An accounting team that’s both data-driven and proactive can be downright transformative. And CFOs get that there is steady sustained demand for more effective use of data, whether to identify areas for savings, evaluate investment opportunities or deliver better reporting and key performance indicators (KPIs).

Accounting professionals that take advantage of business intelligence (BI) don’t just enjoy increased productivity and accuracy. They gain the insights to make those more informed decisions and are better able to contribute to success by providing the right data at the right time to the right people, whether internal stakeholders or clients.

What Is Business Intelligence?

Business intelligence is a technology driven practise of analysing data by developing key performance indicators (KPIs) and monitoring performance to inform decision making. BI provides historical, current and predictive views of business operations in easy to understand, interactive, data visualisations. Organisations use business intelligence software to analyse data and inform performance metrics, such as financial, sales, marketing or operations KPIs. With BI, companies can closely track financials, optimise their supply chains and make better decisions on everything from marketing to M&A.

BI functionality centres on built-in, customisable dashboards that allow for real-time reporting and analysis based on a central database. Decision-makers can identify exceptions, trends and opportunities and drill down into any underlying metric or transaction for greater detail.

Business intelligence systems allow the entire organisation to make better decisions by analysing very large volumes of data from all lines of business. Look for a scalable system that allows for mobile access from wherever people are working and that provides a range of connectors and integrations for you applications so you can pull in all the data needed to analyse the KPIs that your organisation considers important.

Why Is Business Intelligence Vital in Accounting?

BI-enabled financial management software makes accounting professionals more productive and minimises errors by automating data collection and analysis. Once CFOs determine what KPIs are important, BI keeps those metrics up to date and readily available in dashboards.

For example, a cash flow dashboard could show at a glance your current cash conversion cycle, quick and current ratios, days sales outstanding, accounts payable and accounts receivable turnover and other KPIs compared to historical periods. And the dashboard would provide continuous updates.

Accounting teams that aren’t manually compiling this data can spend time interpreting it and sharing insights with business colleagues.

Does Business Intelligence Relate to Accounting? How?

Efficient accounting is crucial for a business’s success, and business intelligence can help promote accounting success. Let’s look at an example of how we can draw a straight line from an accounting team’s use of BI to a business win.

If you are a retailer selling products and you’re out of a popular item, customers will click over to a competitor’s site, so having the right level of inventory is fundamental for retailers. Stockout rate is a KPI that helps with inventory analysis — it measures how often an item a customer orders is unavailable.

Take fictional sporting goods retailer VolleyTech. The start of spring soccer season brings demand for cleats, and VolleyTech merchandisers know that one British manufacturer’s footwear sells out quickly every year, leading to disappointed customers. They push to order extra pairs in the most popular sizes, but leadership balks.

Thinking about why the retailer didn’t want to order enough to avoid stockouts, one factor might be uncertainty about cash flow. VolleyTech has difficulty projecting revenue, so it chooses to run a tight, just-in-time ordering strategy that accepts some items being out of stock to save on costs, like storage, shipping and import fees. Plus, that manufacturer, U.K. FootballWear, knows its cleats are popular, so it can demand down payments on orders from smaller retailers like VolleyTech. That ties up funds that could be needed for operations or payroll.

With business intelligence, VolleyTech’s accountants can do in-depth cash flow analysis and forecasting. The team can take inputs, like expected operating and capital expenses, historical sales and stockout rate data, projected accounts receivables and payables balances, and even pull in external data sources, like long-term weather forecasts for prime cleat-buying months in locales where VolleyTech has stores. With that information, the company may find it can invest more in inventory. That keeps customers happy and may earn it a more favoured partner status with U.K. FootballWear.

Can I Use BI Tactics in Accounting?

Using BI tactically in accounting will raise the team’s status as trusted strategic advisers, as the above example shows. Business intelligence tools also give accountants, including outsourced accounting professionals, the ability to quantify their own value within the company or for clients.

Think about the KPIs leaders use to evaluate the effectiveness of their accounting departments. For example, a good DSO, or days sales outstanding, ratio shows that accountants are effectively collecting the funds owed by customers. But dig deeper, and you’ll see that fast collections are based on effectively negotiating payment terms, and on the accounts receivable group tightly managing the credit extended to customers and collecting outstanding debts with few write-offs.

Business intelligence dashboards help accountants improve DSO ratios by, for example, setting up alerts to flag customers who are paying more slowly and thus may no longer be creditworthy.

BI means fewer errors and more complete documentation, which improves audit performance. It enables accountants to explain complex financial concepts to business users by generating easy-to-read charts and visualisations, and it lets accounting teams work leaner by automating manual tasks.

Tactical? Sure — but in sum, a strategic advantage.

How to Use BI to Influence and Improve Accounting

Successful use of BI to influence and improve the accounting function is all about how quickly an end user can access data and convert it into understanding or insight that allows for more accurate, timely decision-making that leads to increased profitability and business success.

When evaluating your programme, ask: How are business intelligence capabilities actually being used? Do we have dashboards and data that further our accounting goals and the organisation’s long-term vision and overall strategy?

Look also at these seven areas.

Improve insights

Business intelligence platforms allow accounting teams to pull together disparate data and communicate insights in a way that can deliver an “aha moment.”

