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Business|Financial|Services|Systems|Testing
Business|Financial|Services|Systems|Testing
business|financial|services|systems|testing

Why scenario planning belongs at the centre of your budgeting and forecasting cycles

21st January 2026

     

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For many organisations, financial planning still centres on a single approved view of the year ahead. The budget is finalised, locked in and used as the primary reference point for performance tracking.

In practice, that approach is increasingly fragile because it leaves little room to test assumptions as conditions change. Cost structures shift, revenue drivers behave differently to plan, and external pressures introduce variance that cannot be addressed through reporting alone. Strategic planning requires finance teams to look beyond variance explanations and actively model how different outcomes would affect the business before they materialise.

Moving beyond a single view

“Scenario planning extends planning beyond a single forecast and allows finance leaders to assess exposure, understand sensitivity and prepare responses in advance,” says Alwyn Pretorius, GM at Infinitus Reporting, who provide software and services to group FP&A and reporting teams. 

He adds that one needs the ability to ‘tweak’ various drivers, in order to test multiple assumptions likely to be affected by different micro- and macro circumstances. This way, organisations can identify potential pressure points and make informed choices without waiting for actual results to dictate action.

What’s more, forecast models need to be dynamic and flexible in order to re-calculate fiscal outcomes as and when key assumptions are adjusted, all while maintaining record of the different scenarios being calculated. Business leaders need to compare outcomes side by side in order to assess risk, impact and opportunity across the different scenarios.

Data collection and collaboration

“Even in well-resourced finance teams, data collection remains a bottleneck. Planning requires inputs from operational areas that may not sit in finance or have direct access to accounting or reporting systems. The challenge is the same whether consolidating for reporting or for planning,” says Pretorius.

Effective scenario planning incorporates this reality. It requires processes and tools that allow operational teams to submit forecasts in context, while giving finance visibility and control over aggregation, assumptions and influencing factors. This makes scenario testing scalable across units, regions and business functions.

Aligning strategy with execution

Scenario planning is valuable only if it informs decision-making. Comparing alternative forecasts against the original budget and against each other reveals where assumptions matter most, where risks are concentrated, and where contingency plans should be in place. This transforms planning from an administrative exercise into a strategic lever, allowing organisations to act with foresight rather than react to deviation.

“Modelling multiple outcomes and linking them to actionable responses ensures finance teams equip leadership with the information needed to navigate volatility,” says Pretorius. “This approach strengthens resilience and supports agile decision-making, giving the business confidence to invest, control costs or pivot where necessary.

Planning as a continuous discipline

Strong financial planning is not a once-a-year task. It’s continuous. This allows organisations to identify trends and adjust assumptions in order to recalibrate decisions throughout the year.

“The goal is not in predicting the future perfectly, but in preparing for multiple possibilities. Scenario planning is crucial in this way, and in allowing organisations to move beyond reactive reporting to better anticipate risk and make decisions with clarity,” concluded Pretorius. 

 

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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