Recovery Audit Posts

Joint Webinar with Winshuttle Explores Automating Links from AR to AP

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Streams of dataLast month, Lavante teamed up with our partners at Winshuttle to offer a unique look at how our combined solution is able to automates a stream of recovered dollars back to your company’s bottom line. During the session, we focused on how our technology solutions work to streamline a company’s SAP financial recovery auditing processes, resulting in lowering transactional errors and credits with suppliers.

The webinar focused on the following:

    * Minimizing the impact and time required to access real-time SAP Financial data
    * Leveraging access into your supplier records to drive dollars back to your company’s bottom line
    * Improving the accuracy of financial data and supplier records in your ERP System
    * Using the Winshuttle/Lavante solution to self-fund the joint-installation of both technologies

Click here to see a short video with an overview of what we discussed in the session.

And, to view the webinar, please click here.

I’d love to hear your thoughts about the material presented.

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Data Security in Lavante Application

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

There has been much press recently about websites being hacked, raising the security stakes for businesses that rely on the internet and SaaS-based systems.  At Lavante we take data security very seriously, and continuously improve our processes and technologies to protect our customer’s and supplier’s data.

Here are several concrete steps we have taken to address such security issues:

  1. SAS 70 Certification: Lavante has recently undergone SAS 70 Type II certification.  Statement on Auditing Standards (SAS) No. 70 is a widely-recognized auditing standard developed by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).  It represents that a service organization has been through an in-depth audit of their control objectives and control activities, including controls over information technology and related processes. Lavante further underscored its commitment to data security and protection by migrating its hosting to a leading U.S. SAS 70 data center that provides state-of-the art, secure, SAS 70 data center IT infrastructure.  Lavante has always maintained the highest security and control of data, but the new Type II certification along with the move to this new facility provides additional guarantees that customer data is secure.  You can find additional details at http://www.lavante.com/sas-70-certification.
  2. McAfee SECURE certification: Websites displaying McAfee SECURE symbol are tested and certified daily to pass McAfee security scan which help protect you from identity theft, viruses, spyware, and other online dangers.  More details at https://www.mcafeesecure.com/RatingVerify?ref=connect.lavante.com.  You will find a McAfee SECURE seal in our application login page.
  3. DigiCert certification: DigiCert® (http://www.digicert.com/) provides security to Lavante by enabling the encryption of data transmitted between Lavante and your browser during an encrypted SSL/TLS session (look for the padlock). DigiCert® has verified that Lavante controls its site/domain. Records reviewed by DigiCert® confirm Lavante to be an existing Entity/Organization at the time of the review.  You will also find a DigiCert seal in our login page.
  4. Encryption of sensitive data: In addition to above security measure all sensitive data such as password, tax identification and banking information are also encrypted in Lavante Supplier Information Management application.

This is a rapidly evolving area.  I welcome your comments about any of these security measures and the related trends.

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Part 2 – The Future of AP: The Top 5 Changes Coming to AP

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Top 5 Changes to APThis is the second in a series of three blog posts devoted to five changes that are coming to AP:

1. More Importance Will be Given to the Quality of Supplier Information
2. Supplier Networks Become a Reality
3. Technology Provides New Ways to Automate AP Systems & Processes
4. Buyers & Suppliers Collaborate
5. More Cooperation between Finance & Procurement

To review the first two, please click here. Here, I am focusing on the question of how technology will impact AP systems and processes.

3. Technology Provides New Ways to Automate AP Systems & Processes

Over the last few years, this is the single-most talked about AP topic, and was the subject of intense debate and interest at the Fusion session. It is largely understood that automation is inevitability there were concerned opinions about the potential impact automation on, as they described, the “invoice chasers” and “data entry professionals”. I was impressed at the level of passionate discourse about how automation will impact the AP department, as well as how automation is often lumped in with outsourcing and off-shoring as a threat to jobs. The processes of moving past manual to automation will, no doubt, impact the staff in any AP organization. But, as one session attendee aptly noted, the focus should be redirected from potential job losses to the positive impact automation can make to allowing employees to take on more strategic roles.

