04:47 PM
Amex Ends Budgeting as Usual
The typical budgeting process, with its annual back-and-forth dance between departments and finance, "takes too long, is too detailed and doesn't focus on succeeding in the market." So said American Express senior vice president of corporate planning and analysis Vince Nerlino, speaking at Cognos's Business Performance Summit in New York in late January.
Trendspotting Better access to information is the number-one reason IT decisionmakers cite for deciding to use enterprise information integration (EII) technology. EII creates consolidated virtual views of data from different sources, to be used by an application or viewed by humans. The number of data sources in a typical EII application is large: Only 7% access fewer than four, and two thirds access six or more, according to research by Ipedo |
In addition to these monthly flash forecasts, American Express does three rolling forecasts per year that go deeper, and the company continually revises targets, investment decisions and forecasts looking out over a 24-month horizon.
Discussing the application of performance management theory, Nerlino said the concept of visibility isn't about having a clear vision of the future so much as "having really good contingency planning for a range of scenarios." He said Cognos's BI suite has supported dynamic planning with much less cycle time at American Express, as when the Gulf War and the SARS scare in Asia forced the company to "dig down to get to deeper performance targets" to offset losses in underperforming areas.
Reasons for EII Projects |
57% Better Access to information |
47% More flexible integration approach |
39% Federate queries across databases |
Get Smart
Now that the Internet has settled down into a stable, well-understood channel of communication and commerce, defining its place in your overall business strategy is more important than ever. Strategic Management of E-Business (John Wiley & Sons, 2004) by Stephen Chen, an academic director at Australia's National Graduate School of Management, is a scholarly (but not dry) treatment of the subject embellished with an abundant collection of helpful case studies. It's an excellent book to get you started. |
Doug Henschen is Executive Editor of InformationWeek, where he covers the intersection of enterprise applications with information management, business intelligence, big data and analytics. He previously served as editor in chief of Intelligent Enterprise, editor in chief of ... View Full Bio