Learn the phrase, because you will soon be living it in every aspect of your life — it’s not only the new fashion in western politics, but the new fashion in enterprise tech tripling down on the AI hype when the big AI vendors are losing money faster than ever before (as compute costs skyrocket, competition heats up, and a lot of people are getting fed up with a total lack of return on their investments)!
However, in the meantime, as the hype wave makes it way though the mass market, a slew of startups emerge building on LLMs and fake AGI offerings, and the marketing mania takes over, expect the e-Procurement is Dead, Sourcing is Dead, and Contract Management is Dead rhetoric to hit all time highs as these new players cr@p their new apps as fast as they can, with new — natural language centric — interfaces, more automation, and instant gratification. (At least when these apps work as desired.)
As these offerings get adopted at a rapid pace in organizations who are just adopting modern solutions (which make up half of the space, or more), replace first generation apps from the noughts in organizations who decided that anti-complex is the way to go, and start to get noticed, the rhetoric picks up the pace and echos.
But that’s all it is — rhetoric amplified through a microphone. Sourcing, Procurement, and Contract Management are not dead, the fundamental requirements are not changing, and these systems are not being adopted en-masse. Not just because they don’t always work very well, but because they don’t fit. (And even when they do, they are just replacing one interface with another.)
First of all, in the public sector, you have to follow rules and frameworks even for tail spend. These systems have no guardrails, and by their very nature can’t guarantee the rules will always be followed. So these systems can’t be adopted.
Secondly, in many large private organizations, very large investments have been made in big suite models (which still have long term subscriptions in place), so unless the new AI solution enables functionality (regardless of interface) that does not exist in the current platform, or allows for a considerable number of seat-based licenses to be dropped on renewal (for a similar or less number in the new, cheaper and more functional, app), it’s not even going to be considered. Even if buyers get blinded by the hype because the CFO is going to say no.
But yes, some organizations will be in a position to adopt these systems, echo that SaaS is dead, hail the new Agents / AI as king, and go back to doing the same old thing through a shiny new interface.
So while THE PROPHET might find it fun to pontificate who killed the e-Procurement king, the reality is that no one killed the king, because the king will die a death by a thousand paper cuts, and then his clone will be put on the throne.
Why? Well, using THE PROPHET‘s examples:
- most intake/orchestration platforms just put lipstick on the pig you are already using (and the pig isn’t very happy about it), and the king you will get is Merkimer’s clone
- ERP will do what they always do, acquire what their customers are already using (and this time do it in fire sales as investors who paid 10X for suites get desperate for anything back as the growth in these suite companies stalls), and the king you will get is the next CEO, who will be picked to clone the current CEO in form and function
- people will see through the BS of “concierge AI employees” when they falter on more complex purchases, over spend on basic items, and allow Sony PlayStations to be charged to the snack budget (because the only AI employees that perform are those based in India), and they’ll keep the king they have until he nominates his successor (whom he expects to be just like him)
- the viper strikes from fed up merchants being overloaded with RFIs and RFQs to quote items in their public catalogs at non-discount volumes will be laced with poison, and the only way the king will survive is to back down …
- data aggregators and intermediaries will thrive, and they help to select the next king, but they won’t be king
The King is Dead. Long Live the King!
