Challenges.
So Others Might Eat was using Microsoft Excel® and exports from a financial system, but these processes were not keeping up with expanding demands for stewardship, usability and financial performance management. Engagement and adoption challenges with dozens of leaders further complicated the planning and budgeting process.
Why Workday.
A need for a better-structured plan to align resources led to the development of a formal FP&A approach and the purchase of Workday Adaptive Planning.
Benefits and results.
Fiscal transparency.
So Others Might Eat replaced its limited toolsets and rebuilt its planning process with Workday Adaptive Planning, increasing organisational transparency, stewardship of resources and overall understanding of performance relative to the mission.
1%
reduced benefits overpayments and missed discounts
10%
of employees engaged in planning process
Workforce and programme planning.
单位经理明白挑战their programmes were at any given point. Managing FTEs and where they were coming and going across a dynamic organisation overwhelmed the organisation’s spreadsheet-driven processes. By leveraging a hybrid driver-based budget, So Others Might Eat has been able to drive programme design into the budgeting process all the way down to the position level on a project.
<1 Day PPP programme analysis
Transactions, budgets and plans in a single place
Adapting to COVID-19.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, So Others Might Eat had to close clinics, adjust cash flow and apply for funding sources associated with the CARES Act. The real-time drill-down ability allowed for quick access to financial actuals, enabling alignment with the CARES Act requirements and funding sources.
Improved continuity planning
Growing understanding of forecasting provides new functions