HPC America is pleased to offer Espresso Tutorials library of e-books for SAP users at utility
companies. We’ve known the Espresso Tutorials team for years, and find their guides to be clear, insightful, and highly effective at helping SAP users boost their practical knowledge SAP ERP functionality.
If you're training a new SAP team, or want to provide reference materials for experienced users, Espresso Tutorials' books are a great resource. Learn more about discounted subscriptions to Espresso Tutorials online library, and specific SAP FICO titles that HPC recommends.
Showing posts with label sap fico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sap fico. Show all posts
Thursday, December 22, 2016
Friday, October 16, 2015
Video: Utility FICO/FERC panel discussion at SAP Controlling 2015
At last month's SAP Controlling conference, HPC moderated a panel discussion of four utility company controllers and FICO/FERC experts from RPU, NTUA, FirstEnergy, and Sharyland Utilities, covering a range of topics around modern cost accounting and regulatory reporting strategies for utilities on SAP.
Panelists Bryan Blom, Gerard Curley, Steve Law, and Armando Bustamante were joined in an engaging discussion by utility FICO/FERC professionals from PSEG, Salt River Project, CPS Energy, and EDF Renewable Energy.
Watch the SAP Controlling video online:
Panelists Bryan Blom, Gerard Curley, Steve Law, and Armando Bustamante were joined in an engaging discussion by utility FICO/FERC professionals from PSEG, Salt River Project, CPS Energy, and EDF Renewable Energy.
Watch the SAP Controlling video online:
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
Utility FICO/FERC Topics at SAP Controlling 2015 - Part 2/2
Following up on last week's post, the utility company panel discussion at the 2015 SAP Controlling conference will give utility company controllers, utility accounting and finance managers, and Rates department managers a chance to learn from several highly experienced utility FICO/FERC subject matter experts.
Steve Law, Business Analyst at FirstEnergy Corporation, will discuss FirstEnergy's steps to eliminate clearing groups and resolve negative flow errors. Steve has more than 35 years of experience in utility accounting, and has worked in General Accounting, Financial Reporting, Internal Controls, and Business Services. Most recently, Steve has been a project lead on FirstEnergy's upgrade to a "CO-centric" FERC model that enhances external reporting with Controlling module data.
Armando Bustamante, Controller of Sharyland Utilities, will speak about streamlining Sharyland's regulatory reporting and creating a hybrid functional Income Statement. Armando has more than 20 years of experience in accounting, including Financial Reporting and External Audit. He began his professional career with PriceWaterhouseCoopers in Venezuela and Dallas, before joining the Hunt Family of Companies in 2011. Armando is also a CPA.
Contact HPC to learn more about modern SAP FICO/FERC strategies for utilities at the 2015 SAP Controlling conference, and to request group discount registration passes.
Steve Law, Business Analyst at FirstEnergy Corporation, will discuss FirstEnergy's steps to eliminate clearing groups and resolve negative flow errors. Steve has more than 35 years of experience in utility accounting, and has worked in General Accounting, Financial Reporting, Internal Controls, and Business Services. Most recently, Steve has been a project lead on FirstEnergy's upgrade to a "CO-centric" FERC model that enhances external reporting with Controlling module data.
Armando Bustamante, Controller of Sharyland Utilities, will speak about streamlining Sharyland's regulatory reporting and creating a hybrid functional Income Statement. Armando has more than 20 years of experience in accounting, including Financial Reporting and External Audit. He began his professional career with PriceWaterhouseCoopers in Venezuela and Dallas, before joining the Hunt Family of Companies in 2011. Armando is also a CPA.
Contact HPC to learn more about modern SAP FICO/FERC strategies for utilities at the 2015 SAP Controlling conference, and to request group discount registration passes.
Friday, August 21, 2015
Sharyland Utilities to Join SAP Controlling 2015 Customer Panel
HPC America is pleased to announce that Sharyland Utilities will be joining the SAP Controlling customer panel discussion on modern cost accounting and regulatory reporting on September 22.

