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Does it ever cross your mind that praise can be negative? I guess not. After all, it looks harmless and seems to be quite effective. Conventional wisdom says that if you praise people, they are motivated to do better.
People who have been praised throughout their life by their well-meaning parents, friends, and teachers for their talent and smartness or those who have experienced extreme focus on talent and smartness throughout their childhood learn to value only intelligence. No wonder when these people enter the workforce, they continue to seek approval and demand praise every step of the way.
Every opportunity is a measure of their intelligence — do I look smart, how will I be judged, what if others find my ideas dumb. With a single-minded focus on validating themselves, all their actions are rooted in establishing their worth. Every mistake hurts their reputation and every failure is a reflection of their competence. They care less about learning and more about proving themselves. Their sense of morality sometimes takes a hit as they resort to brutal behaviors — demeaning others by yelling, insulting, controlling, or taking undue credit — all in an attempt to boost their self-esteem.
Carol Dweck, professor of Psychology at Stanford University summarised this unfortunate reality from Morgan McCall’s book High Flyers:

People often like the things that work against their growth. . . . People like to use their strengths . . . to achieve quick, dramatic results, even if . . . they aren’t developing the new skills they will need later on. People like to believe they are as good as everyone says . . . and not take their weaknesses as seriously as they might. People don’t like to hear bad news or get criticism. . . . There is tremendous risk . . . in leaving what one does well to attempt to master something new.

What Do Organizations Do with Such People?

They feed and promote this mindset. They praise people for their brilliant ideas conveying the message “we value talent and smartness.” They shower people with rewards and bonuses for their achievements communicating to everyone else around “all we care about is success.”
What happens when these people take on a leadership role? Their mindset of valuing brilliance above everything else amplifies leading to disastrous results. History is full of leadership fiascos with great promises that turned out to be the biggest disasters. This article from Malcolm Gladwell in The New Yorker is as valid now as it was 18 years ago. Describing the talent mindset at Enron and the consultants at McKinsey who wandered the hallways at the company’s headquarters, he points out “They were there looking for people who had the talent to think outside the box. It never occurred to them that, if everyone had to think outside the box, maybe it was the box that needed fixing.”
He also talks about the impact of an environment that values innate talent and what happens when times get tough and that self-image is threatened “They have difficulty with the consequences. They will not take the remedial course. They will not stand up to investors and the public and admit that they were wrong. They’d sooner lie.”
Really, is praising people for their intelligence and achievements the only way to develop people who will be the leaders of tomorrow? Is there a better way out?
What if we praised people for their hard work, for their ability to persist despite failures and setbacks, for taking initiatives to build new skills, for standing up to their mistakes, for believing in their growth, and implementing the right strategies to overcome their shortcomings. What does this kind of praise tell them?
It tells them the value of effort in building abilities. It teaches them the importance of implementing the right strategies to solve problems. It encourages them to seek help to make progress on their task. It creates a passion for learning that’s not driven by the need to look smart, but with a desire to cultivate skills, to stretch themselves to grow.
When these people take on leadership positions, this mindset guides them to put the well-being of the company and its people before their own needs, to place value on teamwork over individual accomplishment, and to foster growth and development of their people.

As growth-minded leaders, they start with a belief in human potential and development — both their own and other people’s. Instead of using the company as a vehicle for their greatness, they use it as an engine of growth — for themselves, the employees, and the company as a whole.
– Carol Dweck

Unlike leaders who pull their companies down with their focus on brilliance, these leaders lead their companies into greatness and gratitude filled in their own hearts and those of the people around them.
Choose your praise carefully as you will see the tremendous benefits in praising for growth over brilliance.

When Leaders Focus on Brilliance

They live in a world of personal greatness and entitlement, vie for labels, and will do anything to boost their image. Instead of building a long-lasting company, they spend time and money on enhancing their image.
With the constant need for validation, they use people in the company to feed their egos and showcase their superiority. Everything is about pleasing the boss. They surround themselves with people who boost their self-esteem. Agreement earns them admiration and disagreement is an attack on their intelligence. Instead of hearing people out, they punish dissent and shut people down.
They pounce at the less talented for their lack of intelligence and find those who are more talented than they are as threatening. They mistreat employees, yell, insult, control and abuse them into their way of doing things. They feel better about themselves by making other people feel worse. Employees worry about being judged all the time. When people are ridiculed for mistakes, they soon learn to keep their heads down, stop putting their critical thinking skills to use, and give in to groupthink.
Their belief in their superiority blinds them to see reality. They turn a blind eye to complaints, ignore warning signs, and fire people who tell them what they don’t want to hear. Their decision-making criteria are based on what would make them look good as opposed to what’s good for the company long term.

