Adaptive Planning consumes data from multiple source systems: the general ledger, the HRIS, the CRM, transactional systems, and external data feeds. Each integration carries both upfront implementation cost and ongoing operational cost. The integration platform selection and the integration scope discipline together drive 8–15% of five-year TCO and are frequently the most underbudgeted cost component in Adaptive deployments.
The integration scope begins with a source system inventory. Typical Adaptive integration includes: the general ledger (for actuals, budget context, account hierarchy), the HRIS (for headcount, compensation, organizational structure), the CRM (for pipeline, revenue forecast, customer dimensions), transactional systems (for revenue actuals, expense actuals, operational metrics), and external data feeds (for market data, FX rates, benchmark data).
For Workday-anchored customers, the GL and HRIS integrations are typically to Workday Financial Management and Workday HCM, which use pre-built Workday connectors. For non-Workday systems, integrations require custom development through Adaptive's integration framework or a third-party iPaaS.
Each integration carries upfront implementation cost driven by source system complexity. Pre-built Workday connectors (HCM, Financial Management) typically cost $15K–$30K to deploy. Standard non-Workday integrations (Oracle, SAP, Salesforce) typically cost $30K–$60K. Custom integrations to less-standard systems typically cost $50K–$120K. External data feed integrations typically cost $20K–$50K.
For a typical mid-enterprise deployment with 8–15 integrations, the cumulative upfront integration cost lands at $250K–$700K. The integration cost is frequently scoped as a single line item by implementation partners, which obscures the per-integration cost structure and limits the customer's ability to discipline scope.
Each integration carries ongoing operational cost: monitoring, exception handling, reconciliation, and source system change management. Typical ongoing cost is $5K–$25K per integration per year. Across 12 integrations, the cumulative ongoing cost lands at $60K–$300K per year, which compounds to $300K–$1.5M across a five-year contract term.
The ongoing cost is frequently absorbed by internal teams (FP&A operations, IT operations) rather than appearing as a separate line item, which obscures the true operational cost of the integration scope.
For non-Workday integrations, the iPaaS selection drives material cost variance. The options: Workday Integration Cloud (native Workday integration platform), Boomi, MuleSoft, Informatica, or a custom-built integration capability. Each option has different cost structures, capability profiles, and operational implications.
Customers who already have an enterprise iPaaS standard (typically MuleSoft, Boomi, or Informatica) should extend that standard to Adaptive rather than deploying a parallel integration capability. The parallel capability creates operational complexity, duplicate licensing, and inconsistent integration governance across the enterprise.
The integration scope validation matters as much as the iPaaS selection. The discipline: validate each integration against the planning model's actual data requirements. Customers frequently scope integrations that produce data not used in any planning model — the data is integrated because it exists, not because it is needed.
The validation discipline frequently eliminates 20–35% of initially scoped integrations. For a deployment with 12 initially scoped integrations, the validation typically reduces scope to 8–10 integrations, producing $100K–$300K in upfront savings and $30K–$120K in annual operational savings.
Integration frequency drives ongoing cost. Real-time integrations are operationally more expensive than daily integrations; daily integrations are more expensive than weekly. The frequency should match the planning cycle's actual data requirements, not default to the most aggressive frequency available.
For most planning use cases, daily integration is sufficient. For specific use cases (rolling forecast with frequent updates, real-time variance monitoring), more frequent integration is justified. The frequency decision should be made per-integration based on use case requirements.
The master data architecture (chart of accounts, organizational structure, cost center hierarchy) is the foundational decision that determines integration complexity. A well-structured master data architecture with clear hierarchies and consistent dimensional values produces lower integration cost and fewer ongoing exceptions. A fragmented master data architecture with inconsistent hierarchies and conflicting dimensional values produces higher integration cost and frequent exceptions.
Customers with master data architecture work pending should complete that work before scoping integrations, not in parallel. Integration scoping against incomplete master data produces both upfront cost overrun and ongoing exception burden across the contract term.
We scope Adaptive Planning integrations against business requirements, validate the iPaaS selection against enterprise standards, eliminate integrations that produce unused data, and structure the integration cost line for transparency and discipline.
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