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Augmenting P2P and ERP with Intake Orchestration and AI (Art of Procurement, Tonkean)
Tuesday, March 12, 2024, 11:00am - 12:00pm
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Most procurement organizations use P2P/ERP platforms to facilitate procurement intake, triage, and coordination. These are important and powerful tools, but they’re not perfect. For example, some don’t easily integrate with other tools. Approval processes that rely on them remain complex and arduous, with long cycle times. 

For all they’re great at, big P2P and ERP platforms are typically designed for the procurement team, and not end-users. 

At the end of the day, what matters most when it comes to creating business value is the experience procurement provides. Those experiences must be connected, intuitive, and fast. When processes require employees to use platforms that aren’t designed with them in mind, those processes may become too hard to follow, which limits speed, effectiveness, and value.

AI-powered intake orchestration technology offers a solution to this problem, without mandating change management or requiring you to rip out and replace other existing tools. It allows procurement to begin creating processes that both empower procurement and advance the business’s goals by finally, actually putting people first. 

THIS is the promise of orchestration technology in procurement. 

In this live webinar, we will be joined by Sagi Eliyahu, Co-Founder and CEO of Tonkean, and Jonathan Fehring, Principal, Procurement and Purchase-to-Pay Advisory of The Hackett Group, to review orchestration use cases that show the potential of putting the experience FIRST when it comes to orchestrating procurement processes and workflows across teams and systems.

Sagi and Jonathan will answer live questions about:

  • Why understanding stakeholder behavior is the key to successful procurement orchestration
  • What an intuitive procurement experience looks like to the business, and what it should feel like to users
  • How taking a comprehensive approach to pulling an existing tech stack together is more powerful - and realistic - than replacing it

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