RKL eSolutions | Technology Insights, Tips and Trends

The Future of EPM: Trends to Watch Over the Next Five Years

Written by Marc Hall | Jul 1, 2026 1:18:00 PM

Let’s start with a different kind of question.

What will finance look like in five years?

Not incrementally better. Not slightly faster. Fundamentally different.

Because EPM is not just evolving. It is accelerating.

And the gap between organizations that adapt and those that do not is about to widen.

Trend 1: From Reporting to Real-Time Decisioning

Historically, finance has been backward-looking.

Close the books. Run reports. Explain what already happened.

That model is breaking.

We are moving toward:

    • Real-time data integration
    • Continuous forecasting
    • Instant visibility into performance

The shift is simple but powerful.  From asking what happened...to answering what we should do next.

What to watch:

Organizations that still rely on monthly reporting cycles will fall behind, and speed is becoming a competitive advantage.

Trend 2: AI Will Move From Insight to Action

Right now, AI in EPM is largely assistive.

It:

    • Highlights trends
    • Flags anomalies
    • Suggests forecasts

But that is just the beginning.

The next evolution includes:

    • AI-driven scenario modeling
    • Automated recommendations tied to business drivers
    • Systems that not only identify issues but suggest actions

Eventually, AI will not just support decisions. It will help shape them.

But here is the catch. AI does not replace finance. It raises the expectation of finance.

Trend 3: Planning Will Become Continuous, Not Periodic

Annual budgets are already under pressure. And quarterly forecasts are not far behind.

Why? Because the pace of business no longer aligns with static planning cycles.

We are moving toward:

    • Rolling forecasts
    • Driver-based planning models
    • Always-on planning environments

Where plans are not set… they are continuously refined.

This changes planning, and it becomes part of daily operations, not a once-a-year event.

Trend 4: Finance Will Own the Operating Model, Not Just the Numbers

This is one of the most overlooked shifts.

EPM is no longer just about finance processes. It is becoming the backbone of how the business operates.

Finance is increasingly responsible for:

    • Aligning departmental plans
    • Connecting strategy to execution
    • Defining key business drivers
    • Enabling cross-functional visibility

In other words, finance is moving closer to the center of the business, not as a reporter, but as an orchestrator. 

Trend 5: User Experience Will Define Adoption

The best system in the world will fail if no one uses it.

And expectations are changing.

Modern users expect:

    • Intuitive interfaces
    • Minimal training requirements
    • Seamless workflows
    • Self-service access to data

If EPM tools feel complex or disconnected, adoption will suffer.

What to watch:

The winners in this space will not just be the most powerful platforms. They will be the most usable.

Trend 6: The Rise of Integrated Ecosystems

Standalone systems are losing ground. The future is connected.

EPM will increasingly sit at the center of a broader ecosystem that includes:

    • ERP systems
    • CRM platforms
    • HR and workforce planning tools
    • Data warehouses and BI platforms

The goal is not just integration. It is alignment. When systems communicate, decisions become clearer.

Trend 7: The Talent Shift in Finance

This may be the most important trend of all. As EPM evolves, so does the role of the finance professional.

The future finance leader will need to:

    • Understand data, not just numbers
    • Think strategically, not just analytically
    • Communicate insights, not just reports
    • Leverage technology, not avoid it

The expectation is changing. Finance is no longer just about accuracy. It is about impact.

The Bigger Shift

All of these trends point to something larger.

EPM is no longer just a system. It is becoming a strategic capability.

And the organizations that recognize this early will have an advantage that compounds over time.

A Final Question

If your current planning process feels manual, reactive, and disconnected… what happens when your competitors operate in real time?

Because the future of EPM is not five years away. It is already taking shape.

The question is not whether EPM will evolve. It is whether your organization will evolve with it.