We recently hosted a webinar on "When Excel isn't enough: financial planning that works" with our host Chris Lofthouse, Commercial Director at Ometis, along with Michael Huntsman and Shahrear Haider from Jedox.
Check out the full recording, along with key insights from the session below.
Excel wasn't designed for collaborative financial planning in volatile business environments. Recent disruptions like Brexit, COVID-19, and global supply chain issues have highlighted this limitation.
"These aren't just isolated incidents anymore. They're becoming the new normal," explained Michael from Jedox during our webinar. "Businesses sticking to rigid annual planning cycles in Excel are at a massive disadvantage."
The typical Excel budgeting process involves:
This approach leads to multiple spreadsheet versions with inconsistent formulas, challenging data consolidation, and minimal audit capability. Finance teams often spend more time managing spreadsheets than analysing results.
Modern financial planning platforms like Jedox address Excel's core limitations while maintaining its familiar interface.
Jedox provides an Excel add-in that connects to a centralised database. This offers:
"It gives you seamless integration where you can write back," explained Shahrear in the demonstration. "If you make changes in Excel, it writes back to the database and reflects in your dashboards instantly."
Budget processes in Excel often lack structure and oversight. Jedox introduces automated workflows with:
Excel makes tracking budget versions challenging. A centralised system maintains a single source of truth while supporting:
"You can have full audit trail of time, which user made changes, what amount, what function was used," Shahrear noted. "This is really powerful, especially when facing auditors."
Jedox automatically combines actual results with forecast data, creating "version blending" that improves accuracy:
Unlike Excel's two-dimensional structure, Jedox supports multi-dimensional planning:
Financial logic stays in the database, not spreadsheet cells:
Transitioning from Excel to Jedox involves three key stages:
"Most users can adapt very quickly thanks to the Excel-like interface," Michael noted. "We offer pre-built templates and support through that transition."
While Excel remains valuable for ad-hoc analysis, dedicated financial planning platforms offer significant advantages for collaborative budgeting, forecasting and scenario planning.
Finance teams benefit from:
Book a personalised Jedox demo to see how it can solve your specific financial planning challenges. Our team can show you how to maintain the Excel interface your team loves while gaining the structure, security and collaboration tools you need: