Automation technology is one of the inevitable technical trends for companies who want to truly improve accounts payable efficiency in their organizations, especially in a complex and competitive economic environment. Once inaccessible to any but the largest corporations with significant cash flows, a move to cloud-based software has created an attainable solution with many benefits including cost reduction, process optimization, data security, regulatory compliance, and improved staff morale (to name a few).
However, not only do the benefits of automation technology affect the company's success, there is another oft overlooked benefit: accounting automation technology is also the heartbeat for measuring Key Performance Indicators (KPIs).
According to Institute of Finance and Management (IOFM)’s Jess Scheer, at each stage of your Accounts Payable journey comes new challenges. At each level of development, the baseline for what makes for “good” Accounts Payable key performance metrics changes. As you streamline your roles and invest in new technology, you should become more efficient and effective. But once you automate your invoice payment process how do you know if you’re increasing efficiency? How do you know how much money you are saving the business? And how do you know if you have more productive employees doing strategic, value-added work?
Improving your Accounts Payable performance starts with determining operational benchmarks, establishing a baseline, and continually measuring your progress. As important as this assessment step is, few leaders do it today at all let alone on a day-to-day basis. Why? Our guess is that it may be because they've never done it and it seems too daunting not knowing where to start.
The IOFM report by editor Jess Scheer asks “Is Your Accounts Payable Performance Top Tier?” and offers guidelines for key metrics that you can use to chart your invoice processing and Accounts Payable improvement journey.
The first thing to do in order to start your journey is determine a baseline against which to create performance benchmarks. A few questions to do this include determining:
Now let’s explore each of these questions further and measure how well your business rates.
The first metric to identify is the organizational structure and automation enablement that most closely resembles where you are today. For example, you’ll determine if your organization is decentralized, partially centralized, centralized but with a shared provider, or shared services. This is how the IOFM report defines these categories for Accounts Payable department operations:
The idea is that the more invoices that are received electronically, the more automation can be enabled. Your business use will determine which category your company falls into: limited automation, moderate automation, or significant automation. Here are how the different levels of Accounts Payable automation are defined based on the percentage of invoices received electronically:
In addition to saving money by reducing the time spent processing invoices and eliminating any late charges, one easy way to know if your Accounts Payable function is operating at a high level is whether you are capturing any early payment discounts that your vendor or supplier may offer.
The IOFM report tells businesses to evaluate savings with these categories:
Now ask yourself these key questions to evaluate and improve your invoice and payment process using the three categories:
Your company's invoice and payment process automation software plays a significant role for invoice processing. It should increase speed for processing a high volume of invoices at a time. This way, you'll be able to lock-in early pay discounts, strengthen your performance metrics, cut costs, and increase efficiency because you're able to shorten cycle time to make the process more efficient.
One way to measure invoice processing time is by Number of Invoices/FTE. The equation will give you an overview of the total number of invoices divided by the number of full-time employees. This will help you determine whether you are under- or over-staffed and how you can streamline your team to do more value-added work while your newly automated Accounts Payable workflow takes over the mundane tasks. And remember, "the more decentralized you are, the harder it is to process invoices quickly".
It can go without saying that the longer it takes each of your Accounts Payable team to process an invoice, the more it will cost. On average, it costs almost $9 per invoice with either a manual or low level of automation. The cost is reduced to an average of $1.77 with a fully automated invoice and payment processing system. Depending on how many invoices your firm processes per month, the savings can be staggering! One of our Yooz clients, Patsy Price, Director of Operations, Peterson Auto Group, reported a savings of $35,000 per year with our Yooz Accounts Payable automation solution.
Invoice process effectiveness means that the purchase order matches the invoice. How often do you have a mismatch? When a business relies on a manual invoice process, they put themselves at a high risk for errors from data entry or misplacing an invoice. These factors can make it hard to get an accurate measurement of cash flow and KPI metrics.
How many of your invoices have errors that require correction, and how much of each Accounts Payable employee's time is spent correcting errors? Here’s a hint: If your Accounts Payable performance is considered “Top Tier”, your employees should spend less than 1% of their time correcting errors. That will help your business reduce costs per invoice and increase cash from the difference you save.
These are also among the first few things you will identify when you are preparing to investigate the most appropriate invoice and payment process automation provider for your business. For a comprehensive checklist of how to prepare for your Accounts Payable automation journey, questions to ask potential providers, and questions those providers should ask you, download our satirical whitepaper, How to Mess Up Your Accounts Payable Project.