The Sourcing Innovation Source-to-Pay+ Cascading Mega Map! (2026 V2 Edition)

(c) 2026-01-10

Still useless, but still slightly less useless than every other logo map that clogs your feed!

1. Every vendor still offering software/services as of 4 days ago!

2. Every vendor logo is clickable and takes you to a live site (as of 4 days ago)!

3. Every vendor is mapped to a meaningful category as of the last date of analyst investigation!

So what’s the point?

To again make it utterly clear you can’t select a vendor based on a random grouping of logos on a map, even if they are categorized!

Not even if the map categorizes the vendors by market size, industry, and/or geography. Those are just proxies for organizational spend, solution needs and cultural requirements. And not every mid-market manufacturing plant in the USA is the same.

The only way to select a good vendor is to follow a proper assisted process and engage an expert who understands what vendors are out there to identify the right vendors to invite to the RFP process once your true needs have been identified.

Especially considering the true number of vendors out there is many times more than what an average big analyst firm will tell you, especially when they restrict their recommendations to their paying clients in their maps, and multiples of what an average big consultancy will tell you, especially when that consultancy only knows their partner solutions (that they need to maintain significant focus on to maintain their preferred partner status).

So, what’s the value?

As we explain in detail in the real value of the sourcing innovation mega map (2026 Ed), it shows you

  1. why you need proper proper assisted solution selection (and we can’t stress this enough)
  2. it shows how unstable the space is:
    • fixty-six (56) companies are gone
    • a dozen-plus (12+) companies have been acquired or renamed
    • there are just too many options for an average buyer to make sense of
  3. it (statistically) proves quite a few vendors ARE NOT GOOD (for you at least)

So let this be proof that there are a lot of logos in our ProcureTech+ space and that, if you want logos, you got logos!
666 of them!
Enjoy!

Source-to-Pay
Souce-to-Contract Procure-to-Pay Intake-to-Orchestrate
Sourcing + SXM + CLM Sourcing + Analytics SXM + Analytics e-Procurement Invoice-to-Pay / AP Expenses Payments (& P-Cards) Training
Sourcing + SXM Sourcing + CLM SXM + CLM Sourcing SXM CLM Analytics
Direct Supply Chain Cyber Monitoring ESG / Carbon Marketplaces Legal Marketing SaaS Intelligence

Source to Pay
corcentric coupa ebidtopay effigo
gep ivalua jaggaer onemarket onventis
raindrop sap simfoni synertrade zycus

Source to Contract
curtisfitch deepstream ensolva lgx
mercanis mercell merlin procol scanmarket
vendorpanel

Sourcing + SXM + CLM beneering buyingstation c1 cotiss
delta esm felix fullstep gainfront
intenda ionwave ispnext krinati lightsource
marketdojo marketplanet medius oalia oneadvanced
penny proactis proculy prokuria readytech
sourcingforce supplyon sustainment tradeinterchange vortal
workday zapro

SXM + CLM anydata birdseye brooklyn certa
convergepoint gatekeeper ignite itbid knovos
weproc

Sourcing + CLM aufait axya bidiful bonfire
cobblestone maistro prm360 safesourcing tradogram

Sourcing + SXM aerchain apadua archlet cimmra
cirplus cofactr inpromax k2 livesource
newtron oboloo opentrd pinpools pratis
procurekey procurementexpress promena prospeum qad
qcsolver sourcedogg srmeprocurement supplios teamprocure
tradebeyond truevaluehub valdera vendorful

Sourcing & Analytics curvo levadata requis

SXM & Analytics coglegal costbits everstream flowie
hivebuy lytica softconcis spendqube veridion

Contract Lifecycle Management (CLM) apporchid aavenir agiloft airflip
arteria atamis avvoka bonterms brightleaf
cipherace concord conga contracthound contractai
contractbook contractlogix contracts365 contractsafe dealsign
docfield docjuris docusign dsilo ebrevia
evisort icertis inhubber intelagree ironclad
joro lawgeex leahai legalrobot legalsifter
legartis lexcheck linksquares litera luminance
malbek opengov getoutlaw pocketlaw pramata
relativity simplicontract sirion spotdraft terzo
thinkingmachine thoughtriver tomorro trackado trakti
trueledger unimarket whitevision

