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Understanding Supplier Enablement and Its Benefits

Barbara Cook
By Barbara Cook
Barbara Cook

Barbara Cook

Barbara is a financial writer for Tipalti and other successful B2B businesses, including SaaS and financial companies. She is a former CFO for fast-growing tech companies with Deloitte audit experience. Barbara has an MBA from The University of Texas and an active CPA license. When she’s not writing, Barbara likes to research public companies and play Pickleball, Texas Hold ‘em poker, bridge, and Mah Jongg.

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Updated November 17, 2024
Accounts Payable
Supplier Management
Supplier Payments
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Supplier enablement is key to cultivating business relationships with your suppliers and raising your return on investment. For the suppliers you work closely with, it’s not sufficient simply to send out invoices and make payments. More complicated vendor relationships require cohesive communication and the right planning to get done right.

If you believe you aren’t getting enough out of your vendors for better supplier performance, a robust supplier enablement strategy is the answer. Supplier enablement includes connecting to a supply chain, supplier onboarding, communication, and compliance components. Let’s specifically address what such a program would involve and how you can achieve it with the right steps and best practices.

What Is Supplier Enablement?

Supplier enablement is the process of connecting and onboarding chosen suppliers to your electronic systems. It includes strategy development including supplier risk management, analysis, compliance policies, as well as continued education and communication. When attention is given to creating supplier enablement practices, mutually beneficial and longer-lasting supplier relationships are formed.

What are companies doing exactly when they’re deploying supplier enablement programs? Supplier enablement starts by connecting your vendors and trading partners with your supply chain using electronic means, such as:

  • Online forms
  • XML data files
  • Radio-frequency identification
  • Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
  • Other E-commerce tools

By connecting with suppliers, you enable direct communication with them and can share critical information about the goods and services you purchase regularly like invoices and purchase orders.

But supplier enablement goes beyond connecting with partners in your supplier network. A company has the opportunity to share technologies and tools from different software providers and develop materials and business processes to help vendors play a more active role in the success of the partnership. A business that focuses on supplier enablement enjoys many benefits.

  • Higher return on investment from suppliers
  • A more efficient supply chain and procurement process
  • Improved communications and invoice tracking in real-time
  • Elimination of inefficient or manual processes

We need to transition into what the full supplier enablement process includes and what can be done to take advantage of these benefits.

What Is the Supplier Enablement Process?

Enablement handles every aspect of global supplier management, from onboarding to deployment to regular updates and support. A complete strategy for supplier enablement involves several key components.

Building a Foundation For Success

Positive supplier relationships are spearheaded by strong leadership commitments and a focus on business objectives. Supplier enablement is actually important enough that most companies have entire teams dedicated to the supplier enablement strategy for their supplier list. These people have a thorough understanding of the needs of internal stakeholders and can make adjustments to vendors accordingly.

Executive oversight is necessary to determine what the supplier enablement strategy will do and how it plans to accomplish its tasks. The company must establish clearly-defined goals and success metrics at this stage. Regular meetings will also be held to analyze progress, make informed decisions, and ensure that the strategy is moving forward in the right direction.

The enablement team also needs to develop a model for governance and management processes. A checklist, for instance, can detail all the steps of the full supplier enablement process, including key milestones and timelines for delivery.

Maintaining Positive Partnerships

When it comes time to add new third-parties into the supply chain, start with a repeatable and consistent process for onboarding and deploying new vendors without staff disruptions.

  • Supplier onboarding: A business begins by selecting its suppliers and conducting a supplier onboarding process that gets them acquainted with the internal supply chain network.
  • Communication: A large part of enablement is educating and talking with suppliers so that the relationship is more than just a series of invoices being passed back and forth. It’s not uncommon to see businesses offer training sessions and documentation for their vendors at this stage.
  • Compliance: Make clear your expectations, deadlines, and general requirements and work out ways to ensure vendors participate in the overall success of the partnership. This way, both sides can work together to resolve issues.

A supplier enablement program is never perfect right out of the gate to manage suppliers. A dedication to continual improvement and a focus on change management is necessary for fostering positive vendor relationships with strategic suppliers in the long-term.

Self-service supplier onboarding saves your company time

Effective supplier onboarding training gets the job done quickly and accurately.  Learn how suppliers can onboard themselves through automation.

Enabling the Success of Vendor Partnerships

Tips and Best Practices:

Upon onboarding a new supplier, the first step is usually to undergo a test run by processing a few small transactions to ensure that the internal catalog works as expected. During this process, communicate with your vendors, specify due dates for expected deliverables, and track and report your results.

A few best practices for supplier enablement include the following.

  • Clean up supplier data: What do you know about your third-party business relationships? Do you have accurate and up-to-date information on them? Is your data free of both inaccuracies and duplicates? If not, then you risk wasting time on your enablement program working with the wrong entities.
  • Categorize your vendors: Since many larger projects have thousands of suppliers, vendors must be grouped and prioritized accordingly. Divert most of your attention to the most critical suppliers for best results.
  • Don’t skimp on communication: There’s no such thing as overcommunication here. It is paramount to inform your suppliers of any major project changes and updates. That way, they can adapt to changing demands and circumstances with ease.
  • Consider a system of rewards and penalties: Gamification can be part of enablement. Emphasize the importance of vendors’ participation in the process by encouraging them to meet deadlines and communicate transparently. Non-compliant vendors must be addressed promptly.
  • Provide self-support options: Supplier education has always played a role in enablement. To that end, businesses often generate online documentation for suppliers to reference, occasionally through a dedicated portal.
  • Don’t forget about legal compliance: Some jurisdictions have restrictions on how companies can interact with their suppliers. For instance, Mexico requires both PDF and XML file formats, and organizations operating in that country must format their invoices accordingly.

Like many modern business processes, the use of supplier management technology plays a huge role in integrating with suppliers electronically. A digital supplier portal for vendors to handle registration and order management is often among the most pressing priorities for supplier enablement programs.

And most of all, don’t treat supplier enablement as a one-time consideration. As new vendors are added to your database and as project requirements change over time, continual optimization is key to enabling more fruitful vendor partnerships and better vendor management.

Automation + Supplier Enablement

Tipalti provides supplier enablement with supplier management software that your company can use to let suppliers begin accurately onboarding with their information through a Tipalti self-service Supplier Hub. The supplier portal can be either white-label branded through your company’s website or hosted by Tipalti. 

The Tipalti supplier portal is part of Tipalti’s cost-saving finance automation software platform with functionality for accounts payable, mass payments, and procurement management. 

As the system is streamlining processes, suppliers enter their contact information and W-9 or W-8 form data before receiving the first payment, select a preferred payment method and local currency, and securely provide payment information. Tipalti automation software pays suppliers in over 196 countries, with a choice of 120 currencies. 

Tipalti’s Supplier Enablement program includes outreach and educates your suppliers and vendors on how to use onboarding processes through Tipalti’s Supplier Hub. The supplier enablement team describes payment methods that your suppliers can choose when onboarding. 

With proper supplier onboarding, you’ll have a cleaner master file with more accurate data to use in your unified and efficient Tipalti software automation solution, integrated with your ERP system, to handle the procure-to-pay process and produce financial statements. Learn more about supplier enablement for how to streamline onboarding suppliers. 

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