What happens when a leader refuses to confront the brutal facts? “The minute a leader allows himself to become the primary reality people worry about, rather than reality being the primary reality, you have a recipe for mediocrity, or worse. This is one of the key reasons why less charismatic leaders often produce better long-term results than their more charismatic counterparts.
– Jim Collins

Since success and failure are a part of their identity — success means they are smart and failure means they are not — they find excuses and blame others for failures instead of taking personal responsibility. Instead of investing in the future growth of their company, they play safe with fear of failure, become less responsive to challenges from competition, go with what’s tried and tested, and refuse to take risks. Why take up the challenge that can hurt their reputation? On the other extreme, they may not shy away from crossing ethical boundaries to beat the competition at all costs. Success is what they are after and it doesn’t matter how they get it.
With more focus on talent and less on potential, they do not invest in mentoring and coaching employees. Instead of putting practices in place to develop employees and help them collaborate together, they make them compete against each other.
Carol Dweck sums up their brilliant mindset “My genius not only defines and validates me. It defines and validates the company. It is what creates value. My genius is profit. Wow!”

When Leaders Focus on Growth

They operate with a learning mode. They don’t claim to be genius but promise to invest in development, their own development, and the development of their people. The drive and enthusiasm to grow their companies make them adopt long-term strategies over short-term tactics. They aren’t in the game to boost their ego or establish their self-esteem. It’s the pure joy of shaping the future of their company that excites and motivates them. More than prestige, they are in it for the challenge.
They understand that the path to success goes through failure. Why lose the opportunity that can drive their future growth? So instead of hiding behind their failures, they face them head-on. Failures don’t define their competence, they are glaring moments of self-reflection. They are opportunities to build skills, explore possibilities, experiment, and invest in the promise of a better future.
They lead with vulnerability. They accept mistakes to shift the focus in the organization from hiding mistakes to finding solutions. When they don’t know something, instead of pretending to hide their ignorance, they say “I don’t know”. These three powerful words show humility and self-confidence. To make decisions, they invite others to share their opinion which promotes the culture of constructive criticism. Since they do not connect their identity to their opinion, more value is placed on seeking the right answers which require open disagreements and championing flexibility of opinion over their sense of righteousness.
Difficult situations make them uncomfortable, no doubt. Instead of letting their discomfort get in the way of meaningful conversations, they embrace it. They choose to look past their discomfort in the value that these discussions provide — saving a lot of time that can be wasted due to stress and anxiety that comes from misalignment of expectations and lack of clarity of purpose.
They are tough but compassionate. They do not shy away from giving critical feedback while also challenging the people in their organization to step outside their comfort zone. They empower people to make decisions with the right channels of feedback to assist in better decision-making in the organization.
Leaders with the growth mindset operate with what Lou Gerstner, who turned IBM’s fortunes around by saving it from near bankruptcy said “Hierarchy means very little to me. Let’s put together in meetings the people who can help solve a problem, regardless of position.” Not blinded by reality, they focus on finding solutions that will push their company forward. This requires keeping an open eye to change in market trends, identifying and investing in future growth areas, and taking calculated risks.
With a focus on potential and growth, they invest in identifying and building future skills of the organization — skills that will be useful during difficult circumstances giving them an advantage over the competition. They foster productivity through coaching and mentoring, place value on teamwork by encouraging collaboration and defining shared measures of success.
Warren Bennis, a scholar, author, and widely regarded as a pioneer of the contemporary field of Leadership studies, writes in Organizing Genius:

Leaders are people who believe so passionately that they can seduce other people into sharing their dream.

His most admirable view on leadership says:

Good leaders make people feel that they’re at the very heart of things, not at the periphery. Everyone feels that he or she makes a difference to the success of the organisation. When that happens people feel centred and that gives their work meaning.

What kind of leaders think like this — those focused on brilliance or the ones driven by growth?
Previously published here.

Source de l’article sur DZONE

In the last decade, advances in processing power and speed have allowed us to move from tedious and time-consuming manual practices to fast and easy automated data analysis. The more complex the data sets collected, the greater the potential to uncover relevant information. Retailers, banks, manufacturers, healthcare companies, etc., are using data mining to uncover the relationships between everything from price optimization, promotions, and demographics to how economics, risk, competition, and online presence affect their business models, revenues, operations, and customer relationships. Today, data scientists have become indispensable to organizations around the world as companies seek to achieve bigger goals than ever before with data science. In this article, you will learn about the main use cases of data mining and how it has opened up a world of possibilities for businesses.

Today, organizations have access to more data than ever before. However, making sense of the huge volumes of structured and unstructured data to implement improvements across the organization can be extremely difficult due to the sheer volume of information.

Source de l’article sur DZONE

Spring and fresh designs are in the air. This month, it’s obvious that designers are feeling creative with new and interesting concepts that range from a new style for cards, homepage experimentation with multiple entry points or calls to action, and risky typography options.

Here’s what’s trending in design this month.

1. “Flat” Cards

Card-style design elements that allow users to click through to other content aren’t new, but the design of these cards is fresh and interesting.

Rather than more heavily designed cards with shadows and layers of content, flat styles are trending. Expect this trend to explode thanks to usage by Google for a shopping experience page.

The Google example below is interesting because Google’s Material Design guidelines are what helped card-style elements grow in popularity previously. However, those cards did include more layers, color options, buttons inside the cards, and shadows.

Today’s trending cards are completely flat. And beautiful.

Each of these websites does it in a slightly different way.

Heartcore, a consumer technology VC company, uses a series of flat cards as a navigation element to help users find their way through the website. Each features a bright color background with an illustration and a simple text block.

Each card has a nice hover state where only the illustration zooms inside the card frame. This is an interesting effect because it is exactly the opposite of the previous iteration of cards, which zoomed the entire card as a hover state.

Google Shopping uses that whole card bounce hover state (plus a not-so-flat shadow) for each card. The initial design is sleek with the pairing of white and image cards with simple text in each. You are enticed to click around to see what happens.

Click on Greece is a travel website design that uses simple cards with a minimal color and text overlay. The consistency of these cards makes the design pop and the beauty of the images draw you in. Each card also has a hover state with a darker color mask to guide navigation and make text elements easier to read.

2. Multiple Homepage Entry Points

For a long time, designers have been working off the philosophy that the homepage should have one direct entry point, creating a direct funnel for the user experience.

These designs throw that idea out the window, with multiple entry points and click elements.

You can think of it as the “create your own adventure” option for these designs.

It can be a risky concept if you are diving into analytics to pay attention to user paths. You want to make sure you know what choices users are making so that you can help them on the journey to the content and information that you want them to get from the visit.

But this type of design scheme does feel somewhat personalized, putting the user in more control.

Parcouse Epicuriens uses three flat card-style elements to help users pick what they want to see from the home page. There’s no other button or direct call to action, which is somewhat uncommon in today’s website design landscape. Users have to pick from one of the cards, scroll, or enter using the hamburger menu icon.

Tasty Find uses search options to help users start their journey. What’s interesting here are the choices – search for the food you want, pick something random, or (in the small print) find even more options. Users get three choices to begin their journey with the website.

What’s interesting is how simple this complex user journey looks. The design is easy to digest, but so many options could overwhelm users. This is one of those situations where you have to watch return search data and information and weigh the risk versus the reward of so much choice. It’ll be interesting to watch this design over time and see if the options decrease in number.

Accord also has several levels of user engagement opportunity. Option 1: Every block contains a click element. Option 2: Use the search at the top to narrow choices. This is an interesting configuration as the homepage for an e-commerce website because they get right to product selection and shopping without a softer sell or introduction.

3. Risky Typography

Typographic risk has been an ongoing theme for a little while. Designers are embracing experimental and novelty typefaces to stand out in the cluttered website space. Sometimes it works beautifully, and other times, it can fall short.

Here, each of these trending website designs uses a risky typography treatment. The risks are a little different for each design, from readability to comprehension to font delivery.

How Many Plants has duel typography risks: A funky typeface paired with odd word breaks. Interestingly enough, readability isn’t as big of a concern as you might think. This is likely because there aren’t many words, and they are short. Plus, the imagery ties in nicely.

Do you notice a similarity between How Many Plants and The Great Lake? The typography has the same style with a blocky, slab, sans serif with alternating thick and thin strokes. (It’s the same font.)

The risk in the typography design for The Great Lake isn’t in the homepage display, although you might wonder what the design is about. It is carrying this font throughout the design. While it looks great large and with only a few words, it gets a little more difficult the more you see it. This type of mental reading weight can be difficult for visitors over time, creating an element of risk.

Zmaslo uses an interesting typeface with a liquid effect on top of an unusual word. That combination of text elements makes you think hard to read the homepage, despite its neat looks. The risk here is weighing visual interest against comprehension. Depending on the audience, this risk can be worth the chance.

Conclusion

Spring always seems to be that time of year where designers start thinking about new, fresh design elements. That might explain some of the “riskier” design choices and experimentation here.

Regardless of the motivation, it is always fun to see the creative stretch happen. It can be even more interesting to see what elements from these trends continue to grow in the coming months.

Source

The post 3 Essential Design Trends, May 2021 first appeared on Webdesigner Depot.


Source de l’article sur Webdesignerdepot

Gartner predicts that by 2023, over 50% of medium to large enterprises will have adopted a Low-code/No-code application as part of their platform development.
The proliferation of Low-code/No-code tooling can be partially attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, which has put pressure on businesses around the world to rapidly implement digital solutions. However, adoption of these tools — while indeed accelerated by the pandemic — would have occurred either way.
Even before the pandemic, the largest, richest companies had already formed an oligopsony around the best tech talent and most advanced development tools. Low-Code/No-code, therefore, is an attractive solution for small and mid-sized organizations to level the playing field, and it does so by giving these smaller players the power to do more with their existing resources.
While these benefits are often realized in the short term, the long-term effect of these tools is often shockingly different. The promise of faster and cheaper delivery is the catch — or lure — inside this organizational mousetrap, whereas backlogs, vendor contracts, technical debts, and constant updates are the hammer.
So, what exactly is the No-Code trap, and how can we avoid it?

What is a No-Code Tool?

First, let’s make sure we clear up any confusion regarding naming. So far I have referred Low-Code and No-Code as if they were one term. It’s certainly easy to confuse them — even large analyst firms seem to have a hard time differentiating between the two — and in the broader context of this article, both can lead to the same set of development pitfalls.
Under the magnifying glass, however, there are lots of small details and capabilities that differentiate Low-code and No-code solutions. Most of them aren’t apparent at the UI level, leading to much of the confusion between where the two come from.
In this section, I will spend a little bit of time exploring the important differences between those two, but only to show that when it comes to the central premise of this article they are virtually equivalent.

Low-Code vs. No-Code Tools

The goal behind Low-Code is to minimize the amount of coding necessary for complex tasks through a visual interface (such as Drag ‘N’ Drop) that integrates existing blocks of code into a workflow.
Skilled professionals have the potential to work smarter and faster with Low-Code tools because repetitive coding or duplicating work is streamlined. Through this, they can spend less time on the 80% of work that builds the foundation and focuses more on optimizing the 20% that makes it different. It, therefore, takes on the role of an entry-level employee doing the grunt work for more senior developers/engineers.
No-Code has a very similar look and feel to Low-Code, but is different in one very important dimension. Where Low-Code is meant to optimize the productivity of developers or engineers that already know how to code (even if just a little), No-Code is built for business and product managers that may not know any actual programming languages. It is meant to equip non-technical workers with the tools they need to create applications without formal development training.
No-Code applications need to be self-contained and everything the No-Code vendor thinks the user may need is already built into the tool.
As a result, No-Code applications create a lot of restrictions for the long-term in exchange for quick results in the short-term. This is a great example of a ‘deliberate-prudent’ scenario in the context of the Technical Debt Quadrant, but more on this later.

Advantages of No-Code Solutions

The appeal of both Low-Code and No-Code is pretty obvious. By removing code organizations can remove those that write it — developers — because they are expensive, in short supply, and fundamentally don’t produce things quickly.
The benefits of these two forms of applications in their best forms can be pretty substantial:
  • Resources: Human Capital is becoming increasingly scarce — and therefore expensive. This can stop a lot of ambitious projects dead in their tracks. Low-Code and No-Code tools minimize the amount of specialized technical skills needed to get an application of the ground, which means things can get done more quickly and at a lower cost.
  • Low Risk/High ROISecurity processes, data integrations, and cross-platform support are all built into Low-Code and No-Code tools, meaning less risk and more time to focus on your business goals.
  • Moving to Production: Similarly, for both types of tools a single click is all it takes to send or deploy a model or application you built to production.
Looking at these advantages, it is no wonder that both Low-Code and No-Code have been taking industries by storm recently. While being distinctly different in terms of users, they serve the same goal — that is to say, faster, safer and cheaper deployment. Given these similarities, both terms will be grouped together under the ‘No-Code’ term for the rest of this article unless otherwise specified.

List of No-Code Data Tools

So far, we have covered the applications of No-Code in a very general way, but for the rest of this article, I would like to focus on data modeling. No-Code tools are prevalent in software development, but have also, in particular, started to take hold in this space, and some applications even claim to be an alternative to SQL and other querying languages (crazy, right?!). My reasons for focusing on this are two-fold: 
Firstly, there is a lot of existing analysis around this problem for software development and very little for data modeling. Secondly, this is also the area in which I have the most expertise.
Now let’s take a look at some of the vendors that provide No-Code solutions in this space. These in no way constitute a complete list and are, for the most part, not exclusively built for data modeling. 

1. No-Code Data Modeling in Power BI

Power BI was created by Microsoft and aims to provide interactive visualizations and business intelligence capabilities to all types of business users. Their simple interface is meant to allow end-users to create their own reports and dashboards through a number of features, including data mapping, transformation, and visualization through dashboards. Power BI does support some R coding capabilities for visualization, but when it comes to data modeling, it is a true No-Code tool.

2. Alteryx as a Low-Code Alternative

Alteryx is meant to make advanced analytics accessible to any data worker. To achieve this, it offers several data analytics solutions. Alteryx specializes in self-service analytics with an intuitive UI. Their offerings can be used as Extract, Transform, Load (ETL) Tools within their own framework. Alteryx allows data workers to organize their data pipelines through their custom features and SQL code blocks. As such, they are easily identified as a Low-Code solution.