Armando Bustamante is the Controller of Sharyland Utilities, which serves over 50,000 electric delivery points in 29 counties throughout Texas. Armando is responsible for many aspects of SAP Financials at Sharyland, including general ledger accounting and reporting, accounts payable, financial regulatory reporting, and project accounting. Armando is currently leading Sharyland's implementation of the SAP FERC module, and he is a contributor on the implementation of a new hosted CIS module. Armando has more than 20 years of experience in accounting, including Financial Reporting and External Audit. He began his professional career with PriceWaterhouseCoopers in Venezuela and the Dallas offices before joining the Hunt Family of Companies in 2011. Armando is a CPA and earned an MBA from the University of Dallas.
Learn more about the utility company SAP FICO/FERC panel discussion at Controlling 2015.
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
FirstEnergy to join Utility Panel Discussion at SAP Controlling 2015
Back in January we announced that the 2015 SAP Controlling conference in San Diego would include for the first time some utility-specific content: a panel discussion of utility company accounting experts sharing their latest solutions to SAP cost accounting, regulatory reporting, and other SAP FICO/FERC challenges. (Plus, a networking session for utility industry professionals.)
We're very pleased to announce that Bryan Blom and Gerard Curley, Controllers from RPU and NTUA, respectively, will be joined on the utility industry panel by Steve Law, a business analyst and FICO/FERC subject matter expert from FirstEnergy Corporation, a diversified energy company headquartered in Akron, OH that serves 6 million customers across Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New Jersey, Maryland, and New York.
Steve has more than 35 years of experience in utility accounting, and has worked in General Accounting, Financial Reporting, Internal Controls, and Business Services. Since 1998, Steve's primary responsibility has been Regulatory Reporting; he led the SAP FERC module implementations at General Public Utilities Corp. in 1999, and at FirstEnergy in 2003. Today, he is a project lead on FirstEnergy's upgrade to a "CO-centric" FERC model that enhances external reporting with Controlling module data.
Learn more about the utility industry panel discussion at Controlling 2015, and contact HPC to share any questions or discussion topics that you would like the panelists to address.
We're very pleased to announce that Bryan Blom and Gerard Curley, Controllers from RPU and NTUA, respectively, will be joined on the utility industry panel by Steve Law, a business analyst and FICO/FERC subject matter expert from FirstEnergy Corporation, a diversified energy company headquartered in Akron, OH that serves 6 million customers across Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New Jersey, Maryland, and New York.
Steve has more than 35 years of experience in utility accounting, and has worked in General Accounting, Financial Reporting, Internal Controls, and Business Services. Since 1998, Steve's primary responsibility has been Regulatory Reporting; he led the SAP FERC module implementations at General Public Utilities Corp. in 1999, and at FirstEnergy in 2003. Today, he is a project lead on FirstEnergy's upgrade to a "CO-centric" FERC model that enhances external reporting with Controlling module data.
Learn more about the utility industry panel discussion at Controlling 2015, and contact HPC to share any questions or discussion topics that you would like the panelists to address.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Five SAP FICO/FERC Take-Aways from Our Customers
While 2014 isn't quite over, we thought it would be useful to share a few things we've learned from our utility company customers this year.
1. Cost flow models are the real culprits.
When we're engaged to audit SAP FERC processes, we sometimes find that a utility's core challenge is not regulatory accounting itself, but rather its larger cost flow model. Utilities that have been on SAP Financials for a decade or more often have cost flows that are too complex, too long, or otherwise ill-suited to support both the fine details required for rate cases, and the high-level summarization required for effective budgeting. Simplifying those legacy cost flow models to support modern internal and external reporting is usually Step One for these customers.
2. Payroll burdens aren't as transparent as they could be.
Utilities that charge "bundled" labor rates to orders — i.e., fully loaded with labor, allocated costs of employee benefits, and the employer portion of payroll taxes — lose the identity of the burdens when combined with long and complex cost flows. This makes compliance with FERC accounting regulations far more difficult, because the more secondary cost movements in a cost flow model, the less transparent the labor burdens become. The traditional FI-centric FERC solution and its flow of costs trace program attempts to keep track of those burdens as they move from senders to receivers, but this approach has a price: FERC and CO results of operations don't match. And that leads us to take-away #3...
