Intengo – Mastering the e-Procurement Tango in Turkey

When we last covered Intengo back in 2010, they were doing the e-Sourcing Tango in Turkey. At that time, they provided an on-demand e-Negotiation platform built around (multi-round) e-RFX and e-Auction with a sprinkling of Supplier Information Management (SIM) and early stage catalog management thrown in. A project-oriented system, it was a breeze to set up a new RFX or e-Auction event in the system and get a new sourcing event going. One of the unique features of the platform was the calendar view, which integrated with Microsoft Outlook and hot-linked to all of the relevant screens in the relevant projects, and which allowed a buyer to get a quick summary of where they were and what they needed to do at any given time. Other cool features were item-level currency support, smart unit support, and bulk-updates on (filtered) lots or items.

Since then they have been dancing up a storm and they are now the leading e-Sourcing and e-Procurement provider in Turkey, with over 100 clients, including a few notable international clients with operations throughout Europe and Asia. That’s right, they have migrated from a basic e-Sourcing application to an end-to-end e-Procurement solution in an effort to serve their clients better. Since 2010, they have added requisition and purchase order support, price lists and full catalog support, delivery notification and tracking, and integration with the big ERPs (Oracle and SAP) for master data management, invoice management, and e-Payment / Accounts Payable integration. In addition, they have also integrated budget management into the e-Procurement process.

A user can begin a requisition from a catalog or from a free-form request. The request can be sent straight to a (preferred) supplier if it is within the user’s spending limit (as defined by the budget), turned into a Purchase Order (after being approved, if necessary), or turned into an RFX or e-Auction. If the request is turned into an RFX or e-Auction sourcing event, the RFX or Auction is pre-populated with pricing from the most recent supplier price list (at the volume level) or catalog if pricing is available. If the request is sent straight to the supplier, the supplier can accept the request and provide delivery information, reject the request, or decline due to incorrect or insufficient information. In the last case, the buyer is notified and corrections can be made. In the case of an RFX, after the event has been configured, the request is sent to the selected suppliers who can bid on the whole or part, decline to bid on the whole or part, or decline to bid because of incorrect or incomplete specifications on one or more line items. In the last case, the buyer is notified, and if the buyer agrees, he can suspend the RFX or e-Auction until corrections are made, and all suppliers are immediately notified of the event suspension. A supplier who accepts a purchase order, who is awarded an RFX, or who wins an auction is able to immediately enter delivery information into the system (which can generate e-invoice data for submission to the organization’s ERP) and when the product is received, a buyer can mark the product as received in the mini delivery module.

The catalog functionality is pretty much what you would expect and is comparable to most other e-Procurement platforms out there and the budget capability can be used to define budgets by user, project, and department and track them against requisitions and awards project-to-date and year-to-date. The built-in reporting is good, and Intengo even has canned reports by brands (which are great for retailers). Furthermore, Intengo can create and customize any report on any platform data that you want, but note that the platform is still missing a custom report builder. However, realizing this weakness, Intengo gives you the ability to export any and all data to Excel or to your ERP (so you can build your own reports using reporting tools you already have). So if you do full ERP integration (and use it for your Master Data), and you already have a best-of-breed reporting product sitting on top of that (and chances are you do), you can use that to build custom reports on your sourcing and procurement projects.

They have also made enhancements to their e-Sourcing platform. One of the most significant enhancements is their formulaic auction capability. This weighted auction capability allows a user to define an arbitrary weighting, composed of one or more factors, to every bid, on a lot and line-item level, that is used in determining the rankings. The user can define one-or-more weighting factors based upon quality, warranty, shipping, associated duties, etc. The categories can be (optionally) displayed to the suppliers who can choose the ones relevant to their bids (such as shipping, warranty included, etc.) and the weighting factors can then be applied behind the scene. In addition, during an auction, suppliers can also suggest substitutions for each line-item and lot, which a buyer can accept. (And, if necessary, the buyer can pause the auction, define appropriate formulae, and provide additional information to other suppliers who might also be capable of offering substitutions on different terms.)

Intengo is definitely an up-and-coming contender on the end-to-end Procurement scene in the European mid-market and another European e-Procurement provider to watch, especially since, like other European players, they have been internationalized and multi-language since day one on their integrated, single-solution, SaaS platform that allows them to create new instances virtually on-demand. While SI doesn’t expect them to cross the Atlantic for another couple of years, it does expect that the North America companies competing across the pond are going to be seeing a lot more of them on mainland Europe in the coming years.