The Indicee Blog

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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Wrapping Sage Summit in Atlanta

by Craig Todd on November 13th, 2009

Faster reporting for frustrated spreadsheet users. That was the message on the wall of our booth at Sage Summit in Atlanta this week. People would stop, stare and then tell us just exactly how frustrated they were. One woman proudly waved her arm in the air, practically jumping up and down and hollering, “That’s me! That’s me!”

demoatboothThe story was the same, time and again, regardless of location, job function or technology involved: people everywhere are wasting hours, days, weeks and even months cutting and pasting information from their applications into spreadsheets in order to analyze their businesses. Why are they doing this? Because they don’t have any other solution that is easy to use and cost effective to implement.

  • The woman waving her arm in the air runs Sales Operations. Their accounting system is not integrated to their text-file-spouting, antiquated MRP system and their forecasting application is home-grown. The result is that they manually move data around into Access databases and worst of all, cut and paste into a 64MB spreadsheet that cannot be shared with the people who need it because of its size. She has already calculated the time spent on manually mashing this data is over 50 person-days per year!
  • Manufacturer of RV’s who sells through a dealer network.  They have over 10 years of sales transactions by dealers and VIN number stored in Excel files and a separate application that tracks warranty information.  They recently implemented MAS so now they need to create reports from 3 separate systems and want to give their dealers access to reports.
  • One IT Manager receives a daily stream of EDI information from distributors about sales. This information is processed as CSV and then imported into custom tables in their accounting system. On top of this, he has written over 120 Crystal Reports files that are scheduled and emailed to support requests for information from their 50+ sales reps in the field. The reps are compensated both on their sales and sales from the distributors. He cannot get enough reports built fast enough to satisfy their requirements, as the information requests change almost daily.
  • A women from a Legal aid society said they receive hundreds of invoices every day from legal aid lawyers.  To figure out how to best spend a limited legal aid budget, she and her boss are spending hours each week
    READ MORE…

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Going green at the show

by Craig Todd on November 2nd, 2009

indicee_bag_trans_600I’ve done a lot of trade shows over the last 12 years. My children have what just might be the finest collection of trade show swag in the business: logo t-shirts, flashing bouncy balls and even binoculars from companies that probably don’t exist anymore. There was so much that I had to cut back to only the “premium” swag in order to keep them happy.

Swag is that stuff we get from the booths of the vendors at trade shows. The logo-encrusted, brand enhanced pens, cups, mouse pads and the granddaddy of all swag, the Squooshie Ball.

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