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PR Fire
Online Invoice - An Opportunity for the Banking Industry
It is estimated that only about 5% of Europes 30 billion invoices were
sent electronically in 2009. However, the number of electronic invoices
is increasing rapidly - at about 35-40% per annum according to Billentis
Report1. A number of banks are already providing electronic invoicing
services to their corporate customers - are you missing out?
Support the
Financial Supply Chain
There are many documents supporting the procure-to-pay and order-to-cash
processes from the original purchase request to the final remittance
details supporting automated payment reconciliation. All of these
documents are required for the entire end-to-end process in purchasing
or selling goods and services. Unfortunately, most of these documents
are currently exchanged on paper with only the payment being conducted
electronically.
The invoice is the most important document in the entire process as it
is the demand for payment bridging the delivery of goods and services
with their financing. The online invoice is also the definitive record
of the tax component of the transaction and as such has legal status and
is subject to compliance requirements, Banks should be supporting their
corporate clients electronic invoicing requirements - especially as
invoices are so closely interlinked with their core business of
financing and payment.
5 Reasons Why E-Invoicing Belongs Banks
Banks are uniquely positioned to profit from the introduction of
electronic invoicing and related services:-
Existing reach - Banks already provide services which are accessed by
virtually all Corporates and SMEs. E-Invoicing is an incremental service
which leverages the existing networks and relationships to the banks
advantage. Introducing E-invoicing provides additional revenue streams
with minimal disruption.
Existing trust network - Banks already provide, manage and maintain an
identity network through their existing on-line banking portals and
security procedures. These trust networks can be further utilised to
support the entire Financial Supply Chain. E-Invoicing provides
additional return on the investment already made in the construction and
maintenance of a corporate user network.
Core competence - Banks are actually very good at providing reliable,
scalable, efficient global transactional services. Why limit these
services to payment transactions when corporates expect more? Handling
additional transaction types, such as E-Invoices, improves the
visibility of a corporates financial supply chain and generates
increased transactional revenue.
Financing opportunities - Immediate and accurate visibility of a
corporates supply chain enables banks to offer attractive and innovative
financing services with reduced risk.
Brand - Despite the turmoil within the industry, corporates are still
more likely to entrust core services like an online invoice to
recognised bank brands than unrecognized third party suppliers.
Providing E-Invoicing capitalizes brand recognition and the increased
utility of bank services further cements customer loyalty.
These are reasons enough, but banks should also play their part in
reducing the significant environmental impact and resource depletion
required to support the mass of paper invoices. |
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