3. Is Tableau a No-Code Data Modeling Solution?

Tableau is a visual analytics platform and a direct competitor to Power BI. They were recently acquired by Salesforce which is now hoping to ‘transform the way we use data to solve problems—empowering people and organizations to make the most of their data.’ It is also a pretty obvious No-Code platform that is supposed to appeal to all types of end-users. As of now, it offers fewer tools for data modeling than Power BI, but that is likely to change in the future.

4. Looker is a No-Code Alternative to SQL

Looker is a business intelligence software and big data analytics platform that promises to help you explore, analyze, and share real-time business analytics easily. Very much in line with Tableau and Power BI, it aims to make non-technical end-users proficient in a variety of data tasks such as transformation, modeling, and visualization.

You might be wondering why I am including so many BI/Visualization platforms when talking about potential alternatives to SQL. After all, these tools are only set up to address an organization’s reporting needs, which constitute only one of the use cases for data queries and SQL. This is certainly a valid point, so allow me to clarify my reasoning a bit more.

While it is true that reporting is only one of many potential uses for SQL, it is nevertheless an extremely important one. There is a good reason why there are so many No-Code BI tools in the market—to address heightening demand from enterprises around the world — and therefore, it is worth taking a closer look at their almost inevitable shortcomings.

Source de l’article sur DZONE

La plupart de mes conversations et pensées de ces derniers mois ont tourné autour de trois petits mots. Non, ce ne sont pas les trois petits mots auxquels vous pensez peut-être immédiatement, mais plutôt trois mots particulièrement chers au cœur des professionnels de la planification et de l’analyse financières en ce moment : l’agilité, la réactivité et la résilience.

Ce sont presque devenus des mots d’ordre pour le secteur ces neuf derniers mois, à mesure que les professionnels ont pris conscience de la nécessité de fournir à leur entreprise les informations requises pour prendre des décisions immédiates, de planifier et planifier encore, de générer des prévisions et de simuler de multiples résultats potentiels en fonction de variables en constante évolution. Et il apparaît clairement que certains y étaient bien mieux préparés que d’autres.

Notre enquête 2020 consacrée aux professionnels de la planification et de l’analyse financières, effectuée en collaboration avec FP&A Trends, a mis clairement en évidence une différence dans la réussite des pratiques de planification et d’analyse financières entre notre groupe entier d’entreprises interrogées et celles considérées comme ayant les « bonnes pratiques » en matière de planification et d’analyse financières. Parmi les défis cités par les entreprises interrogées, on retrouve le besoin de meilleurs systèmes de budgétisation et de prévision (cité par 30 % des entreprises interrogées), mais, d’un autre côté, de nombreuses entreprises déclarent utiliser des feuilles de calcul (73 %) dans le cadre de leurs processus de planification et de prévision. Bien sûr, même si nous avons tous utilisé et adoré les feuilles de calcul pour leur abondance et leur disponibilité, nous devons aussi reconnaître qu’elles ont certaines limites : elles nécessitent des interventions manuelles, sont propices aux erreurs de données et de calculs, peuvent devenir compliquées et peu pratiques, et ne pas offrir la flexibilité et l’agilité requises pour des recalculs et simulations rapides. Donc, à l’heure où les équipes de planification et d’analyse financières doivent se montrer particulièrement agiles, réactives et résilientes, les jours sont certainement comptés pour les anciens systèmes de planification, budgétisation et prévision basés sur feuilles de calcul. En fait, il est sans doute temps pour les entreprises d’examiner attentivement l’importance stratégique de la planification et de l’analyse financières pour leur activité, en réfléchissant aux défis identifiés en 2020, pour mieux cerner les opportunités d’améliorations pour 2021 et au-delà.

Et si les entreprises pouvaient…

  • Planifier et prévoir avec une facilité, une agilité et une flexibilité accrues.
  • Simuler de multiples scénarios de gestion en temps réel en réponse aux évolutions du marché.
  • Renforcer la résilience des plans stratégiques, mais aussi des processus et systèmes sur lesquels la planification et l’analyse financières reposent.

Comment de telles capacités permettraient-elles de transformer votre approche en matière d’analyse et de planification financières ?

Et, face à l’actuel besoin d’agilité, de réactivité et de résilience accrues dans le domaine de la planification et de l’analyse financières, quel est votre plan ?

Rejoignez mes collègues Pras Chatterjee et Chris Chan pour notre présentation consacrée à la planification et à l’analyse financières, proposée dans le cadre du SAP Finance and Risk Virtual Summit. Ils échangeront avec des invités spéciaux pour approfondir certaines des problématiques induisant des changements dans les pratiques de planification et d’analyse financières, et identifieront pour les professionnels de la finance des opportunités de transformer leur approche en matière de planification et d’analyse financières. Il s’agira de 45 minutes particulièrement riches et intenses, axées sur la planification et l’analyse financières, et la présentation de multiples fonctionnalités incontournables : ne manquez pas cet événement exceptionnel !

