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Financial forecasts for the final cost of activities are created to allow activity managers to make wise business decisions. The approach used for forecasting should vary based upon the nature of the activities being forecasted.
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Forecasting Expenses
Financial forecasts for the final cost of activities are created to allow activity managers to make wise business decisions. The approach used for forecasting should vary based upon the nature of the activities being forecasted.
When to Use Expense Forecasting
A budget is a forecast of expenses before the year or project starts. As the year or project progresses, more information is available. Actual spending occurs and it is seldom precisely what was in the budget. With this information and better insight into current business conditions, the forecast can be improved. I recommend starting annual forecasts after the first quarter and starting project forecasts after the first major milestone. Forecasts are typically done monthly once the financial variance report for the previous month has been completed.
Instructions
Expense forecasts can be done for an organization, department, project, or specific account and activity. They are done based upon an assessment of recent financial spending, the nature of the remaining work, and an assessment of upcoming business and industry events. Forecasts are always based upon a set of planned activities or functions that must be supported. There are three fundamental forecasting approaches.
- Bottom-up forecast: This is essentially starting over with the budgeting process. A new set of tasks or activities that must be supported during the forecast time period is created. An estimate for the spending required for each of those activities is generated. These estimates are summed to create a forecast.
- Trend forecast: In this case the existing budget and spending are used as the starting point. The variance between the budget and actual spending is determined. The percentage of underrun or overrun is considered the trend for the organization or activity and that same percentage is applied to the total budget to create a forecast for the total spending.
- Straight-line forecast: This is the simplest forecast since it does not require any budget or understanding of the remaining work. The total amount of spending – for whatever reason - is extrapolated to continue at the same rate through the rest of the year or project. While the easiest forecast to generate, it can be very inaccurate unless the nature of the work is at the same level each time period (known as level-loaded).
Department Forecasts
The most common approach used for forecasting functional departments is the trend approach. Any business or industry effect that is causing an underrun or overrun is likely to continue. If the departments work is “level-loaded,” the straight-line approach will also be fairly accurate.
In many functional department budgets there are some activities that are level-loaded and some that are tied to an event, such as a plant shutdown or major tradeshow. When the department budget is structured in this manner, a mixture of forecasting approaches may be required. Use straight-line or trend analysis to forecast the level-loaded work. The event related work should be forecasted with the trend analysis or bottom up approach.
Project Forecasts
Generally, the bottom-up approach is best for project activities. Specific project activities are often of short duration and can involve unusual and one-time work. The forecasts for these are changed in a bottom-up analysis based upon what has been learned on other project activities.
I normally forecast project work in “chunks.” Either do it for one each phase or for each milestone. If your business has a financial system that supports the earned value management methodology, that approach is far better than any other. However, most companies do not have this capability.
Finance organizations will often use straight-line analysis for project activities because it is a simple approach and it is the approach that is most often used for other overhead expenses. However this approach relies on two assumptions that are usually false with respect to project activities. Those assumptions are: 1) project work is level-loaded – the reality is that most project work occurs in spikes and valleys. 2) project work is on-schedule – the reality is that project work is often ahead or behind schedule and that is the reason that money has been spent or not spent.
Hints and Tips
- Straight line analysis is a good quick approximation for any type of forecast, but don’t rely on it for the final forecast if the activities are not level-loaded.
- If a major unplanned event occurs in your business or industry (natural disaster, merger, recall, etc.) do a new forecast with the new set of industry and business assumptions.
- When a project is nearly finished or during the last month of the year, do a bottoms-up forecast of the known work that will be completed in order to forecast the final value of spending.
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