There has always been a huge disconnect in business between good process engineering and good process execution. In the good ole' days, this was solved through endless training and piles of paperwork.
Then came the "Rise of the Spreadsheet". Like a snake, he infilterated every aspect of your company's operations He was your financial model. He ran your sales. He managed your employee files. He even picked up your kids and dropped off your dry cleaning. In absence of a better solution, the Spreadsheet became the go to solution to fill in the gaps in your nuanced business process.
But with the rise of platform-as-a-service software such as Intuit's QuickBase, the spreadsheet - your longtime best friend - has become an enemy that is destroying your business. Here's how:
Almost by definition, a spreadsheet cannot create workflow. It can only present information about a process. It leaves your team to create their own processes - for better or worse - just so they can update your spreadsheet.
Spreadsheets are the "go-to" solution for managing process for most companies because people perceive them as being inexpensive and quick-to-implement. After all, most companies already have access to major spreadsheet software packages - no procurrement process, no headaches, right?
However, over time, spreadsheets can be hugely expensive - both in real costs and opportunity costs.
Don't underestimate the cost of maintaining a spreadsheet. First, there is daily inefficiency of sending spreadsheets back and forth via email. Moreover, most people don't realize the cost of errors in the spreadsheets themselves. Last year, Harvard economists found that 80% of spreadsheets have material errors in them leading to costs in the billions.
Behavior researches have long-noted that biases take place in spreadsheet development.For example, people building financial models in spreadsheets often design the model so that the results support their personal beliefs. On top of this, individuals often get fixated on the data presented in a spreadsheet - never thinking "outside of the spreadsheet." They make the mistake that the spreadsheet provides a holistic view of a situation and do not think about the less concrete as
pects of a problem. This is behavior is reinforced when a spreadsheet is used repeatedly in, say, a regular meeting
Spreadsheets are not evil and certainly have a place in a business; however, web-based database platforms such as Intuit QuickBase, offer some strong advantages over spreadsheets. For example,