🎯 Introduction: Why This Topic Matters
Capacity planning is where strategy meets operational reality. Revenue targets and delivery promises depend on whether you can staff projects, support customers, ship product, or deliver services at the right time and cost. As organisations scale, capacity becomes multi-dimensional: not just “how many people,” but what skills, what utilisation, what ramp time, and what constraints exist across teams. Many companies have strong finance data in Workday but still run capacity in spreadsheets because the drivers (pipeline, project mix, seasonal demand) live elsewhere. That disconnect creates late surprises-missed delivery targets, rushed hiring, margin erosion, and firefighting. This cluster article fits into the broader Workday vs Model Reef topic by showing how to run capacity planning as a repeatable workflow, and how to evaluate whether Workday Adaptive Planning or a modelling layer like Model Reef better supports scenario-driven resourcing decisions.
🧭 A Simple Framework You Can Use
Use the “DCRC” framework: Demand, Capacity, Restraints, Commitments. Demand is the work you expect-sales pipeline, customer volume, project backlog. Capacity is the supply-available hours, headcount, throughput, and productivity assumptions. Restraints are the real-world limits-skills shortages, ramp time, seasonality, dependencies. Commitments are the actions you lock in-hiring plan, outsourcing, reprioritisation, or service-level trade-offs. This framework stays consistent whether you’re planning within Workday ERP ecosystems or pairing Workday with a modelling layer. It also aligns neatly with broader business performance tooling-many organisations expect capacity workflows to feed into performance management systems and executive cadences. The key is repeatability: the same model structure, refreshed frequently, producing decision-ready outputs every cycle.
🛠️ Step-by-Step Implementation
Define the unit of capacity and the decision it supports.
Start by defining your “capacity unit”: hours, tickets, calls, units produced, or project milestones. Then define the decision: hiring pace, staffing mix, outsourcing, or delivery commitments. Without this clarity, capacity planning becomes abstract and ignored. Align the capacity model to finance outcomes-cost, margin, cash-and decide how often it must be updated (weekly for delivery teams, monthly for broader planning). If your organisation publishes capacity insights in board packs or operational reporting, connect the workflow to your broader financial reporting rhythm so it becomes part of the business cadence. This is also where systems context matters: do actuals come from Workday, and do operational drivers come from elsewhere? Step 1 ensures you build a model that matches how decisions are actually made-not a generic spreadsheet that looks right but drives no action.
Forecast demand with driver-based assumptions.
Build demand forecasts from drivers, not vibes. For services: pipeline × conversion × delivery hours by project type. For support: customer count × contact rate × handle time. For production: order volume × standard minutes per unit. Make assumptions explicit and measurable so you can update them quickly. Then define “demand scenarios” (base/upside/downside) tied to observable triggers. If you’re running planning across tools, you’ll quickly feel the pain of manual updates-especially when stakeholders use the Workday app and expect real-time visibility. This is where integration strategy becomes practical: can demand drivers refresh cleanly and consistently across systems? If you’re comparing Workday Adaptive Planning with Model Reef, evaluate how the integrations layer supports frequent refreshes without breaking your model structure.
Inventory capacity realistically (including ramp time and constraints).
Next, model capacity as it truly behaves: productive hours (not paid hours), skill mix (not generic headcount), and ramp time (not instant productivity). Include planned leave, onboarding lag, and realistic utilisation targets so you don’t “plan” yourself into burnout. For multi-team environments, treat capacity as a portfolio: some work requires specialists; other work can flex. Then model constraints explicitly-bottleneck roles, approval gates, system limits, or throughput dependencies. This step is where many teams get stuck because spreadsheets don’t handle multi-variable constraints cleanly. A structured model helps you update assumptions without rewriting logic. If you’re assessing capability across platforms, review the product features that enable structured modelling, scenario switching, and governed changes over time.
Run scenarios and choose commitments that protect outcomes.
Now combine demand and capacity, then test the plan under different scenarios: delayed hiring, demand spikes, skill shortages, or margin targets tightening. This is where capacity planning becomes strategic: you’re not just forecasting workload-you’re selecting commitments that protect margin and delivery confidence. Typical commitments include: hiring earlier, shifting work between teams, outsourcing, reprioritising the backlog, or changing service levels. The key is speed: leaders need scenario outputs fast enough to choose an action before the window closes. If you’re aligning the workflow to your broader systems architecture, it helps to understand the boundary between enterprise resource planning software (system of record) and planning layers that support rapid iteration. If you’re unsure how capacity planning fits across categories, use the ERP vs EPM lens to prevent workflow confusion.
Operationalise updates, governance, and reporting outputs.
Finally, turn capacity planning into a cadence: update drivers, refresh actuals, review constraints, publish commitments, and track outcomes. Establish governance so changes are controlled: versioning, approvals, and clear ownership of assumptions. Tie outputs to decision forums (weekly delivery review, monthly forecast meeting) and standardise the pack: capacity vs demand, constraint hotspots, scenario deltas, and recommended actions. This is where Model Reef can complement Workday by providing reusable modelling structures and faster iteration-without sacrificing transparency. If your planning tool decisions are still in flight, look at real examples of enterprise resource planning ERP systems and how capacity workflows typically integrate with finance data and operational drivers. The objective is reliability: leaders know when updates arrive and trust the numbers enough to act.
💼 Real-World Examples
A professional services firm grows quickly and keeps missing delivery dates. They’re using Workday for finance and HR, but resourcing is managed in spreadsheets. They introduce capacity planning with a simple unit: billable hours by role and team. Demand is forecast from pipeline by project type; capacity is modelled with utilisation targets and ramp time. They run scenarios weekly to decide whether to hire, subcontract, or rebalance workloads. Within one quarter, they reduce last-minute contractor spend and improve on-time delivery because constraints are visible earlier. They keep core actuals stable in their Workday ERP system, and use Model Reef to model scenarios and publish a standardised capacity pack that leaders can review without “spreadsheet archaeology.”
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake one: modelling capacity as raw headcount, ignoring utilisation and ramp time-this makes forecasts look better than reality. Fix: plan with productive capacity and onboarding lag. Mistake two: separating demand planning from capacity planning-sales forecasts don’t translate into workload. Fix: build driver links between demand and workload. Mistake three: ignoring constraints and bottlenecks-your plan assumes every hour is interchangeable. Fix: model skill mix and bottleneck roles explicitly. Mistake four: updating too slowly-monthly updates can’t steer weekly delivery realities. Fix: define refresh cadence and automate inputs where possible. Mistake five: governance gaps-assumptions change without visibility. Fix: add versioning, approvals, and validation checks so the plan stays trusted.
✅ Next Steps
To make capacity planning actionable, choose one team or workflow and run the five-step process for one full cycle-then tighten it. Start with demand drivers you can refresh reliably, inventory capacity realistically, and publish a standard pack with scenario outputs and commitments. If you’re comparing Workday-centric planning with a complementary modelling layer, pressure-test how quickly you can update assumptions, run scenarios, and publish outputs under real operating pressure. When you’re ready to formalise tooling decisions, align stakeholders on rollout scope and commercial expectations using pricing so the plan is sustainable beyond the first quarter. The goal isn’t a perfect model-it’s a reliable operating habit that reveals constraints early and turns resourcing into a proactive advantage.