The Big Picture: Instead of building a budget, companies should build an annual operating plan and use that plan to drive a budget and forecast
If companies focus on building an annual operating plan and using that plan to drive a budget and forecast (instead of the other way around), then they can define more actionable data that intentionally supports progress toward strategic company goals.
Here’s how to do it:
The first step of designing your annual operating plan is to decide on one to three strategic goals for the year. These goals should be specific, quantifiable, and should not exceed three at most (seriously!).
Next, determine what resources you will need to execute these goals. Some areas to consider:
- Sales and marketing
- Product development
- Support
- Resources (tools, outsourced resources, facilities, equipment, etc.)
- Funding
- Personnel (do you have the correct skill sets in-house? Need additional staff? Training?)
Finally, sit down and build a plan for the company is going to achieve these goals over the next 12 months. Account for all additional costs as well as projected profit and sales impacts. If something doesn’t support the achievement of the strategic goals, why is it included? Is there a valid justification for including it? If not, you need to have the hard conversation on whether or not it stays.
After you’ve designed your operating plan, you’ll find that most of your budget is complete. At the first of the year, take one copy of this budget and lock it away. You can use this to compare budget to actuals and track progress against your goals, and at the end of the year use it to inform your next year’s goals and expectations.
As the year progresses, update a second copy of the budget monthly or quarterly and you’ll have a rolling forecast
We’re a huge fan of rolling forecasts since they allow companies to look forward toward the coming months and make adjustments to their forecast to account for actuals and updated information that becomes available (e.g. did that new product take off far beyond expectations? Revise your outlook in the forecast for the remainder of the year to reflect it).
Instead of using an outdated budget to make financial decisions, this allows the executive team to use the most up-to-date, goal-oriented information to make strategic decisions.
The result is:
- Less wasted spend and more accurate budgets/forecasts
- Financial decisions that align with long-term company goals
- Faster, more sustainable achievement of goals
- Finances that support operations rather than suppressing them
- And most importantly, a defined set of goals with a plan to achieve them, with a way to track progress against the plan