Improving efficiency in budgeting: An interventionist approach to spreadsheet accuracy testing

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Improving efficiency in budgeting : An interventionist approach to spreadsheet accuracy testing. / Lueg, Rainer; Shijia, Lu.

in: Problems and Perspectives in Management (PPM), Jahrgang 10, Nr. 1, 2012, S. 32-41.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{742a721d523f4f2fb33d33f4a22a869a,
title = "Improving efficiency in budgeting: An interventionist approach to spreadsheet accuracy testing",
abstract = "Over the past three decades, the reliance on sophisticated spreadsheets for budgeting has emerged as a standard in most organizations (Hesse and Hesse Scerno, 2009). Despite these technological advancements, rich empirical evidence documents that technologically induced 'spreadsheet errors' can substantially lower the accuracy of spreadsheets (Powell et al., 2009). These errors lead to suboptimal decision making and biased performance assessment. The aim of this paper is to examine how spreadsheet error can be detected and prevented in the budgeting process. The research design applies models of spreadsheet accuracy testing (SAT) from Kruck (2006) and Vessey (1985). The paper, thereby, illustrates the error reduction process in budgeting as well as future spreadsheet error prevention through the use of VBA. The authors base the analyses on a unique dataset (interviews, participating observations, technical artifacts) gathered through 'action research' at a Chinese-Danish government organization, which uses budgets for assessing applications on research funding. Our results confirm and extend existing theory in the field of budgeting and SAT and provide interesting findings. First, the paper shows that later spreadsheet error in budgeting is already rooted in a poor conceptualization of the budget template, in non-workflow-oriented imputation of data and poor documentation of data requirements. Second, it illustrates how the accuracy of spreadsheets substantially improves by introducing even simplistic VBA. Third, we present evidence that the flexibility of the budgeting template itself to changes in the organizational environment fosters spreadsheet accuracy in the long term.",
keywords = "Budget, Non-profit and governmental organization, Public management, Spreadsheet accuracy testing (SAT), Spreadsheet error, VBA, Management studies",
author = "Rainer Lueg and Lu Shijia",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "32--41",
journal = "Problems and Perspectives in Management (PPM)",
issn = "1727-7051",
publisher = "Business Perspectives",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Improving efficiency in budgeting

T2 - An interventionist approach to spreadsheet accuracy testing

AU - Lueg, Rainer

AU - Shijia, Lu

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Over the past three decades, the reliance on sophisticated spreadsheets for budgeting has emerged as a standard in most organizations (Hesse and Hesse Scerno, 2009). Despite these technological advancements, rich empirical evidence documents that technologically induced 'spreadsheet errors' can substantially lower the accuracy of spreadsheets (Powell et al., 2009). These errors lead to suboptimal decision making and biased performance assessment. The aim of this paper is to examine how spreadsheet error can be detected and prevented in the budgeting process. The research design applies models of spreadsheet accuracy testing (SAT) from Kruck (2006) and Vessey (1985). The paper, thereby, illustrates the error reduction process in budgeting as well as future spreadsheet error prevention through the use of VBA. The authors base the analyses on a unique dataset (interviews, participating observations, technical artifacts) gathered through 'action research' at a Chinese-Danish government organization, which uses budgets for assessing applications on research funding. Our results confirm and extend existing theory in the field of budgeting and SAT and provide interesting findings. First, the paper shows that later spreadsheet error in budgeting is already rooted in a poor conceptualization of the budget template, in non-workflow-oriented imputation of data and poor documentation of data requirements. Second, it illustrates how the accuracy of spreadsheets substantially improves by introducing even simplistic VBA. Third, we present evidence that the flexibility of the budgeting template itself to changes in the organizational environment fosters spreadsheet accuracy in the long term.

AB - Over the past three decades, the reliance on sophisticated spreadsheets for budgeting has emerged as a standard in most organizations (Hesse and Hesse Scerno, 2009). Despite these technological advancements, rich empirical evidence documents that technologically induced 'spreadsheet errors' can substantially lower the accuracy of spreadsheets (Powell et al., 2009). These errors lead to suboptimal decision making and biased performance assessment. The aim of this paper is to examine how spreadsheet error can be detected and prevented in the budgeting process. The research design applies models of spreadsheet accuracy testing (SAT) from Kruck (2006) and Vessey (1985). The paper, thereby, illustrates the error reduction process in budgeting as well as future spreadsheet error prevention through the use of VBA. The authors base the analyses on a unique dataset (interviews, participating observations, technical artifacts) gathered through 'action research' at a Chinese-Danish government organization, which uses budgets for assessing applications on research funding. Our results confirm and extend existing theory in the field of budgeting and SAT and provide interesting findings. First, the paper shows that later spreadsheet error in budgeting is already rooted in a poor conceptualization of the budget template, in non-workflow-oriented imputation of data and poor documentation of data requirements. Second, it illustrates how the accuracy of spreadsheets substantially improves by introducing even simplistic VBA. Third, we present evidence that the flexibility of the budgeting template itself to changes in the organizational environment fosters spreadsheet accuracy in the long term.

KW - Budget

KW - Non-profit and governmental organization

KW - Public management

KW - Spreadsheet accuracy testing (SAT)

KW - Spreadsheet error

KW - VBA

KW - Management studies

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84887057642&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:84887057642

VL - 10

SP - 32

EP - 41

JO - Problems and Perspectives in Management (PPM)

JF - Problems and Perspectives in Management (PPM)

SN - 1727-7051

IS - 1

ER -