New artificial intelligence (AI) solutions make contract writing and auction management smarter and easier.

In 2017 Gartner predicted that AI would benefit procurement and sourcing technology. That moment has arrived, according to Mike Quindazzi, managing director at PriceWaterhouseCoopers and a top financial-tech influencer.

'We're now in the golden age of AI, where advancements come from voluminous sets of data, new algorithms being created, computing power, and the ability to do this in the cloud at scale,' he says.

In part, procurement data has exploded because procurement has evolved into something called intelligent spend management, which oversees all corporate purchasing processes, including direct and indirect purchases, travel, and external labor.

But Quindazzi cautions that while AI has many use cases in procurement, such as rating vendors, 'there will always be a human at the end of AI processes, so there needs to be a sense of accountability.' Business leaders must offer transparency into the metrics and data used, how vendors were selected and ranked, and other elements that trained AI algorithms.

At the recent SAP Ariba Live conference, SAP showcased several ways that AI and machine learning technology will impact intelligent spend management.

Consistent Contract Management

There are two phases of contract management during negotiations between companies and suppliers: the legal and the operational. The two phases reside in different documents and systems, and can easily become inconsistent.

Legal contracts are usually unstructured data stored in word processing documents, while operational contracts are structured documents that live in either SAP ERP or SAP Ariba applications. The operational agreements include data such as specific pricing terms, line items, or accounting information. If these details change, the two contracts can get out of sync.

For example, in the past, if the price changed for a specific item in an operational contract, it needed to be manually updated in the legal agreement. But this reconciliation didn't always happen. Now SAP is developing a synchronization feature in SAP Ariba software that will automatically provide consistency across both documents.

Using machine learning, SAP is creating an application that will analyze the legal documents and compare them to pricing and purchasing conditions in operational agreements. The machine learning prototype can make recommendations when there are inconsistencies. For instance, the solution can make sure that taxes and insurance fees in the contracts are appropriate to specific regions and countries where the transactions are based.

Chatbot-Guided Contract Writing

Large companies generally have repositories that contain thousands of contracts. Machine learning can mine unstructured data from those repositories to help procurement professionals more intelligently write contracts and proactively avoid potential issues.

SAP is developing an AI chatbot to review contracts and propose optimizations based on historical patterns. The chatbot may suggest different payment terms or recommend a particular legal clause that addresses a regionally specific insurance law.

External data is also fed into the chatbot from more than 600,000 private and public sources so it knows things like when new regionally specific insurance laws are enacted. This enables the chatbot to flag risks and propose alternatives.

Sourcing Auctions

To find the best supplier, large multinational companies hold sourcing events, called auctions. Bram Purnot, a solution architect for SAP Ariba, explains that these events help companies negotiate prices or find the best supplier based on other criteria. But holding auctions can be very complex. There are multiple types of auctions; some might focus on region or a specific commodity, or a combination of factors. A company may want suppliers for the cheapest, most sustainably produced shea butter in Western Africa.

Collaborating with a large Dutch company that holds many of these auctions, SAP has created a prototype that uses machine learning and chatbots to help manage auctions. Once an auction has been created, the chatbots will suggest how long the auction should last, who should be invited, and how many participants to include.

These chatbots are fed by an SAP machine learning algorithm that has combed through existing data to predict how to run the most successful auction. If a company is looking for transportation services, the app may recommend Japanese providers that are more effective than the Dutch auctioneer in this type of auction.

The Challenge of AI and Business Change

AI has arrived, but organizations may still need help embracing new processes. Judith Hurwitz is president and CEO of Hurwitz and Associates, a technology consultancy and analyst firm. She recommends that companies take a hybrid approach to determining how to use AI that includes both data scientists and procurement professionals.

According to Hurwitz, 'Data scientists can't live in isolation - it's not just an algorithm, it needs the expertise of business experts.'

Attachments

  • Original document
  • Permalink

Disclaimer

SAP SE published this content on 09 July 2019 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 09 July 2019 11:52:00 UTC