Monday 06th May 2024,
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ePayables 2015: AP’s Two-Year Goals – Automate More AP Processes

ePayables 2015: AP’s Two-Year Goals – Automate More AP Processes

It is with great pleasure that Ardent Partners announces the publication of its latest state of accounts payable (“AP”) research report—“ePayables 2015: Higher Ground.” Like the annual reports that came before it, the 2015 ePayables report focuses on the state of the AP function as well as assessing how AP teams leverage ePayables solutions to improve business results and offering up Best-in-Class metrics that allow readers to benchmark their own operations against top performers. (The report is available for download herehere, here, here, and here.)

AP’s Two-Year Goals – Automate More AP Processes

The AP team occupies a unique position in the enterprise at large. No matter where an approved purchase is made—whether the line of business, procurement, or elsewhere in the organization—if an invoice is generated, then that invoice and the resulting payment must be approved in the AP workflow. Because of this, AP has the potential to become a centralized “hub” of financial insights and intelligence for the wider organization. AP likely already collects all the information other departments need to augment their capabilities, such as Treasury with supplier payment data, but the issue is that manual processes limit the visibility required to actually share this data.

It is only through automating the AP process that much of AP’s data can be shared. Couple this with the reality that automation shortens the time it takes to approve an invoice, and it is little surprise that 53% of respondents to Ardent’s ePayables 2015 survey listed automating more AP processes as a goal for the next two years. This makes increasing the levels of automation the top goal for the next 24 months, which makes sense given the central role that technology can play in making the difference between an efficient and inefficient AP workflow.

Automating more of the AP workflow allows the process to scale; no matter how fast a person is at validating invoices, there is only so many invoices that one AP team member can do quickly and accurately. An automated solution, on the other hand, can process many more invoices than a single person can in the same time frame, and has the added capability of allowing the AP team to focus on tasks that add strategic value to the organization at large.

Final Thoughts

Automating more processes has a cumulative effect on the AP team; more automation of core processes like data entry and invoice verification opens up more staff time to work on tasks of strategic importance. These include a greater influence in cash management through supplier payment data, and providing financial intelligence to internal stakeholders for better business decisions. These and other benefits inherent in automation make it little wonder that automating more AP processes is the top goal for the next two years.

Check out these related articles for more:

ePayables 2015: AP’s Role in Collaborative P2P

ePayables 2015: Which AP Technologies Hold the Most Interest?

ePayables 2015: What Causes Invoice Exceptions?

ePayables 2015: The Three Most Common Accounts Payable Technologies

ePayables 2015: What is the Biggest ePayables Priority in 2015?

ePayables 2015: 3 Important Accounts Payable Goals for the Next Two Years

ePayables 2015: How Improved Exception Handling Can Drive AP Performance

ePayables 2015: AP’s Top 3 Priorities in 2015

ePayables 2015: Moving From the Tactical to the Strategic

ePayables 2015: Reaching for “Higher Ground” in Accounts Payable

The ePayables 2015: Higher Ground Report is Now Available

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