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Guide to Best Practice in Financial Supply Chain Automation - Part One

This is the first of a four part series of articles providing a step by step guide to best practice for improving efficiency in the Financial Supply Chain. As we will show, embarking on the road to efficient Purchase-to-Pay is also the ideal starting point for achieving optimized working capital management across an enterprise.


Guide to Best Practice in Financial Supply Chain Automation - Part One

Making invoice data capture more efficient

Guide to Best Practice in Financial Supply Chain Automation - Part One
Increasingly it is being recognized that the transition from manual and costly paper processes to more efficient and cost effective electronic workflows and straight through processing (STP) is a migration, rather than a "big bang" initiative. Furthermore, different organizations will make this journey at different speeds. Any viable solution for streamlining invoice processing must allow for this evolutionary approach and must be able to handle both paper and electronic invoices (in multiple formats) in an efficient and timely manner. This guide offers practical advice on achieving a tangible return on each step of the migration to improved efficiency in Purchase-to-Pay and optimized working capital management.

This four part guide will cover the following topics:

• Part 1: Making invoice data capture more efficient
• Part 2: Streamlining purchase management and invoice approval workflow
• Part 3: Achieving security, efficiency and control in payments and reporting
• Part 4: Optimising working capital management.


Overview of operational and strategic benefits of Financial Supply Chain Automation

By streamlining Purchase-to-Pay, a business can achieve both operational and strategic benefits. At an operational level, which should appeal to Shared Service Centres and AP Managers, benefits include:

• Reduce processing costs for both paper and electronic invoices
• Improve visibility and internal controls
• Minimise the operational risk of fraudulent invoices
• Cut the risk and cost of paying invoices twice
• Achieve lowest cost routing, minimising bank charges and raising STP.

At a strategic level, for Treasurers and CFOs, streamlining Purchase-to-Pay enables a business to unlock significant value from the financial supply chain:

• Accelerate the accurate matching and approval of invoices, both paper and electronic
• Optimise working capital management through improved visibility
• Capture early payment discounts, reducing the cost of goods for the buyer
• Enable suppliers to improve their own cashflow.

This collaborative approach to working capital management positions large corporates to partner with innovative banks to provide supply chain finance, delivering the following key benefits:

• Enable suppliers to reduce their Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)
• Allow buyers to retain and potentially extend their Days Payables Outstanding (DPO)
• Banks provide competitive supplier finance to bridge the timing and funding gap.

There is little doubt that the market is moving in this direction. This approach to optimising working capital management along the financial supply chain will in turn drive increased revenues and enhance shareholder value, which are ultimately key objectives of all commercial businesses. But in order to get to these powerful strategic goals, a corporate must first streamline its invoice processing in order to accelerate the accurate approval of invoices.


Addressing the “Pain points”

A study by PayStream Advisors identified eight key pain points felt by corporates in the Invoice Receipt-To-Pay Cycle (see graph). According to the survey, the top four offending pain points were imaging/data capture, matching, discrepancy resolution and approval processing. All of these pains can be eased through use of an effective Purchase-to-Pay capability. Through the four sections of this guide, we will see how all these pain points can be addressed through the application of best practice.


Solving the paper conundrum

Compared to the impressive progress achieved in modernising the physical supply chain, through advanced logistics tracking, containerisation and efficient warehouse management, the financial supply chain has lagged far behind. Hackett REL Consultancy estimate that EUR 500 billion of unnecessary working capital is locked up in the financial supply chains of Europe's top 1,000 corporates, due to poor visibility of payables and receivables. One major reason for this inefficiency is the huge volume of paper in circulation. Gartner reckon that over 85% of the 27bn invoices issued each year in the EU are still printed as paper and sent out in the post, while 90% of the 22bn invoices in the US are also paper. This means that in many organisations processes in the Purchase-to-Pay cycle are costly and inefficient as invoices are lost, errors are made during data entry and time is spent trying to answer queries from suppliers.

The fact is that in too many companies a great deal of time and money is still spent on re-keying inbound invoices and other documents into ERP systems. Sadly for some AP departments, STP still means "straight to printer", as e-invoices are being printed, circulated as paper and then re-keyed. Some large companies have re-located processing to low cost labour markets, such as India or China, where paper invoices are re-keyed into ERP systems more economically. Although the benefits of labour arbitrage have helped cut costs in the short term, some of these initiatives have already been hit by salary inflation and rapid staff turnover. So it is time for the next step in the migration from paper to electronic. It is now technology's turn to lend a hand in removing this roadblock to efficiency.

