Birmingham Institute
for the Deaf Improves Financial Control. The UK's voluntary sector is reeling under the two fold
barrage of reduced donations and increasing financial reporting
requirements.
Birmingham Institute for the Deaf turned to Exchequer to deliver
the rapid, accurate and consistent financial information required
to maximise resources, monitor overheads and support strategic
growth.
The charity is now leveraging Exchequer's tight links with
Microsoft Excel to produce management accounts and statutory
reports such as SOFA (Statement of Financial Activities) rapidly,
with minimal administrative overhead. Improved information combined
with faster turnaround of invoice production has enabled the
organisation to reduce its debtor days, while multi-dimensional
analysis is supporting improved understanding of its cost base
across multiple service offerings.
Voluntary Sector
Founded in 1899, the Birmingham Institute for the
Deaf (BID) has developed a reputation for providing innovative,
high quality services to meet the many and varied needs of deaf
people. BID has 120 full time staff and 50 volunteers and an annual
income of £4 million used to provide services to deaf people in
Birmingham, Solihull and the West Midlands.
Despite the increasing pressures on charitable
donations and the challenge to win a share of financial commitment
from a plethora of other charitable organisations, from child
welfare to hospice provision, BID is experiencing significant
growth. The introduction of the Supporting People Service, in April
2003, has prompted an increase in revenue. Indeed, over the past
three years, the institute has seen revenue increase by 50%.
Michael Price, (Finance and ICT Director) of
Birmingham Institute for the Deaf, explains, "In common with a
number of voluntary, community sector organisations, BID's primary
objective is to ensure we spend our limited financial resources
effectively by providing a full range of services for the deaf
community, most of which are not satisfactorily funded via local or
central government. The main challenge we face as an organisation
is to recover full costs on our contracts."
Three years ago BID's levels of overdue debt were
inappropriately high and its cash position poor. Critically, the
finance department was struggling to attain the insight into
financial performance required to support strategic
direction. "An inability to access information combined with
unclear reporting structures and accountability was severely
constraining BID's ability to monitor financial performance," Price
confirms.
Financial Control
BID decided to replace its Sage accounting
product with a new system that could deliver improved management
reporting information. Following a market review, BID opted for
Exchequer from IRIS Enterprise Software. "The primary objective was to implement a
system that made the process of inputting and retrieving
information simple and timely," says Price. "Exchequer's tight
integration with Microsoft Excel also means that there was no need
to learn how to use an inflexible report generator."
BID was also keen to avoid expensive consultancy
charges for each upgrade or system enhancement. Exchequer's
scaleability and ease of implementation ensures that the system can
continue to support BID without additional overheads. Furthermore,
Exchequer's ease of operation enables BID to simply add new
departments when additional services, such as Supporting People,
are added.
The charity was also impressed with Exchequer's
ODBC links, which ease the integration with other applications,
such as the database that supports BID's Interpreting Service, and
the tight level of integration with the organisation's payroll
software.
Says Price, "The ease with which information is
entered into Exchequer has significantly reduced the administrative
overhead, releasing finance staff to concentrate on more productive
activity such as analysing costs."
Furthermore, BID has been able to speed up the
production of invoices which, combined with clearer management
information, has removed the problem of long-term overdue sales
invoices. He adds, "Bank reconciliation is now done daily, as is
the cash position, enabling the finance team to focus on analysing
performance."
Performance Monitoring
Indeed, the quality, timeliness and accuracy of
management information now available has transformed the charity's
understanding of its cost base. Furthermore, the link between
Exchequer and Microsoft Excel has enabled BID to produce management
accounts within a day, a process that used to take a week, while
the creation of annual statutory accounts has been streamlined.
Says Price, "Information gathering has been transformed from a
tedious, time consuming process to a straightforward, often
automated activity.
The production of SORP reports is now simply another version of the
Management accounts – information is consistent and is very easy to
access at all times." Furthermore, BID is using Exchequer's
multi-dimensional analysis to achieve a detailed understanding of
its costs. "We can look at spend per cost centre, or per department
and drill down through the detail to get real understanding of cost
anomalies," he says.
For example, BID can now review its
telecommunications cost by department, undertaking detailed
analysis to ascertain where cost savings could be made. Actual
spend against budgets can be reviewed with the 12 budget holders,
using the drill down capabilities to understand patterns in
expenditure.
"Exchequer is also enabling BID to proactively
monitor the performance of new services. Each new service becomes a
cost centre with an established budget, providing a benchmark for
rapid assessment of the success of any new strategic direction,"
Price confirms.
Future Development
Over the next few months BID plans to implement the
Exchequer Purchase Order system and also
the automation of the production of some 2,500 sales invoices
annually.
Price concludes, "Exchequer has not only
provided rapid access to excellent management
information but it also gives us a platform to manage and support
BID's planned growth. Critically, Exchequer enables us to upgrade
and add functionality at any time without incurring the huge
consultancy fees associated with many financial software products,
costs that are simply untenable within the voluntary sector."
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