Here are just a few areas where automation can be used to streamline AP processes and free-up staff time to work on tasks that are not as well-suited to a technology solution:

    eInvoicing: According to a recent Aberdeen report, 77% of incoming invoices are paper-based. The report goes on to state that paper invoices and manual processing continue to hamper accounts payable operations, keeping suppliers in the dark and failing to give finance the visibility it needs to actively manage the organizations’ cash positions. This report looked at the performance of a range of company’s handling of invoicing, and showed that Best-in-Class performers which used technology took 3.8 days to process a single invoice, at a cost of $3.09/invoice.  These companies represented the top 20% of those surveyed. Contrast that to the bottom 30%, or the Laggards that did not employ technology, which took 20.8 days to process a single invoice at an average cost of $38.77! Moving your company from a Laggard to Best-in-Class would go a long ways towards meeting the top pressures driving AP improvements:  corporate directives to lower costs, and lack of visibility into invoices and AP documents. 

    Automating Recovery Processes: A recent report conducted by Paystream Advisors focused on applying automation to the statement audit process, contrasting it to the highly manual and labor-intensive traditional methodology.  Automation, the report noted, really begins with the ability to streamline the process of connecting to the majority of a company’s suppliers — a daunting task without an appropriate technology solution. Traditional recovery audit firms, it states, review only the top 5-20% of a company’s suppliers, which “…leaves 61% of the statement credits in the remaining 80% of a company’s supplier population untouched.” This means a considerable number of credits are never found, and thus the company is missing out on a potential continuous revenue stream.  Automation serves two purposes in this example — it drives money to the bottom line, and it streamlines staff resources.  The report identifies the highest priority in selecting a statement audit firm as being “technology enabled” to manage extreme volumes of supplier data, enable 2-way communication, and capture and manage incoming supplier statements.  To read the entire report, please click here.

If you have other examples of how you see automation changing the AP environment, please add your comments here.  The final installment of this series will review the final two points: Buyers & Suppliers Collaborate and More Cooperation between Finance & Procurement.

Lavante & Basware will present a webinar on July 13 at 11am PDT on this topic, covering these top five changes. Click here to find out more and register.

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Lavante and Spend Matters Look at How Dirty Vendor Data Impacts Your Bottom Line

Monday, June 27th, 2011

Dirty DataThe topic of “dirty data” is certainly becoming more important in the Procure-2-Pay (P2P) space. As companies look for ways to further optimize their daily transactions and drive costs from their processes it becomes apparent a key blocker in the pursuit of excellence is the prevalence of “dirty data” throughout the supplier population. Of course the phrase “dirty data” is a little open ended; a more accurate reference to the problem would be outdated (or incorrect) vendor contact data, duplicate vendors and unidentified vendor relationships. Any of these otherwise unseen elements can strain the transactional process and create oversights in the purchasing process.

This week’s webinar The Dirty Little Secrets of Dirty Data jointly presented on Tuesday the 28th by Jason Busch of Spend Matters and Lavante aims to unveil the many different ways that dirty and omitted data in your supplier population can cost you significant dollars. Jason, Senior Editor of Spend Matters, will discuss from a high level how purchasing and payment challenges bubble up as data decays overtime. Lavante will follow by looking at, in very practical terms, how supplier recoveries are linked almost entirely to the presence of bad data in the supplier population.

By viewing the webinar you will understand a little more about the risk your company faces as well as learn ways in which you can combat that risk and prevent profit leakage.

Join us at the webinar, or check back to see the recorded on-demand presentation.

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Lavante Responds to Customer Data Security Concerns with SAS 70 Type II Certification

Monday, June 27th, 2011

Last week marked an exciting moment for Lavante when we announced our SAS 70 Type II certification, continuing our forward momentum in developing and applying technology advances that benefit our customers. Statement on Auditing Standards No. 70, commonly abbreviated as SAS 70, is an auditing standard issued by American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).

Our SAS 70 certification began with identifying 27 key controls related to our software development and data access security processes. Those controls were then evaluated and tested by a third party audit firm over a period of six months to ensure sustained performance. We are proud to have passed these tests and achieve the certification.

Our commitment to going through this long and rather arduous process came directly from our customer. After listening to their concerns around data security and SaaS applications we felt it was a necessary step to take in order to assure them that we had the highest level of security for all data.

But the impact of this certification extends beyond our customers, out to the industry as a whole. There are two different ways for a company to demonstrate SAS 70 compliance – the first is to use a SAS 70-compliant data hosting center, the second is to certify internal controls and development processes.

While other service providers in our industry have relied on only the first type, using SAS 70-compliant data centers, we clearly heard from our customers that this just wasn’t good enough. They wanted further assurance that development controls were in place on all internal processes, validated through a third party, as SAS 70 does.

