How to Fix Sales Forecasting with Revenue Performance Management (
Page 1 of 2 )
Traditional sales forecasting processes are broken, especially in this economy. Instead of using top-down sales forecasting, real-time, continuous bottoms-up revenue forecasting gives companies the visibility to see what changes in the forecast matter most and why they occurred. Armed with this information, executives can hold the organization accountable to the forecast. Knowledge Center contributor Southard Jones explains how to use revenue performance management to proactively identify market trends and guide strategic business decisions.
The eWEEK Knowledge Center recently published an article
by contributor Joe Ruck on sales forecasting. While I agree with his
diagnosis that forecasting is rife with challenges, I disagree with his
prescription. Mr. Ruck's article treats forecasting as a means to
answer the question "What will top-line revenue be?"
Instead, the true value of forecasting lies in creating an
actionable revenue forecast that provides the entire organization with
detailed information to drive execution. You may even call this
comprehensive process that goes beyond sales forecasting "revenue
performance management."
It is estimated that companies miss the equivalent of 10 percent of
total annual sales in lost opportunity revenue that could have been
captured as a result of better insight on sales activities and target
markets. Here's an example: Company XYZ has a top-level forecast that
predicts a price decay for a particular product line in the Asia
Pacific region. The executives feel fortunate to have seen this shift
coming and lower prices to match the forecasted competition. The
business swallows the lost revenue, but survives because it doesnt
completely lose the market.
Suppose, in reality, that the price decay only existed for a
specific product in Korea, rather than for the full product line in the
entire region. The company lost a great deal of revenue by slashing
their prices across the board. How can you prevent this from happening
to you?
If it's broken, fix it
As Mr. Ruck described in his article,
customer relationship management (CRM) systems are inadequate for
creating a detailed, bottoms-up, forward-looking plan. CRM is great at
providing a top-line gut check on revenue for new opportunities, but is
grossly insufficient for:
1. Forecasting run-rate business
2. Product or account-based forecasting
3. Showing detailed changes on unit and price forecast
Instead, companies sometimes turn to statistical modeling or
top-down predictions to fill the void. Using algorithms to churn out
predictions has its uses, but no previous time period serves as an
accurate model for the unpredictability of today's markets. On the
other hand, predicting revenue with educated guesses or by multiplying
probability and overall pipeline is goal-setting, not actionable
revenue forecasting. For example, what does a plant produce based on 3X
pipeline coverage of revenue?