Deep Dive: AP Processing Delays And How New Payment Innovations Can Help

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Paper-based payment methods such as checks and cash are awkward and cumbersome in either business-to-business (B2B) or business-to-consumer (B2C) transactions. The negative impact that these increasingly outdated methods have on both senders and receivers has mostly been ignored, however.

Such legacy payment methods are usually tied to paper-based invoices and manual tracking and reconciliation procedures, which impede payments from being processed in a timely manner. These payment methods also frequently result in firms receiving transactions and associated remittances in various formats that range from emails and Excel files to paper reports. Navigating the sheer multitude of options and matching information across several companies’ systems can be challenging.

Bottomline’s 2019 B2B Survey Payments Report finds that manual processing is the second-most pressing obstacle for treasury departments and the biggest challenge faced by small businesses. Sixty-five percent of surveyed small businesses considered manual payment generation to be the largest impediment to overcome, in fact.

The issue is not limited to small businesses, though. The report revealed that 54 percent of firms that generate more than $1 billion in annual revenues count manual payment generation workflows among their top three B2B payment pain points. Manual processes can be particularly problematic for such businesses because these firms can generate thousands of payments every day.

The following Deep Dive further explores how paper-based methods can result in processing delays and how new, cutting-edge payment innovations can drive accounts payable (AP) automation.

Manual processing challenges

Manual payment generation is both time-consuming and demanding, tying up personnel who could instead be focusing on other tasks. Such procedures are also prone to human error, which can decrease customer satisfaction and affect vendor relationships. Mishaps and delays can have dire financial consequences for firms, as lengthy invoice processing can expose companies to late fees and prevent them from accessing early payment discounts.

Manual AP processing can also give rise to other inefficiencies. Firms largely miss out on monitoring and tracking their payments’ progress. Suppliers whose invoices have not been paid quickly may deliver another invoice, leading buyers to mistakenly pay for two. Manual AP processes can also be problematic for businesses that operate in multiple locations, as there can be confusion over which location is paying an invoice. Duplicate payments negatively affect cash flows and create new challenges when firms work to recover payments, and this lack of control can leave AP departments vulnerable to fraud.

There is a better way, however. Automating AP processes can improve payments’ accuracy, speed and quality, as less reliance on manual data entry cuts down on related errors. Businesses can also look beyond their banks’ traditional solutions. FinTechs provide many services that can streamline firms’ AP processes, and almost one-quarter of businesses reportedly plan to boost their use of FinTech payment solutions in the next three years.

Firms still must take care not to buy into the hype of technology-based solutions — such as those enabled by artificial intelligence (AI), blockchain and robotic process automation — without understanding their business needs. Both banks and businesses view application programming interfaces (APIs) as the technology that will have the greatest positive effects on B2B payments innovation over the next two to three years, according to Bottomline’s study. The widespread implementation of the revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2) means more FinTechs, financial institutions and businesses are using APIs to enable faster communications between operating systems and replace burdensome paper-based payment methods.

The adoption of digital payment methods is also bound to speed payment settlements and enhance tracking options. Almost 55 percent of small and large businesses are using or interested in using real-time payments (RTP), according to Bottomline. More than 40 percent are interested in same-day ACH, and over 30 percent are interested in blockchain technology.

Greater access to innovative payment methods will give businesses opportunities to move away from manual AP processes. Those that do not keep up with technological innovation risk falling behind.