Workday Adaptive Planning is extended through four primary add-on modules: Workforce, Sales, Consolidation, and OfficeConnect. Each module is priced separately and contributes meaningfully to total cost. The add-on stack frequently equals or exceeds the base license cost for customers who deploy the full stack — and frequently includes modules that the customer's use case does not actually require.
Adaptive Planning for Workforce extends the planning capability into workforce-specific scenarios: headcount planning, compensation planning, workforce capacity modeling, and skills-based workforce planning. Adaptive Planning for Sales extends into sales planning: quota planning, territory planning, sales capacity modeling, and incentive planning. Adaptive Planning Consolidation extends into multi-entity consolidation: intercompany eliminations, currency translation, statutory reporting, and consolidation workflow. OfficeConnect extends the platform into Excel and PowerPoint for users who maintain Office-based workflows.
Each add-on module is priced separately and contributes meaningfully to total cost. Workforce planning typically lands at 30–50% of base planning license cost. Sales planning typically lands at 25–45% of base planning cost. Consolidation typically lands at 40–70% of base planning cost. OfficeConnect typically lands at 10–20% of base planning cost. Total add-on stack cost can equal or exceed the base license cost for customers who deploy the full stack.
The pricing structure varies by module. Workforce and Sales are typically priced per-user with their own user-class definitions. Consolidation is typically priced per-entity with tiered pricing for entity count. OfficeConnect is typically priced per-user with simpler class structure.
For each add-on, the validation discipline is to compare the add-on against the alternative: deploying the base planning capability with module-specific configuration, deploying a dedicated point solution, or accepting reduced functional scope.
The most common add-on over-procurement: customers add Workforce planning when their actual use case is headcount projection (which the base capability supports with workforce dimensions), or add Consolidation when their actual use case is single-entity planning with manual intercompany logic. The validation discipline frequently eliminates one or two add-ons from the initially proposed stack.
Workforce planning is justified when the use case requires: skills-based workforce planning (modeling workforce composition by skill), scenario-based workforce capacity planning (multiple parallel workforce scenarios), or compensation planning integration with HCM data. The use case is not justified by simple headcount projection, which the base capability supports with workforce dimensions.
The diagnostic: if the customer's workforce planning is anchored on annual headcount budget plus modest compensation adjustment, the base capability is typically sufficient. If the planning includes skills modeling, capacity scenarios, or sophisticated compensation logic, the add-on is justified.
Sales planning is justified when the use case requires: quota planning at the rep level with territory-aware allocation, sales capacity modeling with hire-ramp logic, or incentive plan modeling integrated with quota structure. The use case is not justified by aggregate revenue planning, which the base capability supports.
For customers with a dedicated sales planning tool (Anaplan for sales, Xactly, Varicent), the Adaptive Sales add-on creates duplicative capability. The validation should explicitly evaluate the existing tool landscape before adding Adaptive Sales.
Consolidation is justified when the use case requires: intercompany eliminations at scale (typically 10+ entities with material intercompany activity), currency translation under statutory standards (GAAP, IFRS), or statutory reporting beyond what the base capability supports. The use case is not justified for single-entity or simple multi-entity organizations.
For customers with a dedicated consolidation tool (OneStream, BlackLine, HFM), the Adaptive Consolidation add-on creates duplicative capability. The strategic question is platform consolidation: replacing the dedicated consolidation tool with Adaptive Consolidation, or maintaining the dedicated tool and using Adaptive only for planning.
OfficeConnect is justified when the user population maintains Office-based workflows (Excel modeling, PowerPoint reporting) that cannot reasonably migrate to the native Adaptive interface. The use case is not justified by user preference; user preferences shift as the deployment matures.
The diagnostic: validate OfficeConnect adoption assumptions against the actual user population's workflow patterns. Customers frequently over-procure OfficeConnect at signature and discover at year 2 that the actual usage is materially lower than projected.
We validate each Adaptive Planning add-on against the customer's actual use case, identify modules that produce duplicative capability, and structure the add-on stack to deliver required functionality without over-procurement.
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