3. FERC and CO don't match, and that's a problem.
We've talked about this many times before, and it's worth repeating: FI-based FERC models just don't work as well as CO-centric approaches in today's environment. Twenty years ago, when we thought that regulation would be phased out, it was entirely reasonable for FERC accounts to be based on FI documents alone. But in today's world, in which CO has such rich cost detail, there is no reason to tolerate painful FERC-CO reconciling differences any longer. More utilities are recognizing that "one version of the truth" can be more than just a marketing catch-phrase by adopting a CO-centric model in which both primary and secondary costs support FERC balances.
4. Regulatory accounting is under-appreciated.
This is a sensitive topic, but we've got to call it out: few people within utilities truly understand how important regulatory accounting is to their own business. Compliance with FERC, cost recovery, and rate case support are the ways in which regulated utilities make money, but this fact is often lost on staff outside the Rates department. We are starting to see more of the Finance and IT professionals who support Rates reevaluate their perspectives, recognizing that a modern FICO/FERC design must be prioritized in order to gain efficiencies, reduce costs, and take full advantage of their SAP ERP.
5. Few see value in high-speed databases — yet.
For all of the recent hoopla about in-memory databases, we're not seeing that much interest from utility Finance teams. We believe that will change in the coming year or three, when management recognizes the benefits of line item-level reporting. The sheer volume of detail that will continue to grow will mandate adoption of high-speed infrastructure. We predict that Finance won't pursue speed itself, but rather the granularity that enables "closing every day" — which will require speed.
1. Cost flow models are the real culprits.
When we're engaged to audit SAP FERC processes, we sometimes find that a utility's core challenge is not regulatory accounting itself, but rather its larger cost flow model. Utilities that have been on SAP Financials for a decade or more often have cost flows that are too complex, too long, or otherwise ill-suited to support both the fine details required for rate cases, and the high-level summarization required for effective budgeting. Simplifying those legacy cost flow models to support modern internal and external reporting is usually Step One for these customers.
2. Payroll burdens aren't as transparent as they could be.
Utilities that charge "bundled" labor rates to orders — i.e., fully loaded with labor, allocated costs of employee benefits, and the employer portion of payroll taxes — lose the identity of the burdens when combined with long and complex cost flows. This makes compliance with FERC accounting regulations far more difficult, because the more secondary cost movements in a cost flow model, the less transparent the labor burdens become. The traditional FI-centric FERC solution and its flow of costs trace program attempts to keep track of those burdens as they move from senders to receivers, but this approach has a price: FERC and CO results of operations don't match. And that leads us to take-away #3...
We've talked about this many times before, and it's worth repeating: FI-based FERC models just don't work as well as CO-centric approaches in today's environment. Twenty years ago, when we thought that regulation would be phased out, it was entirely reasonable for FERC accounts to be based on FI documents alone. But in today's world, in which CO has such rich cost detail, there is no reason to tolerate painful FERC-CO reconciling differences any longer. More utilities are recognizing that "one version of the truth" can be more than just a marketing catch-phrase by adopting a CO-centric model in which both primary and secondary costs support FERC balances.
4. Regulatory accounting is under-appreciated.
This is a sensitive topic, but we've got to call it out: few people within utilities truly understand how important regulatory accounting is to their own business. Compliance with FERC, cost recovery, and rate case support are the ways in which regulated utilities make money, but this fact is often lost on staff outside the Rates department. We are starting to see more of the Finance and IT professionals who support Rates reevaluate their perspectives, recognizing that a modern FICO/FERC design must be prioritized in order to gain efficiencies, reduce costs, and take full advantage of their SAP ERP.
5. Few see value in high-speed databases — yet.
For all of the recent hoopla about in-memory databases, we're not seeing that much interest from utility Finance teams. We believe that will change in the coming year or three, when management recognizes the benefits of line item-level reporting. The sheer volume of detail that will continue to grow will mandate adoption of high-speed infrastructure. We predict that Finance won't pursue speed itself, but rather the granularity that enables "closing every day" — which will require speed.
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