“It’s budget season. We’ve got to figure out how to deliver on our priorities with 30% fewer resources.”
This is what I heard from a C-Suite executive recently. She heads a critical business function, globally, for a complex, $1.5B enterprise. Probing further, I discovered that the mandate to cut costs wasn’t driven by poor business performance. In fact, business is good. And her unit’s work has been deemed mission critical for the organization’s success in managing its expected growth. Unfortunately, this executive’s situation is not unique. As the traditional “budget season” gets under way, CEOs and their CFOs might want to consider the following:
Like my C-Suite client, leaders are directed to create a budget that allows a specific decrease or increase versus prior-year spending. Certainly, deliberate attention to cost is important. Yet, blind adherence to percentage change disconnects the investment from intended outcomes. It may be expedient to forecast based on percentages; it does little to add clarity.
When budgeting is reduced to a plus-or-minus-percentage exercise, “budget season” becomes a trap. It’s no wonder, then, that people dread it.
The budget projects future spending and revenue based on experience and what’s known now. Budgeting is always imperfect because you can’t predict the future. You can make reasonable assumptions about familiar uncertainties—the economy, political or regulatory shifts, throughput, inventory, etc.—and anticipate potential opportunities. But there’s always something that’s missing or wrong.
As the year progresses, leaders learn. Conditions change. Investments drive progress or fail to deliver. Competitors and customers make unexpected decisions. Each of these shapes action and informs the numbers.
Making your strategy work effectively requires aligning strategy and operations. This is precisely what a strategic budget does: it connects resources and investment to the things that matter most to achieving your objectives. Further, a budget is highly visible throughout the organization. When CEOs transform the budget into a strategic tool, they ensure that everyone understands the relationship between resources and intended outcomes.
A strategic budget becomes a more effective tool for ongoing management, too. When uncertainty is particularly high, savvy CFOs create multiple budgets at the start of the year. This highlights how changes in key business levers can mitigate risk or create advantage. (See also: A Single Budget Won’t Cut It) During the year, CEOs elevate the conversation about actual-versus-budget performance to reconnect investment to strategic action. Both activities make it easier to reallocate resources rapidly and effectively as things change.
In this way, budget is no longer a season—or a trap. It’s an opportunity. Strategic budgets create line of sight for everyone about the impact of specific actions on the success of your strategy. The executives I advise review the strategic implications of the budget at least three times a year. They ask:
The plus-or-minus-percentage approach does little to enhance strategy. So, stop moving numbers around on a spreadsheet. It’s time to transform the way leaders think about budgets. Connect it directly and explicitly to the decisions and actions that have the greatest potential to achieve your vision.
CEOs and CFOs that embrace the budget as a strategic tool and process unlock the potential to accelerate performance—all year long.
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