Merci de votre attention, nous espérons vous retrouver bientôt !

Publié en anglais sur blogs.sap.com

The post La planification financière en 2021 : trois petits mots appeared first on SAP France News.

Source de l’article sur sap.com

L’année dernière, alors que le monde traversait une période de disruption majeure, beaucoup d’entreprises ont dû revoir leurs priorités et s’adapter à cette nouvelle réalité. Dans un contexte aussi instable et incertain, il était essentiel pour elles de disposer de processus numériques solides, capables de faire face aux exigences du télétravail, des changements de comportement des consommateurs et d’un environnement macro-économique plus difficile.

On a fait appel aux organisations de gestion de la trésorerie et des risques pour identifier les nouvelles sources de liquidité, apporter des insights clés sur la trésorerie et atténuer les risques financiers. Ces organisations ont elles-mêmes pu obtenir une meilleure visibilité sur l’état de leurs liquidités, prendre de nouvelles mesures pour combler les manques de trésorerie et fixer intelligemment de nouvelles priorités.

Les équipes de gestion de la trésorerie ont vite abandonné leurs opérations de routine pour se consacrer à la gestion de la crise. Si quelques entreprises étaient bien préparées et capables de réagir vite, grâce à leurs investissements dans des systèmes intégrés de gestion de la trésorerie, pour d’autres, la crise a été un signal d’alarme qui les a forcées à accélérer leur transformation pour améliorer leur collaboration et l’automatisation de leurs processus.

Aujourd’hui, alors qu’on espère voir la vague de la crise reculer, les équipes de gestion de la trésorerie doivent prendre le temps de réfléchir aux initiatives prioritaires à lancer afin de continuer à accélérer leur transformation.

Quels outils doivent-elles adopter pour renforcer leur collaboration et mettre en place un processus complet de gestion de l’actif circulant, des créances en cours aux encaissements ? Comment peuvent-elles obtenir une visibilité en temps réel sur la trésorerie, sans continuellement rechercher manuellement les mêmes informations ? Comment peuvent-elles mettre en œuvre un traitement direct au moyen des systèmes et réseaux adéquats ? Comment peuvent-elles mieux automatiser leur processus de gestion des commandes, en exploitant les nouvelles technologies telles que le Machine Learning ? Doivent-elles modifier leur stratégie de risque lié aux opérations de change pour mieux se préparer à la prochaine crise ? Comment peuvent-elles repenser le financement de leur chaîne logistique ?

Gestion des risques et de la trésorerie

Pour vous apporter des insights sur certaines de ces questions, nous avons créé le « Treasury and Risk Show », dans le cadre du sommet virtuel SAP Finance and Risk. Nous présenterons les innovations de SAP pour venir en aide à ses clients en ces temps difficiles.

Des experts SAP en gestion de la trésorerie et des risques vous parleront de la stratégie SAP, du portefeuille de produits et des dernières innovations dans ces domaines.

Vous verrez aussi comment Zalando, leader de la vente en ligne, vient de terminer la mise en œuvre de SAP Treasury and Risk Management, en plus de SAP S/4HANA. Ils nous expliqueront comment, en transformant leur gestion de la trésorerie, ils ont pu se préparer à réagir vite à la crise et à accélérer leur croissance.

Nous avons hâte de vous présenter la proposition de valeur de SAP pour vous aider à réellement faire avancer votre gestion de la trésorerie et des risques.

The post Gestion des risques et de la trésorerie : des organisations qui vont de l’avant appeared first on SAP France News.

Source de l’article sur sap.com


Le défi :

En ces temps de risques particulièrement évolutifs, les entreprises ne peuvent plus fermer les yeux sur des approches manuelles, cloisonnées et désagrégées en matière de gestion des risques. Elles doivent transformer leurs processus GRC et leurs systèmes SAP clés pour rester résilientes.

Les options possibles :

Avec les solutions SAP® GRC, vous pouvez intégrer des contrôles à un processus de gestion et bénéficier de meilleurs insights sur les anomalies et les potentiels événements à risque. Vous pouvez exploiter le Big Data directement à partir de vos applications SAP pour la surveillance des exceptions et l’obtention de meilleurs insights.

Comme nos solutions partagent une même plateforme technologique, la capacité d’obtenir ces insights en temps réel, via la surveillance automatisée des contrôles et des indicateurs de risques clés (partageables entre nos solutions), vous permet de véritablement transformer vos processus GRC. À partir de nos solutions SAP GRC, vous pouvez procéder à des agrégations et communiquer les principaux risques et statuts de conformité aux décideurs via SAP Digital Boardroom ou via des solutions orientées partenaires, telles que Risk Navigator d’EY.

