Introduction to Financials
In this section, you’ll set up the rates and costs that power your consulting firm’s financial insights in Operating.
Written By Matti Parviainen
Last updated 6 months ago
Introduction to Financials
By defining how much you charge clients (rates) and how much your team costs (cost cards), Operating helps you forecast project profitability and track topline revenue with accuracy. This enables your team to make smarter staffing decisions, price projects with confidence, and spot financial risks early.
Whether you're planning a fixed-fee engagement or a time & materials project, your financial setup lays the groundwork for:
Accurate profitability forecasts
Clear revenue projections
Transparent margins on each project or client
Better alignment between sales, delivery, and finance
Let’s walk through how to configure your rates and costs.
Rates
Set a global average rate as the baseline
You want to set a global average rate as the baseline, if there’s no other more specific rate or a project budget set to replace it.
Use a recent average hourly rate — you can ask your CFO or controller if they know what it's been lately. This should be the rate your clients are typically charged for your team’s time.
With this, you’re able to have a forecast that’s “roughly right” on an aggregate level with minimial effort.
Create a base rate card for your team to use.
Even if rates are often configured on the client level, you might want to set up some basic rate cards, e.g. for each of your different offices or countries, for people to have options to choose from quickly. You
Decide: do you want to have a big up-front effort?
If it’s important for you to get rates right across your ongoing project portfolio, set the rate cards for each of the ongoing projects and ask account managers to keep client-based rate cards up-to-date.
Easier start: set the rates for new projects as they come, you will eventually get it right
Make it a must-do for people creating new projects in the Horizon to set the rates as you’re creating the team setup. This is the moment in time when it’s easiest. You probably have the proposal at hand, and prices haven’t changed yet.
Costs
Read more on setting up cost rates for project margin and profitability calculations under cost rates & project profitability.
Communicate: why getting rates right matters
Explain to your sales team and project managers how this makes reporting and steering the business easier. Show them which capacity, revenue, and profitability forecasts are used in recruitment / investment decisions and what material you share with the board of directors.
People may not realise how much effort it takes to do these reports and forecasts manually whenever they’re needed.
Project owner = responsible for the project information
There’s a concept of a project owner in Operating. Often, that’s the person who has most interaction with the buyer / key stakeholder in the client organisation. They probably send the invoices, and it matters a great deal to them that both the plans and the invoices are correct.
Create as many rate cards as necessary
You may follow a very strict pricing strategy or negotiate them for each case separately. If you’re more liberal about rates, then you will end up creating lots of client- or project-specific rate cards. Don’t worry.
Using an existing rate card as the basis speeds things up nicely.
Good luck! Let’s make lots of money.
Video: work with hourly rates and revenue forecasting (Ask to join our early access users!).