Posts Tagged ‘einvoicing’

Improve Your Accounts Payable Process to Boost Cash Flow and Profitability

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

There are few initiatives these days that deliver double-digit returns but the accounts payable (AP) process is a very good example where substantial efficiency improvements can be made, and quantifiable bottom-line savings achieved!

With the demands placed on global supply chains to exchange more and more data, current inefficiencies can often be linked to slow, inaccurate, and poorly defined paper-based workflow and capture processes. The result is: re-work when processing duplicate invoices, ‘lost’ vendor payment discounts, poor working capital management, and a poor vendor feedback and experience when querying the status of an invoice. The question is – where to begin?

1. Eradicate paper

Purchase orders, invoices and credit notes are often received in paper format, even though we all know that the use of electronic documents have many advantages over paper. Of course, vendors should be encouraged to send invoices in electronic format by rewarding them through speedy feedback, processing, and payment. Where organisations do not have the ‘luxury’ of Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) systems, other, less costly solutions are available! It must be noted that it is best practice to scan and capture all received paper invoices and credit notes as early as possible in the AP process.

2. Scan, capture, and identify duplicates as early as possible

Vendors often send the same invoice via multiple channels (in their enthusiasm to be paid). This can be the cause for a lot of unnecessary re-work as part of the AP process before discovering that an invoice is a duplicate and discarded. The early capture of fields that uniquely identify the invoice, such as the invoice number and vendor number, enables duplicates to be identified at a very early stage in the AP process.

3. Make use the invoice information that you have in the capture and validation process

Information that you already have in the back-end accounting system such as outstanding PO numbers, and anticipated invoice amounts from a specific vendor, can be used to increase the accuracy and reliability of the captured invoice information. In the case of manual capture processes, this information can be used as default values or selection lists to minimise the impact of human error. When capture automation is used, such as Optical Character Recognition (OCR), and the automation technology is closely integrated with the back-end accounting system, this information can be made available to the automation technology and used to increase accuracy – this lends to faster AP processes and less human error!

4. Provide immediate feedback to the vendor

Feedback to the vendor at appropriate stages in the AP process is crucial for improving the vendor experience, decreasing vendor queries and duplicates received, and assisting the vendor to identify issues as these arise. Feedback can be typically via SMS or e-mail. The vendor information must be maintained to ensure that the correct people or systems receive the feedback in the desired format, again lending to faster and more improved AP processes.

5. Don’t underestimate the AP process

The AP process is a little trickier than it may seem at first. Some of the curveballs that you may encounter, and which should be catered for by the AP solutions, are:

* Multiple PO numbers on a single invoice
* “Standing” PO numbers that are to be used many times for an indefinite final amount
* Partial deliveries where the PO number may, or may not, be received again from that vendor
* Invoices to be paid without PO numbers such as consignment stock invoices

All of the above can and should be managed by the AP process solution, thereby ensuring integrity and speed within the AP process.

6. Don’t underestimate change management and the culture of the organisation

Culture, or “the way we do things around here” is not easily changed, and yet the human factor is often ignored – to the detriment of efforts to implement and anchor process and technology changes. Those who find security in paper are not easily convinced to give it up. For example, there are a wide range of organisations whose staff print and courier memos internally and do not know what scanning is, to those that insist on the use of workflow, content management, and scanning technologies. It goes without saying that the change management efforts in these organisations should be and are worlds apart. Often when an AP management solution is implemented, the important ‘people-aspect’ is ignored and the success of an AP solution is hugely dependent on whether or not the solution is used!

Perceptant (http://www.perceptant.com) is a leading provider of software and services that drive the integration, synchronisation and collaboration of supply chains. Our hosted, on-demand supply chain management, application integration and electronic data interchange (EDI) solutions process millions of business-to-business transactions, integrate leading enterprise software applications and help seamlessly connect the demand chains of many complex trading communities. Perceptant is headquartered in Sheffield, Yorkshire, UK.

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US Healthcare Leads the Way in Electronic Invoicing, EDI & Supply Chain Management

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Hospitals expanding use of transaction sets beyond purchase orders to automate more aspects of their purchasing and supply chain management processes, but there is still room for growth

While the healthcare industry is often accused of being slow to change, a new study conducted by HIMSS Analytics and sponsored by GHX found that there is widespread use of e-commerce by U.S. hospitals in the purchasing process, with 95 percent of acute-care hospitals with more than 150 beds purchasing at least some of their medical-surgical supplies electronically.

HIMSS Analytics surveyed hospital purchasing officers to understand the extent to which hospitals are automating various aspects of the purchasing process through the use of electronic data interchange (EDI) transaction sets and the percentage of medical and surgical purchasing that is handled electronically. Researchers also asked where respondents believe automation provides the greatest value and what they believe to be the biggest barriers to increasing the use of e-commerce.

The findings revealed that, in general, acute-care hospitals have embraced e-commerce and are automating a variety of business processes with multiple trading partners.

However, there is still work to be done before the industry can achieve full value from e-commerce. Key findings include:

(more…)