 

Sourcing aestiva alpega amplio bamboorose
bestauction bideg bidlock bidso brainal
cosmoone enverus esupplier expenzing fairmarkit
keelvar lhotse loopio mysupply nextenders
onemoresource pagerduty partanalytics ply postrfp
procurementflow protendering responsive serex solvoz
supplychaincube supplyframe transfix wantex zivio

Supplier Management (SXM) achilles adaptone agora alpas
apexanalytix aravo askafox auditcomply avetta
axiscope bedrock canopy cmx craft
creditriskmonitor enlightaspice eProcure eved exigis
franconnect ghx globality graphite grms
haloai hellios hicx informatica integritynext
interos isnetworld itesoft jiga kodiakhub
kyriba leanlinking lexisnexis linkana lupr
matchory mycomplianceoffice meshworks mfg opuscapita
orbweaver partnerelement paymentworks perimeter planergy
processunity procurence qmsc relatico resilinc
riskledger scoutbee silex smartkyc sourcemap
sphera stateofflux stimulus suppeco supplhi
supplierday supplierio suppliersoft supplyhive supplyrisksolutions
tacto tealbook thomasnet transcepta transparencyone
trustyoursupplier vendorapp vendorscoreit venminder zumen

Analytics acquireinsights aera akirolabs alteryx
analytics8 anaplan anvilanalytical calculum creactives
cxonexus deliciousdata digitate electrifai greencabbage
hunterai ivoflow kiresult metricinsights mithra
neqo onetrust oversight partnerling prgx
proaact procurevue pulse robobai rosslyn
scalue sievo silvon sivuno sourcinginsights
spendata spendboss spendedge spendhq spendkey
smartcube spendscape spendworx sps suplari
tamr vanta

Procure-to-Pay (P2P) b2be birchstreet b1p compleat
curemint dynatos elcom equallevel esker
ezatlas fraxion inbuild kissflow marketboomer
modernpo oracle orderco pagero pairsoft
payem precoro proceedo procuredesk procurenode
ramp settle softco sutisoft tradecentric
tradeshift vroozi

eProcurement bellwether bill brex causeway
controlhub cordis enkash factwise unanet
finexio fluentcommerce idas inorder lojistic
markit nimbi openenvoy payhawk procurementpartners
punnchoutcatalogs purchasingplatform sovra spendmap spendwise
teampay uppler vurbis yaydoo

Invoice-to-Pay (I2P) / Accounts Payable (AP) abby airbase apexpress appzen
aria avidxchange basware billtrust bluechain
candex concur coreintegrator corpay dataserv
directcommerce dooap edenred edicom emburse
ezcloud fiscal freshbooks getpaid glean
iqinvoice lexmark makershub mineraltree nipendo
nium onphase opentext paid photoncommerce
procurify relish rillion sage servicenow
snapb2b snowfox sourceday spendconsole spendesk
stampli symbeo taulia tipalti xelix
xsuite yooz

EXPENSE airwallex deem expensify finetune
navan pleo pluto tangoe travelperk
worktrips

PAYMENTS & V/P-CARDS bluebean bottomline enable finix
payoneer previse transactis transfermate wise

Intake-Manage-Orchestrate
appian arkestro automationanywhere capto
celigo convergentis corvolo elementum focalpoint
levelpath netfira omnea ontra opstream
oro P2Cnnct pega pipefy pivot
procureai provalido qntrl sudozi tonkean
workfellow zflow zip

ESG/Carbon Scope 3
carbmee carbonaltdelete carbonanalytics carboncare
carbonchain carboncloud carbonfit carbonminds circularise
circulartree circulor climatecamp co2ai conserviceesg
cozero ctrls daato ditchcarbon ecovadis
emitwise greenkpi makersite measurabl minespider
responsibly sustainalytics Sustamize trustrace veriforce
verso vertaeon watershed

