The bigger a business grows, the more important a role its accounts payable audit department will have. A certain percentage of invoice payments, estimated by Fiscal Technologies to be between 0.5 per cent and 0.1 per cent, are, actually, duplicate payments. Naturally, it is very difficult to tell precisely how much of a loss this means for the company, since each invoice payment is for a determined amount. So, if you are lucky, a duplicate might occur for a small payment, or if you are not so lucky, a much larger payment will be duplicated. But, statistically speaking, it likely that 0.1 per cent of invoice expenditure will be doubled unnecessarily. Recovery audit software is a way of recuperating the losses incurred by these duplications.
How do duplicate payments happen? Well, there is a plethora of ways in which this problem may arise. Commonly it comes from human error that consequently affects either the supplier’s or the in-house data entry system. Generally speaking, an invoice entry will require about twelve different fields to be filled in by a member of a data entry team, such as an invoice number, a quantity of supplies, a supplier number, a date, and a purchase order number.
The cost of recovery can be surprisingly high; independent recovery auditors might charge a huge commission – often in the region of fifty per cent – of the payments that they successfully recover for you. And that, of course, does not account for those that they cannot identify. With recovery audit software your accounts payable team can run audits daily, or weekly, in order to optimise your chances of paying no more than the correct amounts.
A solution to this problem is increasingly urgent in uncertain, and challenging, economic times. Why? It is not only – or mainly – because the pressure grows on your own business to ‘do more with less’, as they say, and to remove waste and leakage from your expenditure. This is, of course, true, though, and the longer an organisation goes without an effective recovery solution, the older duplicate payments become, and the pricier it becomes to recuperate them. The main reason for the urgency is the variety of factors in the economic climate that cannot be controlled. Again, the longer a payment goes unrecovered, the bigger the risk becomes that suppliers relevant to the payments may go out of business. Accounts payable audit teams are advised to make use of recovery audit software to safeguard companies against these specific dangers.
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