Process Improvements With Measurable Results
See Our Results Below: Select an organization or industry based area below to view the related case study.
Organization Based
Broadly applicable to many companies and industries.
Support Groups:
- Finance
- Human Resources
- Marketing
- Information Technology
- Corporate Services
- Shared Service Centers
- Compliance/Audit
- Legal
- Internal Improvement Teams
Line Groups:
- Field Sales & Support
- Customer Services
- Contact Centers
- New Product Development
- Post-Sales Services
Supply Chain Operations:
- Order Management
- Master Data Management
- Procurement
- Materials Management
- Production
- Distribution
- Quality Management
Industry Based
Document operations which are unique to particular business segments and industries.
Services:
- Financial Services
- Media Services
- Broadcast
- Newspapers
- Digital
- Magazines
- Books
- Information Services
- Health Plans
- Telecommunications
- Utilities
Supply Chain:
- Pharmaceuticals
- Chemicals
- Food Production/Processing
- Paper/Packaging
- Industrial Products
- Technology
- Print and Mail
- Consumer Packaged Goods
- Retail and Distribution
- Oil and Gas

Consumer Packaged Goods
Consumer Packaged Goods: Accounts Payable [A/P]
North America; Worldwide
Project Sponsor:
Project Descriptions:
Self-funding, non-technology improvement of a $3 billion annual spend Shared Services group, including the firm-wide accounts payable operation servicing over 3,000 vendors across 20 purchasing sites
Scope of Project:
- Invoice processing
- Corporate expense
- Master data
- Vendor setup
- Vendor services
- Commission processing
- AP audit
Improvement Benefits:
- Operating cost 17%
- Annual savings $1.7M
- Head count 12%
- Break even point 6 mos.
- ROI (12 month) 2.3x
- Service improvement20%
- Vendor negotiation25%
Situation Analysis:
ClientCo is the world’s largest producer and leading competitor in its core business, generating over $7 billion in global revenues and maintaining a 70% share of the U.S. market. Following the rigorously planned implementation of a new accounts payable ERP technology module, followed by a lengthy and often-extended technology “settle down” period, A/P service performance continued to deteriorate. Processing backlog increased by over 60%. Errors, such as duplicate, missed and unaccounted for payments contributed to suppliers’ increased dissatisfaction and diminished cooperation.
Improvements Identified:
The Lab conducted a Phase I Analysis of ClientCo’s Accounts Payable function. The standard eight-week, template-based approach incorporated several additional A/P analytical tools: invoice hold segmentation research, invoice submission quality, processing cycle time impact and supplier satisfaction value.
The effort identified over 120, activity-level operational improvements. Approximately 90% required no change to the recently-implemented technology. Slightly over 40% could be implemented within 1–2 months. Examples:
- Inconsistent Payment Cycle Times - No formal method was used to align and track the processing cycle times for invoice payment. Consequently, suppliers, A/P staff, and the requisitions group, all began counting cycle time [>40%] in an ad hoc informal manner, using different starting points. This resulted in a large, costly increase in “follow up for payment” calls.
- Inadequate Submission Training - Inadequate training for invoice requisition staff across 32 plants generated high intake error rates. Roughly 65% of the invoice requisition forms submitted were completed incorrectly.
- Skilled Staff Diversion - Due to the high backlog levels, the most experienced staff were frequently interrupted and diverted to address the most basic issues. Roughly 50% of the organization’s capacity was devoted to rework and other low value tasks.
- Excessive Internal Blocks/Holds - Numerous internal blocks on payments exceeded comparable benchmarks by a wide margin. At peak times, up to 70% of A/P staff were engaged in reducing internal blocks/holds.
Overall Results:
The 5 month implementation plan targeted an immediate action [1–2 month] documented service improvement and a simultaneous labor cost reduction [15%].