La phase de découverte :

Nous savons également qu’en matière de transformation numérique la compréhension des fonctionnalités proposées et de leur valeur ajoutée, tout comme la réalisation d’une analyse de rentabilité, sont essentielles. Si vous avez besoin d’aide pour cette analyse, n’hésitez pas à recourir à l’un de ces calculateurs de valeur (pas d’inscription nécessaire).

Voici les calculateurs disponibles, accompagnés d’une brève description :

SAP Access Control (s’applique aussi à SAP Cloud Identity Access Governance) : découvrez les avantages de l’automatisation de l’analyse et de l’atténuation des risques, mais aussi de la gestion des rôles et des privilèges, de la mise en service et des certifications d’accès dans vos environnements hybrides.

SAP Process Control : explorez les améliorations possibles dans des domaines tels que la gestion des risques, les contrôles, le mappage des réglementations et politiques, les tests (notamment la surveillance continue des contrôles), les évaluations, etc.

SAP Risk Management : quantifiez les avantages potentiels d’une approche d’entreprise en matière de gestion des risques dans des domaines tels que la planification, la gestion des réactions ou encore l’identification, l’analyse et le reporting des principaux domaines à risques.

SAP Audit Management : découvrez comment rationaliser les audits internes et améliorer leur qualité en facilitant la documentation des preuves, l’organisation des tâches administratives et la création de rapports, sur site et à distance.

SAP Business Integrity Screening : identifiez les opportunités d’économies potentielles en réduisant les pertes liées à la fraude, via le contrôle de gros volumes de transactions, mais aussi de partenaires, afin de détecter toute anomalie.

Invitation spéciale : en savoir plus à l’occasion de notre prochain événement virtuel !

Rejoignez-moi, ainsi que mes collègues Neil Patrick, Thomas Frenehard et Vishal Verma, pour obtenir des insights de la part de SAP, mais aussi de nos invités spéciaux, Marsha Reppy d’EY et Michael Rasmussen de GRC 20/20, pour notre présentation intitulée « Risk and Compliance », proposée dans le cadre du sommet virtuel SAP Finance and Risk.

Nous évoquerons l’environnement actuel et la façon dont les technologies SAP peuvent aider les professionnels de la gestion des risques, des audits, des contrôles et de la conformité à transformer votre approche en matière d’automatisation et de conformité. Nous évoquerons également nos principales solutions GRC (Thomas Frenehard), ainsi que notre solution SAP Cloud Identity Access Governance (Swetta Singh).

En somme, nous vous proposons 45 minutes particulièrement riches et intenses, axées sur les risques et la conformité, et la présentation de multiples fonctionnalités absolument incontournables.

Informations complémentaires :

En attendant, voici quelques suggestions :

  • Regardez cet entretien de 10 minutes avec le directeur des audits internes d’OYAK Mining Metallurgy Group, Dilek ÇETİN, qui explique comment son entreprise a transformé ses processus d’audit et GRC via un modèle basé sur « trois lignes », pour plus d’automatisation, d’assurance et de visibilité, grâce aux solutions SAP GRC.
  • Accédez à notre dizaine de sessions à la demande pour bénéficier de présentations de produits approfondies et pour découvrir les nombreux cas dans lesquels SAP utilise ses propres solutions pour gérer les risques, automatiser des centaines de contrôles et effectuer ses propres programmes d’audit interne à travers l’entreprise. Inscrivez-vous pour regarder la session de votre choix et approfondir les domaines de la GRC (gouvernance, gestion des risques et conformité), de la gouvernance des accès, de la confidentialité et de la cybersécurité.
  • Découvrez l’approche de KraftHeinz avec les solutions SAP GRC et son parcours avec Risk Navigator d’EY.

Publié en anglais sur blogs.sap.com

The post Gagnez en résilience en optimisant la gestion des risques et de la conformité appeared first on SAP France News.

Source de l’article sur sap.com

Just like a tortoise hides inside its shell and a porcupine’s sharp quills leap to attention when they sense danger, we human beings also put on protective armor when we feel threatened. Risky situations, anxiety from the unknowns, and the danger of being exposed evoke the same emotional response as the fear of being chased by a predator. 

We feel vulnerable. But instead of embracing vulnerability, accepting our fears, and leading with curiosity, we put on a shield of protection. We project confidence even when we are scared, speak with surety even when we are unsure, hide our mistakes with the fear of disapproval and avoid confrontation to save ourselves from the risk of emotional exposure. 

Source de l’article sur DZONE

Clôture provisoire, clôture définitive, clôture légale, clôture de gestion ou clôture de groupe : pour répondre aux multiples attentes en matière de clôture comptable, dans le respect des délais, les services financiers du monde entier utilisent des outils logiciels. Afin d’optimiser la clôture financière, il faut une stratégie cohérente et bien menée pour la gestion des systèmes, individus et processus : des processus de comptabilité transactionnelle à la clôture d’entité, en passant par le reporting d’entreprise, financier et de gestion, ou encore les déclarations. Cela requiert une gouvernance robuste, de la centralisation des processus et contrôles de conformité jusqu’à la gestion des données de base. Et tout cela se fait maintenant à distance.

