ERP Financial Consolidation

In most globally-expanding organisations, with multiple regional ERP systems, financial consolidation poses a major challenge. Due to the nature of acquisition and multiple outstation operations, financial consolidation relies mainly on Excel spreadsheets with inaccurate data, leading to non-compliance.

The Analysis Phase

When choosing your flavour of financial consolidation solutions, it’s important to undertake a thorough analysis of the organisation’s current state and what’s required. Here are a few guidelines on what to cover during the analysis phase:

Assess Current State• Conduct a comprehensive assessment of the current financial reporting processes, systems and data sources.
• Identify strengths, weaknesses, and pain points in the existing financial consolidation approach.
Stakeholder Analysis• Identify and engage key stakeholders(regional and Group), including finance teams, IT professionals and end-users. Understand their needs, expectations and concerns regarding the existing financial consolidation solution.
Data Sources and Integration• Analyse the variety and complexity of data sources across different regions.
• Assess the requirements for data integration, transformation, and mapping to ensure consistency and accuracy in consolidated financial reporting.
Technology Infrastructure• Examine the organisation’s existing IT infrastructure and assess whether any upgrades or changes are necessary.
Security and Access Controls• Analyse the security measures and access controls needed to protect sensitive financial information.
• Ensure that the financial consolidation solution complies with data security standards and regulatory requirements.
Risk Assessment• Identify potential risks associated with the implementation, including technical challenges, data cleansing/migration issues and user adoption hurdles.
Table-1 Things to consider during the analysis phase

Possible Architecture Options

OptionsProsCons
Best-of-Breed Cloud FCS
Financial Consolidation Service
• Automation of complex processes e.g. Intercompany eliminations.
• Pull financials from multiple ledgers and other source systems.
“Single source of truth” for financial data.
• Self-service operating model, owned by finance/accounting team with very little IT admin.
• Rolling out software across a large organisation. 
• Require financial professionals to learn new things, which can be time-consuming, expensive and sometimes met with resistance. 
Global Cloud ERP
A single global ERP is used to manage all business units worldwide.
All the data in one place acting as a single of truth.
Return on investment of just-in-time purchasing and the corresponding reduction of inventory carrying costs can justify a single-instance ERP project.
• Slow to grow and expand a business.
• The cost to convert to a single ERP is prohibitive.
Blockchain-Based Solution
Blockchain technology can be leveraged for financial consolidation to enhance data integrity, transparency, and security.
Immutable ledger for transparent and auditable financial records.
Enhanced security features.
Complexity in implementation.
Limited adoption and industry standards.
General Tools
Spreadsheets & Data Warehouse
The simplest solution to implement.
Users familiar with Excel UI and functionality.
More user intervention leading to potential errors in data.
Changes could affect the underlying transaction and extract, transform and load (ETL) processes—and determining these effects takes time.
Does not promote the concept of autonomy and self-service.
Table-2 Financial Consolidation Architecture Options

Logical Architecture

At a high-level, a best-of-breed solution may look something like this:

Where organisations are considering transitioning to a global single-instance Cloud ERP solution, the financial consolidation and reporting solution can help with the transition to cloud ERP by providing consistent processes and reports during the transition period. Also, in a post-Cloud ERP world, the FCS compliments the ERP service.

You May Also Like