Improving paper processing and converting it to data

Recognising the continuing use of paper invoices in even the most advanced of economies, some large companies are adopting a more evolutionary approach to invoice management. Under this pragmatic model, inbound paper invoices are being scanned, validated, matched and then routed electronically for approval in an efficient and timely manner. Such a solution can of course be structured in-house, but it offers even greater benefits if outsourced to a specialist provider, with the scale and experience to master the most advanced paper handling techniques and data capture processes. With CFOs and AP departments under increasing pressure to reduce costs and add value, outsourced invoice data capture services provide a low risk way to make savings and provide process efficiencies. This approach allows corporates to gain the benefits of working with quality data without the headache and cost of implementing and maintaining their own in-house solution.

Nowadays, with efficient systems for capturing paper invoices, as well as matching these against purchase orders / goods received notes (POs / GRNs) and resolving anomalies, processing times can be reduced from days to just a few hours. The services and solutions which stand out are those which successfully combine handling both paper and electronic invoices and other commercial documents.
An efficient invoice data capture capability should focus on adding value and reducing errors, paper and costs across a corporate's AP function. They are particularly suited to supporting large corporate Shared Service Centres (SSCs). However, their value is more than just invoice data capture, as they can quickly identify problem invoices and allow AP personnel to concentrate on exception management, whilst technology ensures that compliant invoices are processed quickly and efficiently.


Simplifying supplier on-boarding

A major barrier to adoption still hindering the growth of the e-invoicing market is getting suppliers on board, since each supplier will have its own processes and formats which it already uses in its one-to-many relationship with customers. Whilst there are some notable exceptions, it is generally very hard for a buyer to impose on all its suppliers a single format electronic invoice. Persuading suppliers to adopt the same invoice format as the payer can be a costly and time-consuming exercise and its success will often depend on the power of the buyer over the supplier base. However, for an experienced invoice data capture capability, on-boarding suppliers can be as simple as asking them to redirect their invoices (in any format, whether paper, pdf, e-invoice etc) to the service provider who will take care of converting paper documents into electronic images, then capturing and normalising the data to suit the requirements of the payer. And for those suppliers unwilling to redirect their invoices to a new PO Box, the payer can simply bulk up incoming post and courier these mail bags to their service provider.

Efficient invoice data capture

Corporate users quickly see the return on their investment and reduced costs, due to the transactional fee model, The benefits of an efficient invoice data capture capability fall into three broad categories which reflect the main problem areas that AP departments experience today:

• Compliance
• Improved Processes
• Reduced Costs.

With the advent of Sarbanes-Oxley and the 8th EU Directive on Company Law, AP departments are under increased pressure to ensure that controls, audit and segregation of duties are enforced. An invoice data capture capability underpins this compliance by formalising processes and providing visibility of AP activity down to individual transaction and line item level.

With an efficient invoice data capture structure in place, paper is removed from AP. Once the post is opened in a controlled environment, paper documents are scanned using advanced scanning technologies to create images, enabling users to view images of all invoices over the web. The significant advantage of this simple step is that users are able to work 100% electronically from day one. This cuts the risk of paper invoices being lost and makes access to valuable information much easier. Imaging or scanning is a good place to start business process improvement. It is simple to implement and suppliers continue with their existing processes and submit invoices in the usual way. With scanning, you do not need to impose new rules and formats on your suppliers, yet the error rate, speed of approval and visibility of the AP process are all vastly improved.

Optimising Optical Character Recognition

The second step is data capture, that is extracting data from the images. Optical Character Recognition (OCR) technology is used to extract data from the images of invoices to line item level. Scanning and OCR software can be difficult to implement and operate effectively in-house, so the outsourcing option is worthy of close examination. There are various types of OCR. Freeform Learning OCR is the most sophisticated and delivers a high degree of data recognition. Freeform learning can identify words and fields wherever they are located on a document and even on poorly printed pages. This minimises the amount of keying regarding anomalies that may need to be resolved manually (exception management). Once amended manually, Freeform Learning OCR remembers the modification next time. A proven way to enhance data recognition is to use multiple OCR engines and virtual engines, all with voting rights. This minimises manual keying requirements and ensure the fastest possible turnaround times.

Meanwhile, any incoming electronic invoices received in a variety of formats (such as pdf, CSV flat file, XML) can also be mapped into a suitable normalised electronic format of invoice, to suit the payer's invoice management system or ERP. All incoming invoices should be compared to the payer's business rules to ensure they are acceptable, for example checking they are addressed to the correct legal entity or that local VAT rules are satisfied. If an invoice fails these test, the supplier can be advised of the reasons for rejection so they can re-submit. Importantly, all disputed / rejected invoices should be captured in the invoice system, enabling optimised VAT accrual management, with significant working capital benefits.