To fully answer these requirements, we not only met the data center SAS 70 requirement, but extended this to cover the critical internal part of the equation. I predict that other service providers in our industry will now go down this same road, and adopt similar certification of internal process controls. This will be have a positive impact on our industry, by providing customers with further peace of mind and assurances that their data is secure.

In the end, I firmly believe that the future of our industry will flow directly through technology, providing intuitive applications that empower and enable people and companies to do more with less. As Lavante has demonstrated, most recently with our statement audit patent approval, that we will continue to lead the way in innovation and deploying technology that provides the highest levels of security to our customers.

Please add your comments here about what you think are them most critical concerns around data security and SAS 70 certification.

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Joint webinar to highlight cashflow solution for SAP users

Monday, June 20th, 2011

Streams of dataUsers on the SAP Financial module have an extra reason to smile this Thursday. Lavante and Winshuttle are teaming up to present a new webinar outlining our combined solution that automates a stream of recovered dollars back to your bottom line. On the webinar we will walk through a Fortune 500 example demonstrating how our solution was able to automate an otherwise impossible link from thousands of supplier AR records back to our client’s AP department.

For years Lavante has been unique in its ability to seamlessly communicate with an unprecedented number of suppliers to request and successfully obtain massive volumes of supplier AR records. Our on-demand software solution has always been able to process these high volumes of data and to validate potential credits against the clients’ records, all while securing signed approval and managing the supporting docs from suppliers. The only time our clients needed to get involved was in devising a way to pass the data back and forth.

Anyone who has ever worked with data or databases and has navigated IT’s tight schedules knows how daunting this process can be. With the Winshuttle Lavante solution, however, SAP users have access to a streamlined, integrated process. By using a simple desktop application the work involved is reduced to a few clicks of the mouse.

If you are an SAP user or simply want to learn more about this integration process, please join us Thursday, June 23 at 9am and discover how simple the process can be. Click here to register online.

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Maximizing Statement Audit Results: Best Practices to Drive Fast, Continuous Credit Recoveries

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

I recently had a long talk Sherry DePew, V.P. of Account Management at Lavante and former Director, Shared Accounting Services at Boise Cascade, about how to conduct the most successful statement audit process, and what that really meant to companies. I took copious notes during the conversation, and wanted to share her thoughts on issues such as the impact of credit aging on statement audit recoveries, the different types of credits captured, and how without a statement audit process, these credits can be lost over time.

How does a statement audit differ from a traditional recovery audit?
The recovery industry started before the deployment of ERP systems, and duplicate payments were the most significant pain point. The recovery audit practice involved extracting mountains of internal data – AP, GL, and purchasing data – to uncover anomalies that could lead to recoveries. During this process, there is typically a very limited statement audit process performed on the top 10-20% of a company’s supplier base. A true statement audit focuses 100% on the supplier side, looking not at internal records but rather the supplier data. And, because a statement audit analyzes a different data source, it uncovers very different pools of credits that would be missed without this type of review.

Why doesn’t the traditional recovery audit include all suppliers? Is there recovery opportunity in the lower ranks of the supplier population?
There certainly are credits sitting out there with lower-spend suppliers, but with the highly manual processes used in traditional recovery audits, it is simply not practical to include all suppliers. With thousands of suppliers, and numerous AR aging reports to consider, each of which can be hundreds of pages, technology is a critical requirement to manage a comprehensive statement audit. Lavante records indicate that over 60% of the recovery opportunity actually comes from the lower 80% of the supplier base.

What technology is required to perform a comprehensive statement audit?
First, the technology must support a way for companies to seamlessly connect to all of their suppliers. And, it must provide a means for these suppliers to easily send back to you the required data, along with a database so all of the data can be archived and analyzed over time.

What types of results and credits can a company expect to receive from a statement audit that would be missed in a traditional recovery audit?
While traditional recovery audit firms find only 5-10% of their recoveries from statements, Lavante focuses 100% on the statement side, so we consistently deliver magnitudes more credits to our clients. And where traditional recovery audit recoveries are based on transactional errors around payment and system errors, statement audits instead look for post-settle issues, which simply can’t be identified from internal documents. For example, if merchandise is returned after it has been paid for without the appropriate RMA and/or RTV processed, the transaction will have no internal records, and thus missed in a traditional audit. Another example is when an item is not billed correctly, or perhaps tax was included for are a resale company. Again, this type of error can only be caught with a statement audit.

