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October 21, 2010
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About Nolan
The Robert E. Nolan Company is an operations and technology consulting firm specializing in the banking industry. Since 1973, we have helped banks innovatively redesign processes and apply technology to improve service, quality, productivity, and costs. Our consultants are senior industry experts, each with over 15 years of specialized experience. This depth, coupled with our collaborative approach, enables us to expedite and magnify improvement initiatives for our clients.

Visit our website to download a demo of our annual Efficiency Ratio Benchmarking Study, articles, and client success stories.


It's That Time of Year Again…
Dennis Sullivan
Chairman and CEO

Fall foliage, the start of the NFL season, kids back in school, and—oh yes—next year's budget! The dreaded budgeting process is well underway (hopefully), and predicting the future is at hand. With all the challenges facing today's economists about job growth, new sales, and the ever-volatile stock market, we executives are struggling with some of the same issues—growth, expense management, sales projections, and staffing needs. While there is little risk to economists in a bad prediction, today's business executives have a lot on the line in managing expenses. Preparing next year's budget requires skill whether you are a mutual organization, a stock company, or a not-for-profit health care organization.

Without some scenario-planning tools to help with the projections, the task can be difficult. And without some level of precision, you could spend the next 12 months answering to your CFO during monthly variance-reporting sessions. This time of year offers a great opportunity to look at total company performance for 2010 and evaluate what will change, what remained the same, and where you expect to have a different look in 2011. It is also an opportunity to review performance to last year's budget, evaluating not only sales projections, but staffing levels, outside spending (vendor management) on services (i.e., contract programmers), and temporary help against what was planned.

Establishing a well-thought-out staffing plan based on factually engineered metrics provides you with a model to plan for 2011, and you'll use it throughout the year to monitor the effects of changes in sales and operating performance. This cost model will account for 60% of your total budget. The other critical analysis that needs to be performed is a more comprehensive vendor management model to track and evaluate your external spends. Tightening the reins on outside spend will afford most companies an opportunity to conservatively realize up to a 5-15% reduction in overall spend.

Taking this broader analytic approach to the budgeting process allows those financially proactive companies to save money and turn their budgeting process into a model for ongoing analysis. Give us a call and let us help you during these challenging times. The Nolan Company has 37 years of experience helping companies conduct this kind of analysis and planning, and we would welcome the opportunity to help your organization.