The Delphi Speaks

May 29th, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

Earlier in 2011, The International Journal of Digital Accounting Research published a paper called The Impact of XBRL: A Delphi Investigation, which reported the results of a panel of ‘experts’ (the ‘delphic’ panel) validating or not various propositions about the future impact of XBRL. The results were interesting, but not surprising. To find out which of the various marketing claims made for XBRL struck the experts as plausible, fast forward to page 16 of the paper.




Gee Up for XBRL

May 25th, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

The Global Reporting Initiative has announced that it is working on the next generation of its guidelines for ESG/sustainability/integrated reporting. There seems to be some hope for the rather dormant GRI XBRL taxonomy contained in this statement:

In line with our mission to mainstream ESG reporting, a key aim of the G4 Guidelines is to harmonize Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) and sustainability reporting practices around the world. In order to be fit for mainstreaming, the G4 Guidelines will need to be “standard ready”; robust enough to support higher levels of assurance and help companies to produce reports that are trusted by markets and stakeholders.

Note that term ‘standard ready’. It’s impossible to be ‘standard ready’ in today’s world of online information communication without the use of a data standard – like XBRL. So let’s hope that the GRI walks the talk.




Fanning the Flames

May 25th, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

The Washington Post reports that The SEC approved rules Wednesday that could make it highly lucrative for Wall Street whistleblowers and other corporate insiders to alert the agency to securities violations. Which is great news in terms of adding another important dimension to corporate transparency – but clearly a touchy subject for many. Read the rest of this entry »




XAID

May 24th, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

If you’re from New York you might well think that the Tunis Consensus is some kind of cool new sandwich.

Hey! Luigi…gimmee a Tunis Consensus on rye and hold the paprika.

But sorry, it’s not.

In fact it’s a document from 2010 about realizing Africa’s own vision for development and part of that vision includes greater transparency in terms of how aid funding is decided and spent:

Participants agreed that better information flows were essential to improving accountability. Nothing less than full disclosure of development expenditure is necessary. Fiscal transparency includes publishing budget plans and reports and ensuring that the public has ready access to information on the state of public finances and on the structure, functions and financing of public institutions. [p.10 - The Tunis Consensus] Read the rest of this entry »




Master! It Works…

May 23rd, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

It’s official. Sustainability reporting works. Or at least according to Harvard Business School it does. HBS have been researching the efficasiousness of the CSR report (always wanted to use that ‘e’ word outside of a Turkish steam bath) and found…

the first real evidence that mandatory CSR reporting works, and could give policymakers and companies themselves added impetus to increase transparency around environmental, social, and governance (ESG) performance.

Now all we need is a mandatory CSR XBRL taxonomy so we can easily combine financial and CSR data into a single holistic report.




Technology when you want it. People when you don’t.

May 20th, 2011 by Emily Huang - Co‑founder & SVP, Sales & Marketing

This blog post talks about how the Esurance slogan “Technology when you want it” ties into Rivet‘s belief in giving their clients options when it comes to XBRL filings. The post goes into detail about the different ways Rivet helps make the XBRL filing process more efficient.


 

You may have heard the slogan, “Technology when you want it,” from Esurance recently.  As a former employee of Esurance (I worked for Esurance as the Director of Business Intelligence between 2000 and 2003), I have to say that I quite like the rebranding that happened in 2010 to replace the pink-haired female spy named Erin! I never truly understood what a spy had to do with auto insurance.

So how does auto insurance connect to Rivet Software you ask? Auto insurance buyers and policyholders like to have options. Similarly, options are very important to public companies that need to comply with the SEC XBRL mandate. Read the rest of this entry »




XBRL for Harmonization

May 19th, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

We often talk about the promise of the  ‘XBRL data ecosystem’ but most insiders understand that this is far from a reality and in fact XBRL is in as much danger of becoming a series of taxonomy-based data silos as the systems it is being layered onto. That’s why harmonization of data assets is so important, both to leverage non-XBRL data assets and to provide the mapping layers between new XBRL taxonomies.

Thomas Verdin, fellow presenter on the data sharing track at the 23rd XBRL Intl. conference, updated us on the progress of the xEBR taxonomy designed to provide a mapping layer between existing EU business register data from a number of countries (e.g. the eccbso databases BACH and ESD), some of which already provide many years worth of financial performance data for analysis purposes. MONNET is another EU data harmonization project that is focused on the automatic translation of public information to minimize the language barrier when trying to compare data from different countries that is only available in a local and reference language (e.g. English).




Land of the Rising Taxonomy

May 17th, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

Fumiko Satoh of IBM Research in Tokyo has recently published a paper that advocates an XBRL Taxonomy for Estimating the Effects of Greenhouse Gas Emissions on Corporate Financial Positions. As the abstract suggests:

…disclosing the emissions data by using XBRL will be very beneficial for the analysis of the financial positions and emissions results of these companies. Interested third parties will want to combine the XBRL reports of the financial data and the emissions data. This will allow them to easily evaluate the companies from both the financial and environmental perspectives.

Luckily I don’t have to worry about the carbon impact of my blog postings. Though it might be a different matter if the focus of emissions disclosure was methane.




Global Brains or Dare to Share (9)

May 16th, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

I enjoyed skimming Tim O’Reilly’s presentation from TED 2011 Towards a Global Brain. It has some good dare to share quotes in it like this one from Peter Norvig, Chief Scientist at Google:

We don’t have better algorithms. We just have more data.

As XBRL is just one of many bricks in the wall of data sharing, this is encouraging.

One of the concepts O’Reilly also refers to is ‘selection by association’, which is something that has an XBRL connection in relation to the kind of compliance analytics Rivet supports e.g. the decision to extend or not extend a tag or to select or not select the same tag for a fact as your peer group. Associating your tag selection choices with those of your peer group could help to avoid ‘red flags’ when your S.E.C. filings are reviewed by regulator or investor analysis tools.




Should Have Gone to Specsavers

May 16th, 2011 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

Microsoft has launched a new add-in for Excel called Fuzzy Lookup that is supposed to help you with the problem of identifying and matching textually similar string data in Excel (e.g. when importing data). Oddly enough this relates to the ‘data scrubber’ point I made in my last post, although Microsoft rather primly refer to the process as ‘data cleaning‘.

I thought it was amusing that the first bug fix relates to incoming decimal points:

An updated version of the add-in has just been released. It fixes a bug that was causing the tool to fail on systems where the default numeric format for decimal values is configured to use something other than “.” as the decimal separator.

Those pesky foreigners using ‘,’  when we all know a decimal point is ‘.’  goddammit.

You can clarify the fuzziness of this post by going to the Contextures blog where you will find lots more helpful information about using the fuzzy add-in. Specs optional.