How often does a company need to look at statement records? It sounds like it is more of a continuous process vs. a point-in-time project.
It is absolutely a continuous, rolling process. First and foremost, you want to drive cash back to your bottom line as quickly as possible. If you perform a statement audit as part of a traditional recovery audit, it usually occurs on an annual basis, so potential credits are not identified and paid out in a timely basis. Secondly, an on-going process uncovers errors and issues in a time frame that allows you to take corrective actions to deal with the problem right away and eliminate future credit issues.

Consider the example of the improperly tracked return. Depending on the statement audit aging time frame this error would be caught quickly – within 120 days – so you could fix the problem immediately. Statement audits act as a safety net that sit 90-120 days behind a company’s internal processes. This time gives your internal processes a chance to catch the errors, but the statement audit then will kick in to deliver credits that have aged to a point when, statistics prove, they will not be caught. Data that we have collected over tens of thousands of audits demonstrates that after a credit ages to 105 days there is a less than 5% chance that the customer will find this credit.

What happens to these older credits?

Supplier Credit Example

Suppliers apply credit to unrelated invoice.


There are many ways a supplier can get “creative” with credits, using them for other purposes. In the example shown here, the supplier notes on the credit verification that the “credit issued applied toward inv. balance...” The problem is that the invoice may not be approved for payment or be in dispute. If the invoice is not in dispute the company has a Purchase Order and a receiving records that will continue to accrue every month because there is no invoice to clear it. Either way, this “creative” practice causes problems, and the credit is not received.


What is a best practice credit aging time frame a company should apply to a statement audit process?

90 – 120 days is the typical range we recommend at Lavante. Many of our customers begin with a longer time frame, of up to 12 months, but this changes fairly quickly. As part of our standard process, our account managers work closely with our customers to analyze credits identified at 90 days which are then compared to those present at 120 days. The vast majority of these credits will still be there at 120 days. This gives our customers the confidence to accelerate the rolling time frame closer to 90 days so they can bring in that revenue faster and quickly identify root causes to issues so future credits are eliminated.

If you have other examples of how statement audits have benefited your company, please share them with us. And, please click here to download this blog as a PDF.

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Lavante Thanks the ITLG for Recognizing Top Irish Leaders in Silicon Valley

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Last week, Lavante’s CEO, Joe Flynn, was honored by the Irish Technology Leaders Group (ITLG). It is a well-deserved honor for him as both a technology innovator and as a proud descendant of the Emerald Isle. Both of Joe’s grandparents took boat rides across the Atlantic and settled in Newark NJ in the 1920’s. Although the pair grew up only 20 miles away from each other it took an overseas voyage and a neighborhood dance for them to finally meet. Joe’s grandparents were certainly innovators for their time and they were fearless. Their business, a parking lot and body shop combo, started as a large patch of asphalt. The first structure that they ever built on that property was comprised of an upside down barge serving as a roof over hand-laid cinderblock walls. The design, which housed up to 14 cars, was of their own creation and utilized materials that were available and affordable.

The same innovation and fearlessness that was present in Joe’s Irish ancestors are apparent in him today. Joe’s achievements in technology are a simple matter of identifying an opportunity and being undaunted in the pursuit of his goals. Joe grew up in the recovery audit industry and recognized a massive opportunity for large corporations to recover credits that are sitting unrecognized at their suppliers. He also realized that the manual processes used in traditional recovery audits were not going to scale to support an ongoing, full-scale review of supplier AR records, leaving a significant percentage of these dollars undiscovered. Joe founded Lavante (originally Audit Solutions) in 2001 with the vision to build the processes, technology and applications to help companies find these untapped dollars and drive them to their bottom line. From Joe’s original vision, Lavante has grown to not only a well-respected solution but one that has fundamentally changed the recovery industry, with solutions that help Fortune 1000 companies across industries find more dollars, with near immediate results.

Joe was just one worthy recipient in the ITLG ceremony, surrounded by a many others who have all descended down from a proud and hard working culture. Lavante thanks the ITLG for creating this award, for shining a well-deserved spotlight on Irish and Irish-American leaders, and for recognizing our fearless leader Joe.

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Lavante Awarded The Industry’s First Statement Audit Patent

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Last week, we announced that Lavante was awarded a new patent by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Patent Number 7,908,188 was awarded on March 15 and covers Lavante’s statement audit processes, technology and software application. This is a huge step for Lavante and a huge step in fundamentally changing the recovery auditing industry.