Cyber Monitoring
cybersecurityintelligence securityscorecard

Direct Supply Chain
approve athingz contingent ensun
exiger exostar findmyfactory facturee frdm
genlots kreatize marvo gosupply nimbly
omx overhaul owlsolutions partfox partspace
prewave qstrat rapidratings sayari shouldcosting
supplywisdom trademo versedai visotrust whistic
wholechain xometry zetwerk

Legal
apperio brightflag bryter fulcrum
lawvu mitratech persuit thomsonreuters wolterskluwer

Marketing
agencymania alliansis decideware hhglobal
mtivity moosh rightspend

SaaS
appdirect apptio auvik beamy
bettercloud calero cledara cloudeagle diminish
entrio flexera flywl hudled lightyear
lumos nachonacho najar npi productiv
saasrooms sastrify setyl spendflow substly
torii trelica trgscreen tropic varisource
vendr vertice viio zluri zylo

Training
eveneum lavenir positivepurchasing

MarketPlaces
auxionize axiom bizeebuy cimple
collectivespend droppe faire growinco iap
joor kaleida mercadolibre partstrader procureafrica
produceiq rheaply smartequip sourceit unite
wescale

Intelligence
apriori aranca beroe bipsolutions
brightfield buynamics capella chai consource
convergencedata costdata cottrillresearch covalyze diprima
dnb easykost evpsolutions expana fareye
freightos freightender fuelme importyeti LRQA EIQ
magayz metalminer mtisystems nvelop pando
paxly moodysanalytics procureforce procurementiq sourceintelligence
sourceful sovos spikefli totalbid trax
truevaluehub trustpair xeneta

Dangerous Procurement Predictions Part I

If you read my predictions post, you know SI hates predictions posts. It fully despises them because the vast majority of these posts are pure optimistic fantasy and help no one. Why are the posts like this? Because no one wants to hear the sobering reality off of the bat in the new year and the influencers care more about clicks than actually helping you.

But given how dangerous and costly the hopeful fantasy has become, not only did SI swallow its disgust and give you a realistic predictions post, but it’s going to collect and lay bare the most dangerous of the predictions that, even if seemingly innocuous, will lead you astray if you believe them. And now some of the influencers and LinkedIn aficionados are taking up the claims, and the charge, but like many other claims, they are overstated.

Today we tackle the first three, but you can expect this to be the first of many posts as dangerous prediction posts flood your feeds for the rest of the month.

1. The “Great Convergence” Accelerates

The claims of of the ORChestration providers is that all roads lead to them, the convergence will accelerate, and you won’t have to worry about what you need because, as long as you have orchestration, you’ll have it all!

For example, if you want to use the largest orchestration provider in S2P, your are limited to the platforms they have already integrated. The same goes for the second or third largest. Plus, if the providers you want to integrate aren’t reasonably sized Source to Pay providers, good luck expecting the workflow to support them appropriately.

Moreover, they were built to minimally support the existing solutions, not emerging solutions in the Source to Pay and extended Supply Chain Marketplace. In other words, the convergence will continue at a snails pace, but it will never be great!

2. “X” Finally Gets Modern Attention

It doesn’t matter what X is — if X has been needed, but ignored, for the last ten years, it’s NOT going to all of a sudden be addressed this year. For whatever reason, it will continue to be ignored.

Example #1, Cybersecurity.

As per my recent post on breaking down the risks: IP / cyberattacks, the risk of cyberattacks has been high since 2014, a year when 71% of organizations were affected by a successful cyberattack! Ten years later, 70% of small to medium sized businesses are still getting hit by cyberattacks. (Which means that if it was going to get major attention, shouldn’t 2014 have been the year?!?)

Nothing has changed — the reason? Cybersecurity is seen as a cost, not a return. So, when a successful attack results in significant losses, organizations spend on improved cybersecurity, and ignore it until the next significant successful attack hits, and that is the only time they will spend for new systems across the board, and that’s it. That’s why cybersecurity, inside and outside the organization, won’t get any more attention this year than last year.

Example #2, Risk Management.

There’s a big reason it’s been the exact same risks in the state of procurement studies and reports for at least the last five, if not the last ten, years. It’s because, despite the fact that risks keep increasing, no one ever does anything about it … there’s no additional investment in risk management software. Why? Again, it’s seen as a cost and not an investment. And when you’re already paying for insurance, why pay for what, at best, seems like more?

