Cash & Liquidity Management
Published  3 MIN READ
Please note: this article is over 6 years old. If you feel this article is inaccurate or contains errors get in touch here . Many thanks, TMI

How Digitisation is Improving Corporate Payments


In recent years, the corporate payments management sector has suffered from underinvestment in many organisations, in both process rationalisation and technology infrastructure. This has led directly to a range of operational challenges, including inefficiencies, increasing control, security and compliance risks, high error rates and the proliferation of disjointed solutions which require an expensive patchwork of manual support processes. There are many ways in which strategic digitisation can materially improve the situation for the corporate enterprise – and should be actively evaluated.

Digitisation provides the technology infrastructure to centralise and standardise the payments process, and to eliminate many of the problems summarised above. Digitisation requires robust, proven technology which enables optimised processes to be deployed to address the most critical challenges, and to achieve best practice in this vital business function. It enables payments to be managed with little or no human intervention, through customised straight-through workflows (STP), which increasingly build the base for powerful robotics to achieve fully dependable and transparent end-to-end results.

The key features of a strong solution bring benefits to all aspects of payments management, starting with integration from the start of the procurement process, through payment execution, and on to account reconciliation. Each corporate solution is configured to fulfill specific authorisation and workflow control requirements, so that different levels of policy, centralisation and functionality are properly accommodated.

Contemporary solutions standardise the management of diverse global banking structures and systems, handle an array of different file and message formats, connectivity channels, communications protocols and security systems, and deal with the complexities of multiple ERP systems and instances. The key is the flexibility of configuration and set-up, and the robustness of the testing and commissioning process. The result is an operational payments solution which provides a very high level of automation, and which may be fully relied upon to produce consistent, accurate and audit-proof results.