Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Oracle enhances procurement suite

Software updates address the expanding role of the procurement pro, helping control costs, manage supplier risk, and enforce compliance spending, enterprise software vendor says.

rc24-procurement.jpg

Enterprise software vendor Oracle Corp. has upgraded its suite of procurement tools to give supply chain customers greater visibility into business spending and address the expanding role of the procurement professional, the company said today.


Oracle released upgrades to its Oracle Fusion Cloud Procurement suite, a product that manages an organization’s complete source-to-settle cycle. The suite is designed to help customers minimize risk, reduce costs, enforce compliance spending, and simplify supplier management and contracting. The update includes 25 new capabilities that represent a “step forward in industry depth and additional value” in an area where companies tend to “bolt on” solutions, according to Tom Anthony, Oracle’s vice president of procurement strategy.

“With these additional capabilities in the procurement area, we are continuing our pace of fast innovation,” Anthony said in an interview, emphasizing the procurement professional’s widening area of responsibility and need for easy access to expanded tools and solutions.

“Now that procurement professionals are measured on their ability to control costs, manage supplier risk, and enforce environmental policies and [compliance] spending, they need to have full visibility into supplier performance and company spend,” Oracle said in a statement announcing the upgrades. “Too often, a lack of visibility into what the business is spending on and with whom quickly leads to inefficiencies and increased risk.”

Anthony highlighted three of the new capabilities, focused on managing complexity and spend:
  • Complex Procurement helps organizations procure services and manage risk by helping ensure that contractors and subcontractors comply with negotiated payment terms. The new capability also provides transparency into services spend across payment milestones, allowing the department to track progress and completion of goals, Anthony explained.
  • Spend and Procurement Analytics gives customers a holistic view of procurement and supplier performance across the entire organization, including the increasingly important environmental, social, and governance (ESG) areas. Spend and Procurement Analytics helps drive cost savings and efficiency by allowing users to view key spend metrics within a single dashboard–without complex data integration, according to the company.
  • Spend Classification helps procurement professionals better understand their organization’s spending patterns and gain an accurate overview of buying activity. Spend Classification can remove manual effort and reduce human error by using machine learning to organize spend data into logical categories.

Recent

More Stories

robots carry goods through a warehouse

Fortna: rethink your distribution strategy for 2025

Facing an evolving supply chain landscape in 2025, companies are being forced to rethink their distribution strategies to cope with challenges like rising cost pressures, persistent labor shortages, and the complexities of managing SKU proliferation.

But according to the systems integrator Fortna, businesses can remain competitive if they focus on five core areas:

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

shopper uses smartphone in retail store

EY lists five ways to fortify omnichannel retail

In the fallout from the pandemic, the term “omnichannel” seems both out of date and yet more vital than ever, according to a study from consulting firm EY.

That clash has come as retailers have been hustling to adjust to pandemic swings like a renewed focus on e-commerce, then swiftly reimagining store experiences as foot traffic returned. But even as the dust settles from those changes, retailers are now facing renewed questions about how best to define their omnichannel strategy in a world where customers have increasing power and information.

Keep ReadingShow less
artistic image of a building roof

BCG: tariffs would accelerate change in global trade flows

Geopolitical rivalries, alliances, and aspirations are rewiring the global economy—and the imposition of new tariffs on foreign imports by the U.S. will accelerate that process, according to an analysis by Boston Consulting Group (BCG).

Without a broad increase in tariffs, world trade in goods will keep growing at an average of 2.9% annually for the next eight years, the firm forecasts in its report, “Great Powers, Geopolitics, and the Future of Trade.” But the routes goods travel will change markedly as North America reduces its dependence on China and China builds up its links with the Global South, which is cementing its power in the global trade map.

Keep ReadingShow less
woman making purchase with smartphone

C.H. Robinson says shippers are stressed about tariffs and trade changes

Shippers are actively preparing for changes in tariffs and trade policy through steps like analyzing their existing customs data, identifying alternative suppliers, and re-evaluating their cross-border strategies, according to research from logistics provider C.H. Robinson.

They are acting now because survey results show that shippers say the top risk to their supply chains in 2025 is changes in tariffs and trade policy. And nearly 50% say the uncertainty around tariffs and trade policy is already a pain point for them today, the Eden Prairie, Minnesota-based company said.

Keep ReadingShow less
woman shopper with data

RILA shares four-point policy agenda for 2025

As 2025 continues to bring its share of market turmoil and business challenges, the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) has stayed clear on its four-point policy agenda for the coming year.

That strategy is described by RILA President Brian Dodge in a document titled “2025 Retail Public Policy Agenda,” which begins by describing leading retailers as “dynamic and multifaceted businesses that begin on Main Street and stretch across the world to bring high value and affordable consumer goods to American families.”

Keep ReadingShow less