Budget Creation
A budget tells the story of how a team will execute over a period of time. The intention of a budget is to allocate financial resources against strategic objectives to pursue the meaningful work of scaling a SaaS business. An effective budget should be realistic, comprehensive, and aligned.
Realistic
For a budget to be realistic, it must be appropriately linked to past performance or benchmarked with realistic expectations where past performance cannot serve as a guide. The enemy of realism in the budgeting process is the blinding optimism of entrepreneurial leadership. As a result, effective executive teams need to access a more critical side of their nature when budgeting. Where strategic decks, company announcements and annual reports focus on the future and are optimistic in nature, budgets should be more likely to be achieved than missed. Despite this, management teams all too often set budgets that are optimistic from the start and impossible by February.
A GSV team member served on the board of a growth stage software company recently and saw the optimism vs realism problem first hand. The management team had set a ‘board budget’ which was the budget reported to the bank for covenant purposes. Then the management team set a management budget which served as the board’s true budget. Next there was a final budget intended to be the stretch budget. By March, the management team had all but abandoned reporting actuals to any budget but the ‘board budget’ and had to be reminded constantly that this budget, which they were not achieving, was intended to be the most pessimistic.
The core problem in their budgeting was a lack of realism. It was plainly obvious to the GSV team member that all three budgets were fundamentally flawed. Each budget included amounts for new sales bookings and sales and marketing expenses. The GSV team member compared those amounts and revealed that in the most pessimistic case, the management team thought they could achieve $0.45 in sales efficiency (how much sales & marketing expenses needed to achieve $1 of new ARR bookings). Knowing that the top 25th percentile struggles to beat $0.75 in sales efficiency, it is obvious that the proposed budget will likely be low on the revenue estimate throwing all the other expense categories out of balance.
Comprehensive
A comprehensive budget addresses each of the key strategic goals fully. This means not only does the budget take the past performance into consideration, but it is also sufficiently detailed to address each key strategic goal in the following year. Businesses morph and change, so for a budget to be comprehensive, a budget needs to take changes into account and not just consider past performance.
An easy way to accomplish this is to precede budgeting with strategic planning. A comprehensive strategic planning process incorporates the leadership and key roles within the company to design the most meaningful activities to focus on in the coming phase. The length of the phase is a year for most businesses. Each of the new strategic initiatives need to have a budget impact analysis to be incorporated into the budget formed from past performance.
Aligned
Someone must own and manage a budget for it to mean anything. Management creating a budget and hiding it from the people making cost-based and revenue impacting decisions is like playing a multi-month game and hiding the score. It is ineffective and inert at best. At worst, it wrecks the business.
An aligned budget requires a few key items:
Below is a general step-by-step guide that will get you started on creating your own budget creation plan.
Prepare:
Meeting 1: Vision and Delegation
Meeting 2: Budget Review and Defense
Share the consolidated document at least 1 day before the meeting. All participants should come prepared to:
Meeting 3: One-on-One Meetings
Meeting 4: Budget approval
Incentives
Troubleshooting
If your budget includes payroll and the team is too small to sufficiently hide the pay, then remove payroll from the departmental areas or make it a blank number on the P&L. Payroll and compensation can be managed from the top for smaller teams.
If you are struggling to get people to care about following up with the budget, then your incentives are not meaningful enough.
If all you hear is ‘we are too thinly staffed’ and ‘we cannot possibly accomplish this with these few resources’, be in good cheer as this is the common refrain from running a SaaS company. Remind the team of the vision of the company and the importance to remain focused only on what is most important. Often times in SaaS firms, the various requests from customers, partners, vendors, and internal stakeholders create a fog of strategic confusion that leads to people running frazzled and incapable of accomplishing anything. Be wary of this. Such feedback in the budget process is indicative of a lack of focus.
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