IT directors love technology projects; business analysts love
strategy. But in between the two a great gulf may be fixed:
Relationships between these departments are often strained,
and sometimes acrimonious.
Business planning has historically been a bastion of the finance
department with strategists using the now ubiquitous Microsoft
Excel to store, manipulate and forecast business performance
data. It's not that there is anything fundamentally wrong
with this approach. It has served banks around the world very
well for many years. It's just that in today's on-demand,
data driven, real-time commerce, it's knowing where a business
is, where it was, and where it is heading that is driving
competitive advantage.
This same commercial landscape is increasing the requirement
for banks to make split-second decisions that will often directly
impact their financial and operational success. It requires
the ability to store and compare huge amounts of data. That
data must be accessible so that it can be used to derive forecasts
and other custom metrics and make informed decisions based
on the latest facts.
Don't get me wrong, Excel is a great tool for data management,
as thousands of financial departments around the world would
lay testament to. Moreover, people are comfortable with it.
Excel is however, a static, single-dimensional application
that was never designed to deliver this volume of information,
so that it could be shared or evaluated in the way that strategists
are now demanding.
So if not Excel alone, what is the answer? An increasing number
of companies are turning to BPM software in order to manage
the increasing amount of data available to them. It enables
multiple users to get answers to many performance questions
from a single data store.
Many of the leading BPM solutions, from companies such as
Applix and Hyoerion, actively embrace Excel, but deliver increased
functionality. Using Excel as the user interface ensures that
any BPM software will be more readily adopted than a completely
new solution.
Moreover, BPM software has been around for longer than you
might think; Applix, for example, has been around since 1983
and the solutions have evolved over a period of time to deliver
tangible benefits to thousands of businesses globally.
"Applix allows us to analyse past performance, anticipate
future needs, and provide consistent reporting across the
organization," says Michael Dinsmore, CFO, Bank Services,
First National Bank of Lexington. "We are now able to
review data on a daily basis that up until now was difficult.
With its ease-of-use and ability to distribute across the
organization quickly, it will become even more valuable as
we expand its use in the near future to include both budgeting
and forecasting."
The other important advantage of BPM software is in bringing
together IT departments and business strategists in order
to drive success. Business Performance Management software
that embraces Excel delivers tangible business benefits by
ensuring that IT acts as a value added service to the business,
using technology to drive the strategist's vision by providing
business critical data. It is neither technology for technology's
sake, nor a way to develop strategies that are not practical
to implement.
BPM is helping to align the goals of IT with those of the
business strategists. For banks, this rejuvenated cooperation
will reap greater benefits than simply successful BPM projects
alone. It may even be heralding a new maturity in the application
of IT as a driver for businesses, integrating it into the
very heart of business performance.
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