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GUEST BLOG: Zero-based budgeting – a great idea, one step at a time

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Ian Stone, managing director, UK and Ireland, Anaplan

Zero-based budgeting (ZBB) allows companies to reduce unnecessary costs, increase profits and maximise shareholder value.

It is a cost management approach adopted by many businesses, especially in the consumer goods sector and it’s no secret that ZBB is often associated with acquisitions or firms positioning themselves for a sale.

As a result, ZBB is often seen negatively by employees who, on the whole, fear such change. However, if CFOs avoid focusing purely on the bottom line, and instil ZBB broadly across the business, they could use such an approach to fuel investment for company priorities, boost growth and increase brand investment.

AUSTERE TIMES

Why the sudden need for change? Well, with the post-Brexit economic situation across Europe remaining precarious, industry leaders are starting to wake up to the potential of ZBB. A lot of them have spoken publicly about how it has helped them save on areas such as overhead costs, which can then be reinvested elsewhere.

Alternatively, such savings can be used to return funds to the shareholder (e.g. dividend increase, share buyback).

All organisational activities— from the way orders are fulfilled, to individual marketing campaigns, to IT and legal – are rigorously reviewed so funding for each activity can be recalibrated

This level of efficiency cannot always be realised through traditional budgeting processes, based on extrapolating last year’s spend. Quite simply, it fails to provide the detailed insight needed. ZBB can ­– and that’s what’s driving its increasing adoption during these volatile economic times, especially for any consumer-facing companies struggling to maintain margins at a time when prices are largely capped, or even decreasing.

For this reason, ZBB is also gaining adherents with manufacturing, advertising, and hospitality companies – as well as public sector bodies following continued government austerity measures.

THE DEVIL’S IN THE DETAIL

Planning is central to the ZBB process. All organisational activities— from the way orders are fulfilled, to individual marketing campaigns, to IT and legal – are rigorously reviewed so funding for each activity can be recalibrated.

Inevitably, this is a large undertaking. However, here are five ways businesses can effectively apply ZBB for the benefit of the wider organisation:

Managers need to make informed decisions about how changing activity volumes and different service levels impact costs

A NEW APPROACH

Although ZBB is less likely to have a negative impact on employee morale than successive rounds of across-the-board cost cutting, well-planned internal communication and a cloud-based collaborative infrastructure to underpin the technology are needed before managers embrace this new approach to planning.

With your employees on board, and improved results or savings beginning to show, the true potential of ZBB will begin to materialise – helping firms across all sectors navigate the choppy seas of economic instability.

About the author

Ian Stone is the managing director for the UK and Ireland at Anaplan. Stone’s role includes responsibility for sales, pre-sales, marketing, consulting, support and operations, while day-to-day he aims to ensure that Anaplan’s customer focus is driven throughout his region.

Prior to joining Anaplan, Stone held positions with Business Objects and Cognos before going on to found Vue Analytics – a reseller dedicated to bringing the Anaplan platform to the UK market. Following a successful launch Anaplan acquired Vue Analytics and in 2013, he was appointed to his current role in the organisation.

Stone has over 15 years’ experience working in the Enterprise Performance Management (EPM) and is widely considered an expert in the application of EPM across the sales function.

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