Technology adoption in B2B payments has reached a new level. COVID and work from home sped up the pace of change, and over the last two years, we have seen a dramatic shift toward electronic payments and payment automation.
According to the "2022 AFP Payments Cost Benchmark Report," business check use is declining, ACH payments are rising, virtual card use is rising and the number of companies planning to automate payments also is growing.
Here’s another data point to add: Corpay has started working with more than 20 strategic partners over the past year—partners that integrate with our payment solution and offer it to their customers.
The uptick speaks to an emerging trend: Software companies, specifically ERP and invoice automation providers, are seeing payment capabilities as an integral part of their offering. It’s a complementary new service they can offer to increase the satisfaction of their customers and a new revenue stream for themselves.
An ERP value add
For ERP providers, payment automation is a value-added integration play. A mature ERP system typically has dozens of partners offering different value propositions for their customers—analytics, workforce management, CRM and tax management, to name a few. Most ERPs do not yet have an equal partner for AP payments, but having one makes a lot of sense.
AP payments are initiated from the ERP system, but ERPs typically do not offer technology to make the process of sending payments easy for their customers. This would be something very difficult for an ERP to build themselves because payment processing is complex and highly regulated. Partnering is key.
Compared to other initiatives, automating AP payments is low hanging fruit. Payment processing still is a very tedious manual process, with a different workflow for each payment modality. There are big gains in operational efficiency and cost savings to be had by rolling all those flows into one automated flow. And fraud risk is reduced, because the payment provider takes on payment risk.
Automation also helps companies increase the number of vendors they can pay by virtual credit card, so they can generate rebates. ERPs are able to give their customers a better user experience, and monetize a payment flow that they're not monetizing today. There is a very strong ROI, both for end customers and for partners. Systems integrators that work with ERPs also have recognized this opportunity and are starting to get into the game.
Table stakes for invoice automation
We also are seeing increased interest from invoice automation providers that want to add payment automation to their product offering to win new sales and provide more value to their existing customers. A few years ago, most businesses didn't even realize it was an option to automate the AP payment process. Now that it is becoming more common—and necessary—their customers are asking for it.
Software companies, specifically ERP and invoice automation providers, are seeing payment capabilities as an integral part of their offering.
Invoice automation is a very crowded market. There are at least 100 providers out there, and no one has yet emerged as the dominant player. There are a handful of larger ones, and many niche players that operate in a particular vertical or ERP ecosystem.
For those software providers that added payment automation early on, it was a good differentiator. Now it is almost become a necessity. Enough providers have started including payment automation that it is getting hard to win sales without it. A few providers are building their own payment solutions, but it is a very difficult thing to do, as it requires domain expertise, a high level of ongoing service and dealing with regulatory challenges.
Partnership is a much faster and easier path to revenue.
Closing the gap
As the way we make payments in our personal lives has changed in the past decade, it’s opening a yawning gap between making an instant payment with a couple clicks using something like Venmo, and the B2B experience of printing checks or making ACH payments through a bank.
Market awareness of new digital payment options for business is growing, and COVID is intensifying the push towards digitization and automation in general. Since B2B payments still involve so much manual work and costs, there’s lots of room to reap the benefits of digital transformation—efficiency gains, risk reduction, cost savings and rebates.
ERPs, systems integrators and invoice automation providers should evaluate payment partnerships as a way to help their customers on that journey while generating more revenue for their own business.
Byron Biggins is the Senior Vice President of Strategic Partnerships at Corpay. He is passionate about driving revenue growth through strategic partnerships and building and training partnership teams. Biggins holds a MBA from the University of Southern California.
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