I’ve been working in the recovery auditing industry for over 16 years and I recognized an opportunity for large corporations to recover credits that are sitting out at their suppliers. I also realized that the manual processes used in traditional recovery audits were not going to scale to support an ongoing, full-scale review of supplier AR records. I founded Lavante in 2001 to build the processes, technology and application to automate the end-to-end statement auditing process.

Today, we’re the only automated solution for statement auditing in the market and this patent is an amazing validation of our original vision, our execution, and our technology leadership. I am so proud of the company and team that we’ve built. We’re experiencing record growth in our customer base and revenue, while partnering with our customers across industries help them find ongoing dollars out at their suppliers. At the same time, we help our customers improve their processes, data and relationships with their suppliers.

Our future vision gets even more exciting. We’ve taken our experience with supplier communication and management and we’ve expanded out product footprint to include Supplier Information Management (SIM). With a single platform for both recovery auditing and supplier information management, we’re offering the market a unique, self-funding combination for supplier AR reconciliation and quality supplier data. No one else in the industry provides this combination!

We recently closed a round of funding led by SAP Ventures. Here is how our new board member, Andreas Weiskam, Managing Director, SAP Ventures, describes our new patent:

“Lavante is filling a critical technology gap that has existed between companies and their suppliers. The ability to automate supplier communication and AR reconciliation is a game-changer for large corporations. The award of this patent validates Lavante’s visionary approach to technology and processes to the audit recovery market.”

I welcome your thoughts about this exciting development and how you see it will move the statement audit and recovery industry forward.

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PayStream Advisors Present Five Best Practice Steps for a Successful Statement Audit Process

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

Large enterprise accounts payable organizations manage millions of payments to thousands of vendors each year. Business changes including mergers and acquisitions, consolidation, and centralization, as well as new systems and automation mean that 100 percent payment accuracy is nearly impossible – even for AP organizations with the strongest controls. To identify the highest percentage of anomalies and recover the most dollars, it is necessary to investigate both a company’s internal AP data and processes, as well as its suppliers’ AR data and processes.

A statement audit is the practice of reviewing the AR accounting records of a company’s suppliers for un-offset credits. A comprehensive statement audit targets the breadth of a company’s supplier population to request and analyze AR data which delivers significantly higher statement claims than the traditional recovery auditing approaches. Implementing a comprehensive statement audit means managing communication and outreach with mass volumes of suppliers and requires an automated solution to handle the supplier data, orchestrate the outreach, and collect and manage incoming information from this high number of suppliers.

The following is best practice guideline based on research conducted by PayStream Advisors, and included in the recent industry white paper, Statement Audits: An Untapped Source of Dollars For Your Company. These steps illustrate how to implement the most successful statement audit process at your company and drive more recovery dollars to your bottom line:

    1. Start with good supplier data: In order to communicate with suppliers, the first step is ensuring you have the right data and communication preferences. Supplier data deteriorates quickly, so it’s no small feat to keep your data clean and up-to-date. For an effective statement audit, you need a system that will manage supplier data, cleanse and identify issues, enrich with external data, and ensure contact information and communication preferences are up-to-date at all times.
    2. Drive supplier compliance across multiple communication channels: Supplier compliance is an ongoing process; contacting supplier just once is not enough. The statement audit process is analogous to collecting past due balances – outreach statistics show that multiple touches are required to drive maximum compliance. Using an automated, pro-active, multi-channel approach to drive compliance is critical to a statement audit.
    3. Use technology to capture and validate supplier statements: With the mass volume of outreaches, statements and supporting documents, and verifications involved in a statement audit, technology is essential to tracking and managing the process. Technology can ensure there is an easy way to track, manage, analyze and verify information sent to and received from your suppliers.
    4. Proactively identify accounting anomalies and root causes: Visibility into transactions and credits across your supplier base enables you to identify accounting anomalies that occur after a transaction is settled. For example, expired products that are returned for credit after a three-way match will be caught by a statement audit.
    5. View statement auditing as an ongoing process, not a project: Transactional errors with suppliers occur every day. A statement audit helps you find anomalies that your organization does not resolve in the first 120 days. Identifying and resolving issues on an ongoing basis, vs on an annual or biannual basis helps you to maintain better processes and uncovers more money left with your suppliers. A rolling four month statement audit is a best practice.

Please add your ideas about how statement audits currently work at your company, and your thoughts about these best practice steps. And, be sure to subscribe to The HUB for automated alerts when new content has been posted.

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