A recent CIO article drew my ire because it claimed that AI Overcomes 10 Common Procurement Challenges as it oversimplified the problems and overstated the benefits of AI. Let’s finish them one-by-one.
Legacy Systems Complicate the Adoption of New Technology: The article claims AI streamlines integration by assessing system compatibility, automating migration, and reducing downtime. While two out of three ain’t bad, it ain’t good when the critical requirement of assessing system compatibility cannot be met by AI — since simple text matching isn’t helpful if the interface of a legacy system isn’t specified in a standard format (as otherwise it’s essentially field-name matching, which is no different than human guesswork). The reality is that humans still have to define/verify the mappings before the AI can take over.
Letting AI do the mappings is fraught with errors. And its even worse when you let it automatically connect systems, pull and push data, replicate incorrectly mapped and bad data across systems, and “fix” data that was actually correct on system integration because the “bad” data in one system is used to overwrite the good data in another system just because it appeared to be more recent. Because it’s automated, AI can propagate and exacerbate errors at an unprecedented rate and in a matter of seconds make a mess that can take months to repair.
Managing Supplier Risks is a Growing Concern: AI can continuously monitor supplier performance, predict risks, and ensure compliance. This is one situation where they were almost perfectly correct, but, when they say vendor evaluation can be time intensive and imply that AI can speed it up, they overlook the fact that evaluations still have to be done by humans and tech can’t speed that up.
Moreover, if you think you can augment your data with third party data to speed up the evaluations, you’re just fooling yourself. You just make bad decisions faster.
Manual Procurement Process Drain Resources: AI can definitely automate repetitive tasks, reduce human error, increase efficiency, and free your team to focus on strategic initiatives, but only for tasks that are well defined, typically free from exception, and capable of being processed by standard rules. However, this can’t be done until the repetitive tasks are identified, processing rules defined, standard exceptions identified, and additional rules defined. Only then can the AI automate enough to be useful.
Moreover, using a next-gen LLM with chain-of-compute to try to break the requirements of a task down into subtasks, execute those subtasks automatically, and automate a process without any human intervention is just as likely to go wrong as it is to go right.
Demand Forecasting is Often Inaccurate : AI can improve demand forecasting, but only if you have the right data — it’s not a magic box, just a black box that you need to understand.
It’s not just demand trend based on utilization / point of sale data, its also market conditions which can sharply change a demand curve overnight … traditional curve fitting / machine learning that most “AI” is based on cannot detect a change in market conditions or a political situation that can cause a rapid change in demand.
Procurement Remains Transactional Rather Than Strategic: AI DOES NOT transform procurement into a strategic function that optimizes spend, improves supplier collaboration, and aligns purchasing decisions with your business! Only people-powered Human Intelligence (HI!) can do that. Remember — transforming Procurement requires defining a strategy, defining appropriate processes, identifying the right people to transform it, and then, and only then, identifying the right technologies.
Assuming that you can slap in AI and transform a tactical function into a strategic one is worse than a pipe dream, it’s a recipe for disaster. Running fast and hard doesn’t get you any closer to the finish line if it’s not in the right direction. For more details, see the dozens of posts about AI in the archives.
Again, we’re not saying that AI is bad. Technology is neither good nor bad. But, like any technology, it has to be ready for prime time, correctly identified, correctly implemented, and correctly used — and that requires a lot of Human Intelligence (HI!) and planning, and the right processes put in place. Shoving it in and expecting a miracle is dangerous. And this is yet another article that implies you can just shove it in and get results. And you can’t. Especially if it’s the wrong technology, which can enhance your problem instead of shrinking it. That’s the problem. This article, like many others, doesn’t tell you about the dangers and downfalls and what you have to do to avoid them.