Rolling forecast vs static budget: how each works, why rolling forecasts are gaining ground, their trade-offs, and how to run both together for agility plus accountability.

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Rolling forecast vs static budget: how each works, why rolling forecasts are gaining ground, their trade-offs, and how to run both together for agility plus accountability.
Budget Narratives
The Budget Narratives explains what the cost in each budget category is and which budget item will be covered. It can help your company to understand why each specific cost is necessary and how to achieve the goal.
5 Components of a Successful Rolling Forecast
For the past several years, businesses of all types have been deciding to either supplement or replace their annual budgets with rolling forecasts.
There are a number of reasons for this. For one, rolling forecasts can offer greater accuracy than an annual budget, which is often out of date within weeks of being put together – if it’s not already out of date when it’s finalized.
For another, rolling forecasts take up far fewer resources than the massive task of putting together an annual budget, which can tie up staff’s time for months on end.
Maybe these factors are part of why you’ve decided that you want to switch to a rolling forecasting model. Now that you’ve made the decision, what components need to be in place for your new method to be a success?
1. Buy-in.
When you made the decision to switch to rolling forecasting, you probably had already achieved buy-in from the rest of your finance team. However, if forecasting is going to work for your organization, you need to ensure that the rest of your colleagues and staff are ready to embrace it as well.
That means demonstrating to your staff at large how forecasting will improve not only the company’s success, but also their own workloads. Emphasizing the fact that rolling forecasts will mean staff has to spend less time and, eventually, effort, on putting their numbers together is always a good place to start.
2. People.
Do you have the right people for the job on your finance team? When you’re switching to something new like forecasting, you need to make sure your people are ready to embrace the changes.
Are they willing to learn what they need to to make the switch a success? Are they able to be evangelists for the new method to other members of the staff? Are they good at seeing the big picture as well as focusing on details as needed? All of these things will influence the success of your rolling forecasts.
3. Data.
When moving to rolling forecasts, having good data is vital. Almost before you do anything else, you need to decide how far out you want to forecast – three months? A year? Longer? Forecasts can be implemented as far as five years out, but only if you have the data to populate them. If not, there’s not much point in trying to forecast that far in advance.
Three-month, or quarterly, forecasts, on the other hand can be a great place for businesses to start. After you and your staff are comfortable with forecasting for this length of time, you may find that you want to move to more frequent forecasts – monthly, perhaps.
4. Systems.
If your company is one of the thousands of businesses that continue to use Excel for their finance needs, you’ll need to make a change once you start forecasting. Forecasting using only Excel, as noted by the Geneva Financial Planning and Analysis Club, is nearly impossible.
Instead, business that decide to forecast should really consider moving to a more robust planning and forecasting solution, like True Sky. One of the great things about True Sky is that it is Excel – it’s based in the Excel interface, but offers huge advantages including greater security, real-time updating, and the ability to manage the entire forecasting process through the office of the CFO.
5. Process.
Since forecasting involves many people both inside and outside of finance, it’s essential to establish clear, efficient processes that allow for collaboration and flexibility as needed.
This may involve merely tweaking your old budgeting processes, or it could mean coming up with entirely new ones. It will all depend on what works for you and your company. If you’re using True Sky, you’ll be able to configure your approvals process however you like, and easily involve the people you need to ensure the forecast is completed accurately and on time.
Want to learn more about how to make rolling forecasting work for your company?Check out our post “Making the Switch from an Annual Budget to a Rolling Forecast.”
View the full post here.
Why Annual Budgeting Has Become a Thing of the Past
In the ever changing work environment, tension is bound to arise between the age old practices, and the innovative, new ideas. This is especially true in the world of finance. Why tinker with traditional business practices if everything is swell? Finance is the backbone for any organization, so any concerns about any changes in methodology are understandable.
Rolling For Growth
There you were a couple of months ago buried under a mound of paperwork, getting prepared for 2012. Your schedule was absorbed by meetings; meetings with managers, phone calls, voice-mail, email, calendars, spreadsheets. It’s an annual ritual that business goes through called “Budget Season” - the time of year where we all play our hand at being Nostradamus. While going through this annual process and looking over projections for the coming year, you’re not happy. The revenue growth is not where you, or worse yet, someone upstairs want it to be. So, you begin to slash – people, products, services – anything to make the bottom line look better. What always struck me as odd about this process is the fact that it’s forecasting vs. fairytale. Tell me honestly that you had the slightest clue what this year was REALLY going to look like by way of revenue. Tell me honestly that you can afford cuts without consequence. Tell me honestly that the final budget you assembled, regardless of how perfect it looks on paper, is anywhere near reality. I first wrote about this topic for Radio & Television Business Report back in October 2008 because I continued to watch media companies put together annual budgets calling of for revenue increases across the board in the year to come, regardless of how awful the year prior was. Predictably they’d miss their first quarter projections, and then all chaos would break loose, and set a horrible tone for the rest of the year. At Remerge we work with a wide array of businesses, across a large spectrum of industry. From music to media, restaurants to retail… and the budget process remains the same. Why? Many would agree that the way we conduct business has changed, so why not the way we look at business budgeting?
Whether it’s a wobbly economy or a rapidly changing digital landscape, there is no way you’ll have an entirely accurate picture in October of what next April is going to look like for your business. I’m not suggesting you should not have a plan – just not one based in pure wishful thinking. I guess that’s why I was so delighted to read about Steve Player in the February issue of Entrepreneur Magazine. Player has become a champion of the rolling forecast. Steve reminds readers that Jack Welch, the former CEO of General Electric, wrote that budgeting "brings out the most unproductive behaviors in an organization." Historically, corporations have tied incentive pay to their budgets, Player says, creating a conflict of interest among employees who are more committed to hitting a target number than to moving the company forward. Regardless of the size of your business, or the type of industry your business competes within – it’s not as much about being “better” as it is being “different”. Consumers decide on difference – and that difference makes one brand or business better than another in their eyes. A good first step for defining your difference may just be budgeting on a rolling forecast, allowing your company the flexibility it needs to truly grow. Take a moment to read the Entrepreneur article and see if you agree. Chuck Francis remerge