Posts Tagged ‘Lavante Case Study’

Benefiting from a Prescription for Clean Data: A Case Study

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

A recent case study developed by Spend Matters details  how a North American and global procurement organization for a top five pharmaceutical company applied a defined exercise and solution implementation from Lavante to discover where it had excess risk exposure, lack of policy compliance, over payments and other cost driving issues. The procurement organization, which primarily focused on order-to-cash, procure-to-pay, credit and collections was ultimately able to trace all of its challenges in these areas back to weak or missing vendor data.

As the case study details, the company already had some of its vendor data under active management, but many vendor data points required enhanced management. Critical data with inaccuracies included:  remit-to addresses, parent child connections, duplicate vendor entries and incomplete fields including TIN, email and fax numbers.

If the organization had embarked on its data cleansing efforts internally, the benefits would not have cost-justified the task. As such, it decided to work with an external partner. After evaluating a number of providers, this pharmaceutical company selected Lavante based on the power of its underlying technology and the portal it offers to access it. Lavante also offered a breadth of coverage to reach the majority of the pharmaceutical company’s vendors rather than just the top 10-20% of its vendors.

The company implemented the change process by centralizing data quality through one common channel in order to ensure accurate books. To achieve this, the solution was integrated with the pharmaceutical company’s vendor outreach and registration process through four key components: validation, updates, augmentation and de-duplication to primarily find duplicate payments.

To read more about this process, download the full case study by clicking here.
It clearly demonstrates how this global pharmaceutical company was able to recover $5MM in credit opportunities based on a total spend of $10 billion. In order to have the same EPS impact, the organization estimated they would have needed to generate between $50MM and $100MM in new sales.

An underlying platform for credit recovery proved to be the key success factor. Previous, largely manual consultant-led activities focused on only top vendors and their “statement reviews” and led to a lower recovery rate. In contrast, the Lavante platform cast a wider net, and this broader reach resulted in additional recovery opportunities that had been previously overlooked. This was critical for this pharmaceutical company as the top 10-20% of vendors were already “over-farmed” and the next tier down was where the most significant potential for recovery was found.

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Global Cruise Line Uses Lavante to Maximize Recovery Efforts

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

As part of a larger report published by PayStream advisors earlier this year, PayStream also interviewed a Lavante customer to verify the comprehensive statement audit best practice approach covered in the paper. The findings of this interview are now available, which validates Lavante’s approach to applying technology to help our clients drive a continuous stream of credits to their bottom line, and uncover the root cause of trouble areas so AP departments can work with their counterparts throughout the P2P Process to take quick corrective actions.

We were happy to see that our recovery process was clearly differentiated from both internal review and traditional, manual audit processes. Before bringing Lavante in for a trial, the global cruise line had used in-house processes to track duplicate payments and unclaimed credits before trying two different traditional AP recovery audit firms. The later proved to be too invasive with too few results, and they decided to try Lavante with a small scope.

Based on the results of this smaller project, after a short time the audit scope was expanded to include more recent credits – from a initial 180 days down to 120 days old, and now working on 90 days. This “rolling” time frame is an important part of the statement audit process, as it gives the client’s internal AP process to catch many of the credits. We sit in the background as a safety net, continuously connecting with the company’s suppliers to ensure that credits on these older statements are caught. And, Lavante delivers these credits via our online web portal on a weekly basis.

As the manager of Cash Disbursements stated:

“[Lavante’s] job is to get out there and identify where people owe us money. They let us get this money faster and equally as important, quickly recognize potential errors. They are helping us collect with is due to us and most likely, a lot of this would be missed.”

To read the entire case study, please click here. And, to read the larger white paper which outlines the best practices for a comprehensive statement audit, click here.

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FREE – 1099 Reporting Changes Webinar – September 17, 2010

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

FREE 1099 Reporting Changes Webinar

Attend a free  webinar to help you understand the effects that the new 1099 laws will have on your company and department. The presentation will be hosted by Sherry DePew the former head of Boise Cascade’s global  Shared Services Group and Mindy Harada a renown tax consultant with Armenino McKenna LLP. 

The webinar is scheduled for Friday, Sept 17, 2010 at 11AM PDT

REGISTER HERE

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Taking Pride in your Organization

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

I was in LA early this week and at the National Association of Payables and Procurement and I gave a case study presentation with my client Ellen from Holland America Line.  Ellen and I had gone through a couple dry runs of the presentation and we were pleased with how it had come along.

The information and the story were great, but I am no graphic designer and the powerpoint graphics left a little to be deisred.  Not wanting the presentation to be too dry, I added a few images of the Holland America Lines cruise ships.  These are very impressive and majestic vessles, and the images were very striking.  Ellen and I hunched over my computer for a last review before our case study and she saw the photos for the first time.  Out loud, she said almost wistfully, “what a pretty ship” and then she took another moment and spoke again, “it really is gorgeous.”

Ellen has worked for HAL for 26 years, she has been on her share of cruises and she has seen the entire fleet in photos and in person more times than she can remember, but after all of this, she is still moved to the point of calling her ships “gorgeous” when presented with their image.  I hope everyone reading this blog can feel as proud of their company as Ellen feels for hers.

Everyone of us deserves to be as impressed with the product that their company produces.  I understand that we are not all in the cruise line industry and falling in love with our product may not be as easy for us, but we should always seek to find some part of our work that makes us proud.  In my own situation, I work for a company that performs profit recovery and optimizes vendor data for Fortune 10o0 companies.  It is not always the most glamorous work, but it is wonderful work when I see how much we deliver to our clients and how they feel about working with us.

At the end of  the case study Ellen produced a stack of business cards and held them up in front of about 50 people.  She offered to hand out a card and have a conversation with anyone in the room that was planning a recovery audit in the next year.  As she put it, She “loved working with Lavante.”  In all her 26 years she said that she had never  enjoyed working with recovery auditors until engaging with us.  I guess her comments are something that I can be proud of.

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