Take our sporting goods retailer. BI-driven retail analysis might use purchasing behaviour and retail trends data to show that younger soccer players are interested in competing year-round, and that indoor soccer leagues are springing up in a few northern states where VolleyTech operates. Cleats aren’t appropriate for indoors, so merchandisers might move quickly to source affordable shoes in sizes and designs suitable for the demographics most interested in year-round play. Using BI software to analyse inventory data will help VolleyTech create a purchasing and distribution process to get this stock into geographies with indoor facilities and leagues.

Improve accounting processes

BI improves accounting processes in obvious ways — aggregating data, creating dashboards more efficiently, improved planning and budgeting — and in less readily apparent areas.

Accounting teams that use BI in their processes can help address all of these:

  • Better visibility into complex supply chains translates to fewer disruptions, and BI is all about visibility. For example, companies are considering onshoring and localising their supply chains. This is expensive, though. How much more can you spend on raw materials and still be profitable? What effects do exchange rates and shipping have on costs?
  • Accounting teams can pull in external data sources to improve forecasting and inform financial decisions as the economy recovers.
  • Addressing a talent shortage is easier when companies can hire without worrying about proximity to a physical office. With BI tools, accounting can break down relevant data so that all departmental teams can work on their headcount budgets and collaborate remotely using a central database. This not only improves communication between accounting and hiring managers but also can improve the recruitment process.

Accounting data visualisation

Accounting data visualisation is the process of presenting financial information in a dynamic, graphical manner. Effective data visualisations help decision-makers consume a lot of sometimes complex information in a way that’s seen as intuitive and holistic.

There are obvious benefits to the ability to visualise data, including those “aha moment” insights we’ve discussed. But one upside that’s often overlooked is that, if you make data consumption enjoyable, decision-makers and relevant stakeholders will ask accounting to help them use dashboards more often. That may drive investments in new data sources and finance systems with built-in BI.

Improve productivity

One key payoff of the increased productivity benefits of business intelligence capabilities in accounting software is being able to scale without needing to add headcount.

First, the types and volume of data and requests for analysis and reports tend to grow along with the organisation. With BI-capable accounting software, new data sources can be easily added to dashboards. And, accounting can set up customised dashboards and automatically generate analyses, minimising manual effort.

And of course, business intelligence allows many finance processes to be automated. Let’s say it takes the accounting department days to prepare monthly financial reports when using traditional tools like spreadsheets. With BI-capable software, charts and graphs can be exported to reduce the amount of time needed to prepare financial reports.

Data-driven decision-making

Accounting professionals are natural-born data champions. Say a merchandise manager at VolleyTech has a gut feeling that customers would spend more for a line of fair-trade-certified soccer balls. Marketing agrees and believe that adding this line would be a sales opportunity.

How could accounting help quantify that hunch?

Tactics to apply data-driven decision-making to assumptions include applying inventory cost accounting metrics to the more expensive fair-trade balls, helping calculate cost-plus pricing to estimate a sales price point and comparing that to the highest-priced balls currently stocked. All these data points can help merchandisers determine if any new product makes sense financially.

Improved product and revenue analysis

With BI, finance can compile data from various sources into customised dashboards to allow for in-depth analysis that will yield ways to improve products and increase revenue.

For instance, let’s say business leaders need to figure out what’s behind a reduction in revenue. Digging into relevant data, they can identify any specific departments, offices or regions that are underperforming. Or, there may be other factors, such as new sales reps who may not have enough training to perform, or a product upgrade that temporarily drove down revenue.

One area to focus on might be total sales revenue.

Sales revenue is recognised on the income statement for the month in which the product or service was delivered or fulfilled, according to accounting rules for revenue recognition. For example, say a VolleyTech location decides to offer in-person goalkeeping classes. It signs up 40 students in June, each paying $50 per session, and collected $2,500 in receipts. But it held only 20 of those sessions in June. It can recognise revenue for only those 20 students, making recognised sales revenue for June $1,250. The remaining $1,250 of sessions booked for July is recorded to deferred revenue. Given that, does it make sense to add another instructor to double the number of classes available in a given month? BI can help model adding another instructor a month to determine if it makes financial sense or not.

Improved KPI analysis

Key performance indicators, or KPIs, are metrics that are closely tied to strategic business objectives. Leaders should identify their key metrics early on and revisit that KPIs list periodically based on changes to the market, economic conditions or the business itself.

Once a list is established, companies need to agree on what numbers represent success — and signal rough times ahead.

For example, our Australian cleat manufacturer might see fewer orders coming from Asia Pacific countries as a result of supply chain issues. If its finance and accounting software had BI built-in, the company could have identified at-risk clients and worked with its FP&A (financial planning and analysis team) to run scenarios on how it could still meet its revenue goals, such as by offering a discount to increase its exports to Singapore distributors.

Improve Your Business Intelligence With NetSuite ERP

Adopting software with built-in BI, such as NetSuite Business Intelligence, can deliver better transparency into company performance across all departments. The benefits of a unified system that comes with an ERP include a centralised data warehouse and a single view of customers, inventory and financials across multiple business units, locations and subsidiaries.

Look for the ability to customise dashboards and provide access to a variety of stakeholders via web browser, including on mobile devices. Busy accounting teams should look for self-service capabilities so department heads can generate analyses on their own and pull in whatever data they need to make decisions.

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Business intelligence is the perfect complement to data-driven accounting professionals. It helps take the guesswork or opinions out of the decision-making process by providing real-time, factual results compared to business goals. When these results are shared across the company, decisions can be made faster. The accounting team not only becomes a trusted business partner but also has the information to improve business processes and performance.