Anyone doing planning at a proxy member?
Hi all,
I'm just trying to get a feel for how common this use of proxy members is these days. I've worked for multiple organizations and typically, if we were planning at any level higher than the most granular level of data, we would plan a number representing a group of members, at some 'proxy' member created specifically for planning purposes. That is, we would not use some random existing base member that held actuals.
For example:
If our dimension hierarchy looks like the one below and we were planning at the Region Level:
I would not plan for the entire RegionA by loading my planning data to "South3".
Instead, I would create a unique member (say, "RegionA_Plan") and load my data there.
Wondering how many companies out there would use the first method rather than the second method and what advantage there would be to this?
Thanks in advance for your thoughts on this.
RegionA
North
North1
North2
North3
South
South1
South2
South3
East
East1
East2
East3
West
In cases such as this where extensibility is in use already and the requests to plan at whatever level whenever, which is hard to reflect in a consistent and easy to understand data model, or a new dedicated planning cube with a planning model will not be implemented, I only see the use of proxy members in the projects I am involved in. Using a random base member in the data model suggests possible purpose for new users later on (as you say, it can be a revolving door). This makes the data quality in the system really bad so a proxy member is much preferred IMO. Also, when people start applying AI models to their planning data, having all data against e.g. Denmark will not make any sense to the model and highly distort the outcome of the forecast.
Long answer short, yes, proxy members are still in use for planning if other solutions are not feasible, rather than using a random base member.