La transformation de la clôture financière ne se résume pas à un projet ponctuel : il s’agit d’un parcours continu et incrémental, et les gains perçus dès les premières étapes de ce processus d’amélioration peuvent être considérables. Cela se traduit par une réduction de la durée du cycle de clôture, des risques et des frais d’audit, mais aussi par un moindre recours aux ressources financières et comptables internes pour les activités de clôture.

En limitant les heures supplémentaires, l’amplitude des journées et le travail répétitif liés aux activités de clôture, les entreprises aux opérations de clôture financière optimisées seront mieux positionnées pour retenir et attirer des talents comptables hautement performants ou à fort potentiel, et ce dans un environnement où le service financier est amené à jouer un rôle de plus en plus stratégique.

Le processus de clôture financière comporte de nombreuses étapes et les domaines à améliorer ne manquent pas. Rejoignez-nous le 16 février pour le sommet virtuel Finance and Risk pour obtenir plus d’insights de la part de pairs et d’experts SAP.

Max Koebler, SAP, concernant l’amélioration du processus de clôture d’entité

Pour réaliser rapidement une clôture financière, il faut exécuter de multiples étapes de processus correctement, dans les délais et dans le bon ordre. Des lacunes en matière de communication peuvent entraîner des retards qui compromettent le respect des délais de clôture.

De nombreuses entreprises gèrent le processus à l’aide d’une liste de contrôle, généralement dans Excel. Chaque entité de l’entreprise doit clôturer ses comptes et cela implique de nombreuses étapes et souvent différentes personnes. Souvent, différentes parties de l’entreprise gèrent différents sous-ensembles de la clôture (partage par division ou par localisation géographique par exemple). Ainsi, de nombreuses listes de contrôle Excel sont utilisées pour gérer le processus. Comme pour la plupart des étapes du processus de clôture financière, ces activités manuelles sont propices aux erreurs et particulièrement chronophages. La gestion du processus de clôture d’entité peut clairement bénéficier d’une standardisation, d’une centralisation et d’une automatisation accrues.

Philip Aliband, SAP, concernant la rationalisation du reporting de groupe et du processus de consolidation

Les entreprises doivent effectuer une consolidation d’entreprise et un reporting de groupe précis et dans les temps. La consolidation financière au niveau groupe constitue une tâche critique, hautement complexe et risquée. Avec les multiples entités d’entreprise, systèmes ERP, réglementations comptables, devises et personnes impliqués, la consolidation peut constituer un véritable défi. De nombreuses entreprises travaillent dans un monde fait de silos de données, sources d’inefficacités, de temps perdu et de frustration. Par exemple, des systèmes isolés conduisent souvent à des enregistrements comptables incomplets, à des processus de rapprochement particulièrement longs et même à différentes versions de la réalité.

Une consolidation unifiée offre une solution efficace pour relever ces défis. Cette nouvelle approche combine clôture locale et clôture de groupe, pour offrir bien plus de rapidité, de précision et de transparence à l’échelle du groupe. L’accès direct aux données financières des entités du groupe élimine le besoin de recourir à différents outils de clôture indépendants. Les données de clôture locale et les ajustements requis se reflètent immédiatement dans les résultats du reporting de groupe, sans avoir à les transférer manuellement. Ainsi, le processus de clôture est considérablement accéléré, libérant par conséquent les membres des équipes comptables et financières, qui pourront mener des activités à plus forte valeur ajoutée et devenir de véritables conseillers de confiance dans l’entreprise.

Krzysztof Noster, de Stanley Black & Decker, concernant la centralisation du processus de clôture et l’automatisation des rapprochements de comptes

Stanley Black & Decker renforce l’efficacité et l’automatisation de ses processus de comptabilité, de conformité, de reporting et de traitement des transactions grâce à SAP S/4HANA pour une gestion financière centralisée. Non seulement l’entreprise gagne du temps pour des activités à plus forte valeur, mais elle réduit aussi le nombre d’erreurs. Elle centralise non seulement son reporting, mais aussi ses processus comptables. Avec SAP Account Substantiation and Automation par BlackLine, Stanley Black & Decker a pu standardiser et rationaliser ses processus de clôture, complétant et étendant ainsi les solutions financières SAP. Cette application cloud optimise les étapes essentielles tout au long du parcours et soutient des pratiques de comptabilité continue afin d’améliorer l’efficacité, la productivité et l’intégrité des données.

Pour toutes ces raisons, je vous encourage pleinement à participer au sommet virtuel SAP Finance and Risk 2021 !

The post Réinventez votre clôture financière au niveau entité et groupe appeared first on SAP France News.

Source de l’article sur sap.com