A few weeks ago, we not only told you that Exact Purchasing is a Pocket Cube, but we broke it down and defined each octant for you, as well as indicating which categories of goods and services were most likely to fall in each octant (with the disclaimer that there is variation between industry and sometimes even companies in the same industry based on size and focus).
This was a great start, but once you understand the breakdown, the next step is understanding how you go about sourcing and procuring the categories in each octant. In this follow-up series we dive in and define the core technologies you will use for each octant as well as their focus.
Today we start with the Transaction focussed-octants.
Low Complexity, Low Risk, Low Impact: Transaction Capture
This is the most “non-critical” of all of the categories in the pocket cube … the true lower left. The impact is minimal if a purchase is delivered late, or has to be replaced with another order. It’s so unimportant compared to literally every other category that, with the right technology, you can literally automate all of it without any worry whatsoever — because the worst case is an ASN/delivery doesn’t materialize and you re-order from someone else, a shipment doesn’t meet spec and you return it and reorder (from someone else), or a service isn’t up to snuff and you don’t (fully) pay for it.
The core technologies are the following:
- (Strategic) Sourcing: (Deterministic) Autonomous Sourcing
- Supplier Management: AVLs (Approved Vendor Lists)
- Catalog Management: APLs (Available Product Lists)
- Contract Management: Auto Creation and Auto-Sign
- Procurement (Channel)*: Goods PO (Item Master), Service PO (Fixed Cost Service), PCard Purchase (One Time)
- Monitoring: ACK, ASN, and Receipt in the Procurement System
Basically, once you define what the categories are, what the product requirements are in each category, and which vendors you have vetted as being real and “safe” enough to source with, you automate the entire sourcing process end-to-end. (You can even use experimental AI here if you want — the vast majority of the time worst case is that a wrong order is made, and you will have to inform the system of its error, return it, and order again. Unless, of course you ask for 100 10g pot for your nursery, and it interprets that as you needing 100 bags of 10gs of pot and orders 1,000 grams of marijuana for you off the dark web in a state where that’s still illegal … but that is rather statistically unlikely so you’re probably safe.) Once you have your AVLs and starting APLs that capture the specs, as well as your standard RFP/RFQ templates, classic robotic process automation can do the entire event from trigger (stock falls before a certain level, an approved buyer request comes in) to final payment on final delivery on final receipt. You step in if a human detects an issue, and otherwise, you just let (for what is typically tail spend) the process flow.
Low Complexity, Low Risk, High Impact: Continual Transaction Monitoring
The difference between this category and the last is that while the products are simple, commodity, and very low risk, you need them to keep operating day to day and you can’t be without them for too long. However, the lack of complexity and risk means that this is another category you heavily (heavily) automate and only step in to review the award recommendation to make sure the specs are met. You set up additional monitoring, and the system kicks off another event or PO (to a backup supplier) the minute an ACK or shipment from the primary is too late (and even sends a cancellation to the primary for breach of terms), again involving you only to verify an award (if the award is not one that has been previously verified, since a re-sourcing/re-order should be automatic).
This can again be handled mostly by classic RPA, but some AI will be used to monitor for new products from the existing supply base that can be used (even if the supplier hasn’t supplied the category/product before), because the human award review will ensure that new products get human approved before they are purchased.
- (Strategic) Sourcing: (Deterministic) Autonomous Sourcing with Award Review
- Supplier Management: AVLs and Performance Monitoring
- Catalog Management: APLs and regular review and approval of new product options
- Contract Management: Auto-Creation and Auto-Sign
- Procurement (Channel)*: Goods PO (Catalog), Service PO (Fixed Cost), Contract Invoice (Fixed Payment Schedule), Blanket PO (Fixed Delivery Schedule)
- Monitoring: ACK, ASN, Receipt in the Procurement System; Lead Time, Delivery, Quality Trends in the Inventory Management System;
* Unless the Channel-Master Joël Collin-Demers says otherwise.

