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As you might have heard, SAP has a new ERP suite: S/4HANA. While the thought of migrating your company to an entirely new ERP, or upgrading your existing ERP, may seem like bad news to some, it’s actually far from it.
This article will discuss SAP S/4HANA in more detail, exploring the unique value it creates for utilities by bridging the gap between financial and regulatory objectives, along with the benefits of using a Central Finance approach to transition to S/4.
SAP S/4HANA has substantial business benefits. Leveraging in-memory computing, it reduces data redundancy and allows for real-time, drill down capabilities into figures that impact both the financial and regulatory planning process. For example, when an invoice gets posted to the financial ledger, it can automatically be reconciled and converted into regulatory insights, where performance-to-plan can then be analyzed at a line-item level, without data duplication.
It’s naive to think there won’t be some headaches and growing pains with the transition to S/4HANA. Every organization’s IT infrastructure and business requirements are unique, and it’s impossible to know every issue that will arise before the migration – but this isn’t new to anyone.
Most ERP transitions start with finance, which makes intuitive sense, but migrating to S/4HANA via a “big bang” approach only works for some. For many utilities, it’s better to utilize a measured approach, realize incremental business value, and see what issues arise. While there can be a cost and project timeline increase during a move to Central Finance, the slow and purposeful transition can be more palatable to traditionally risk-averse utility clients.
Central Finance provides the ability to transition to SAP S/4HANA, without disrupting your existing financial systems and processes.
In the most basic sense, it creates a sidecar (separate physical system) S/4HANA environment that leverages replicated data in real time – providing the ability to realize the business benefits of a unified journal entry system sooner, with lower risk.
For utilities, balancing financial and regulatory objectives can be extremely challenging – and the root of this issue largely stems from the inability to trace cost flows at an enterprise level, and bring insight to the work order or cost object level.
There are a vast amount of financial systems and processes in place at most companies, which help automate many aspects of financial reporting and monitoring. In contrast, most regulatory and FERC reports are created manually in Excel or through outdated modules, based on data from disparate financial plans and systems. This makes it difficult to track how a single invoice or new cost item impacts the company holistically – ranging from internal budgets, financial performance, to regulatory estimates. This issue also creates rate case delays, which costs utilities millions every day.*
Rate cases generally take between nine and twelve months to complete. During this time, in most jurisdictions, the utility is prohibited from modifying its prices, yet costs continue to be incurred and investment must continue.
This lag can cause gaps in the ability of utilities to prudently recover incurred costs or, depending on the circumstances, may cause costs in the test year to be overstated. (Source: EEI) To address this, utilities have rapidly increased the number of rate cases they conduct, as shown in the chart below.
· Get ahead of rate cases by monitoring performance metrics in real-time
· Perform much more complex what-if analysis to develop and defend forecasts
· Automate many aspects of regulatory reports and filings, saving time and improving accuracy
· Reduce the effort required to create a rate-case
· Respond to intervener questions faster, with more comprehensive information using the traceability functionality
That’s just one component of the value SAP S/4HANA provides. To see for yourself how S/4HANA, Central Finance, and Finance4U work together to streamline the rate case process use the link below to set up a demo. You can also view additional resources on regulatory reporting here.