We often hear from our customers that they originally set out to fix their resource management challenges with a spreadsheet. They needed a solution and fell back on what is comfortable. They opened a new Excel file, listed out projects and resources, and put together some semblance of a forecast. There was a sense of accomplishment that they now had a better view of their organization. While this path can feel sustainable and helpful, the situation can rapidly fall apart when data needs to be shared, multiple versions start popping up, different teams want their own reports and dashboards to analyze their separate workloads, and issues arise when trying to explain how data was inconsistently captured by multiple people inputting data into the spreadsheet. Instead of feeling like they had reached the top of mountain, users felt like they had hit an iceberg – because there is so much more to resource management, and Excel is a dead end.
We often hear from our customers that they originally set out to fix their resource management challenges with a spreadsheet. They needed a solution and fell back on what is comfortable. They opened a new Excel file, listed out projects and resources, and put together some semblance of a forecast. There was a sense of accomplishment that they now had a better view of their organization. While this path can feel sustainable and helpful, the situation can rapidly fall apart when data needs to be shared, multiple versions start popping up, different teams want their own reports and dashboards to analyze their separate workloads, and issues arise when trying to explain how data was inconsistently captured by multiple people inputting data into the spreadsheet. Instead of feeling like they had reached the top of mountain, users felt like they had hit an iceberg – because there is so much more to resource management, and Excel is a dead end.
Like how most of an iceberg is below the ice and you can’t see at first glance, most of important resource planning tools are below the surface and are not achievable through Excel, such as handling resource-based capacity, allocating people to work, handling absences, assignment status and approvals, plan versus actuals for forecasting, and skills management. Something as simple as concurrency is an issue, unless you are the sole tracker in your organization of all the projects and resources, otherwise everyone editing this one spreadsheet is unfeasible.