maybe April Fool’s).

I had some pretty standard stuff to do; the bank rec wasn’t pretty, standard payroll auditing for a few hundred employees, a systems conversion meant that we had to chase down some entries that got dropped from one of the back office systems, and then there were the Revenue Reports for the managers.  The Controller did all the financial reports.  He would often describe his month-end consolidations style as the brute force method.  He understood 1) the importance of having a process and 2) the tenacity that is a requirement for the profession.

I’m going to focus on the Revenue Reports for the managers that were part of my month-end process.  I would collect data from the accounting system, from the system that recorded the advertising sales, and the system that generated the physical page layouts (capacity).  This business has a number of publications being produced.  Each publication required a report.  After which, the completed reports were emailed and yes, were printed, for each of the managers.

You’ve probably guessed buy now that I put all of this data into a spreadsheet.  Thinking back, could the company have benefited from Indicee? It probably would have taken a bit of work to set it up and the reports would have looked a bit different, but Indicee probably could have provided the information I was putting into these reports.  But that’s not what I want to tell you about.

I want to tell you about how I learned the process of completing these reports.  The incumbent, clever fellow, had developed his process for these over a number of years and in relative isolation.  He had it down to a science; but, all that knowledge was locked up in his head.  When he walked out that door, the process walked out the door with him. Typical in mid-market companies.  Documentation on complex processes that have evolved over time tends to be weak.  In this case, the damage would be shortlived because these reports were being killed when the head office transition was completed.  In the meantime though, I was left to decipher and de-engineer the reports and get them out to the managers.

To the point:

In the course of my investigation, I found that neither my boss nor some of the other managers actually knew what large parts of the reports meant!  Or why they should care! The process of creating the report, even with practice, was big.  Why was I going through all of this if the end users had no clue what I was giving them? Why had my predecessor done so over the course of a number of years? A pretty big portion of the reports were just wasted effort.

My theory is that reports evolve over time.  This one had evolved, but it hadn’t “lost it’s gills” so to speak.  It was standing upright and talking, but it had a tail.

http://www.cafepress.ca

Tightening up your month-end throughput means recognizing the Darwinian nature of your reports.  Questioning your end users, your internal customers, is key to understanding what parts are no longer relevant.  You’ll need to be persuasive within your organization in order to overcome the natural tendencies toward the status quo.  Be prepared to quiz people.  This part is easier said than done, but with tact and a collaborative attitude gains can be made.  I suggest using the analogy of accounting as a manufacturing process.

Month-end, like any good manufacturing process, needs to be free of waste.

It’s a question of throughput.

That’s my story for today.  For more on stories, I recently produced a guest blog post on the Sage Peachtree Community site called, The Importance of Stories.  Don’t worry, month-end will be there when you get back.

Enjoy.

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