In combining paper and electronic invoice processing in this way, an efficient invoice data capture capability can cut the cost of an AP department enormously, with savings ranging from 50% - 80%. It can cost between £ 5 to £20 to process a paper invoice, and even up to £50 where an invoice is disputed, while an efficient invoice service provider can handle this process for about £1, at the same time as reducing processing times down from days or even weeks to a few hours. Research by Benchmarking agencies shows that a good, non-automated AP department will process around 8,500 invoices a year per Full Time Equivalent (FTE) in the AP department. With an efficient invoice management capability an AP department can expect to process in excess of 45,000 invoices per FTE per year.


Capturing IBANs and BICs from supplier invoices

With the advent of SEPA, a valuable benefit of an efficient invoice data capture structure is to capture IBANS and BICS direct from supplier invoices, paper or electronic. As all businesses trading internationally should know by now, there is an EU law, known as Regulation 2560/2001, which requires that euro payments within the EU up to a value of EUR 50,000 should cost no more than domestic payments, provided they are properly formatted. In order to qualify for these lower bank charges, a corporate's payment instructions to its bank must include the beneficiary's IBAN (International Bank Account Number) and BIC (SWIFT Bank Identifier Code) in order to facilitate STP through the banking system. An efficient scanning and OCR solution can capture this vital information off invoices and update the vendor data base, in order to ensure compliance with the new law and obtain lower bank charges.

Failure to include BICS and IBANS on euro payments up to EUR 50,000 means the beneficiary bank receiving such payment instructions is entitled to apply penalty charges which remitting banks may decide to charge back to their customers or alternatively absorb the non-STP penalty fee themselves. From January 2007, failure to include an IBAN and BIC in a payment instruction will be even more serious, since the beneficiary bank will be entitled to reject / return the payment and will be able to deduct a penalty charge from the payment.

Paper capture portal for industry initiatives

This efficient invoice data capture model solves the current problem of the general lack of widely adopted industry standards in the financial supply chain, since it can draw together and normalise data received in any standard and format, paper or electronic. This capability may even prove a valuable aid for major initiatives such as TWIST (see www.twiststandards.org ). This important not-for-profit industry group, backed by major corporates and banks, is delivering non-proprietary XML-based standards for the financial supply chain and transaction processing. TWIST seeks to develop practical standards that allow market participants to communicate with each other efficiently. However, for those suppliers reluctant to adopt their systems to this new standard, there could be value in using an invoice data capture solution to process paper invoices, POs and GRNs and other commercial documents as a front end capture point for transactions which would then be reformatted into TWIST standards for subsequent processing. This approach may yet prove to be a practical way of increasing the volumes of transactions being processed using this new standard, resulting in improved STP and cost savings.

Benefits of efficient invoice data capture

An efficient invoice data capture capability resolves the problems surrounding:

• Data errors caused by manual data entry from paper invoices
• High costs associated with manual data entry
• Handling multiple electronic invoice formats from suppliers.

The benefits of using an outsourced invoice data capture service can be summarised as follows:

• Increased process efficiency
o Obtain 100% electronic invoices from Day 1
o Reduces data capture errors
o No paper invoices to lose
o Achieve a consistent 24 hour turnaround time from invoice receipt to data upload.

• Reduced costs
o Immediately reduces headcount or allows staff to be reallocated from manual data entry
o Removes the need for capital investment in scanning and OCR systems to automate data capture
o No need to continually invest in software upgrades, hardware maintenance and replacement.

• Improved visibility and compliance
o Provides an audit trail for captured invoices from receipt to data upload
o Delivers an online archive, accessible 24/7, for all invoices and associated data.

• Easy Implementation
o Requires no vendor on-boarding to deliver benefits, at most a change of address is all that is required
o Can provide data in any format for upload to any system
o Can take any incoming form of invoice.

Conclusion: The value of enhanced visibility

This first section of a four part guide on Improving Efficiency in Purchase-to-Pay has focused on efficient invoice data capture. Corporates adopting this approach have highlighted the great value of improving the visibility of these processes across the enterprise. The next section of this guide will offer advice on the processing of invoices once they have been converted into data, covering the invoice approval workflow and query resolution process. We will also look at achieving best practice in purchasing management.

Source : www.bottomline.fr

Lundi 8 Janvier 2007



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