Even though the cost of insurance will soon be unaffordable given that natural disaster and fraud losses are going through the roof, if you can even get insurance at all, risk management solutions are still being ignored by every organization that hasn’t suffered a major loss as a result of a risk-related event. (And who knows if insurance will cover AI losses when AI escapes the vending machine? It’s a question you should definitely be asking!)

Example #3, Direct.

That’s supply chain, right? Right?

Wrong! But that’s the view that the vast majority of Source-to-Pay providers have taken since the beginning. Sure a few big suites picked up a few smaller players that specialized in direct sourcing, but that’s about it from the big players. And there are a few startups here and there, but they’re all overlooked, underfunded, and not getting any traction.

Because it’s hard. Damn hard. And the majority of S2P players don’t want hard. They want easy. They built easy. They sell easy. And that’s all they want to do. (And, often, all they can do!)

We could continue, but you get the point.

3. One of the big legacy S2P suites will go out of business.

This is a prediction straight from the genius of Gary Wright. Only a Dream Weaver would predict this! This has happened exactly once since our space began in the late 1990s, and it wasn’t exactly going out of business, it was a big acquirer deciding the space wasn’t profitable enough and shutting the vendor down. Specifically, it was IBM shutting down Emptoris and shunting all the customers to SAP Ariba in 2017.

Every big provider in this space is controlled by PE who have poured tens, hundreds, or thousands of millions (that’s billions) into the firm. If it starts losing money, and if they think they can’t turn it around, rather than shutting it down, they’ll flip it to another firm at a loss (to recover some investment) who will pick up some fire sale acquisitions, integrate them, update the UX, install a whole new management team, fluff it up, rebrand it, and bring it out with a whole new spin. Like ERPs, Suites never die. Even if they’re twenty years behind the times.

So if a new big player hits the scene, check under the covers, do a bit of research, and dig up those skeletons. PE knows how to make everything old new again, but tech is not like fashion, and you don’t want two decades old SaaS, as that’s just the same old sh!t.

Primary ProcureTech Concern: Supplier/Supply Chain Resiliency/Continuity

As this is one of the top risks and top barriers to success, it’s no wonder it’s also a top concern.

Why?

Given that supply shortages/constraints have consistently been identified as an organization’s top three risks, and can easily result from geopolitical uncertainty, economic downturns, and even high inflationary pressure, as well as decrease the category/market complexity barrier if key suppliers suddenly exit the market, this should come as no surprise.

Impact Potential

Impact is very straight forward, and summed up nicely by the Arrogant Worms in 4 words: No Sale, No Store. If you don’t have supply, you don’t have product. If you don’t have product, you don’t have anything to sell. No sale, no revenue. No revenue, no organization.

Major Challenges/Risks

  • supplier stability: ensuring they are legit, financially stable, and operating sustainably
  • supply chain stability: country access, operational ports, secure carriers, and so on
  • raw material availability: mine stability, crop protection, etc.
  • financial security: ensuring you have the right agreements in place to ensure supply chain financing as needed
  • multiple relationships: you need primary, secondary, and alternate sources of supply — and for certain materials or products that are rare or unique or bought in low quantity, this can be extremely hard to arrange

Final Words

Supply chain resiliency is in doubt, but supply is crucial, so you need to figure it out. Re-read our barrier and risk pieces and dive in.

Primary ProcureTech Concern: High Inflation Pressure

The two decades of low inflation we experienced in the noughts and tens are two decades we won’t experience again in our lifetimes. Thus, this is a significant concern.

Why?

More precisely, this is a significant concern for two reasons. The first reason is that if costs rise too much, the cost of acquiring the necessary materials and services to make the products and/or deliver the services you sell rise, as well as the cost of MRO and day-by-day operations. If you’re in a thin margin business, inflation pressure is thus a significant concern.

Moreover, this is also a significant concern because wages never keep up with inflation (because, if they did, we wouldn’t see so many port and logistics strikes every time cost of living skyrockets while wages remain flat or indexed against an outdated cost of living increase as of the last contract negotiation that occurred two to five years ago), and if the inflation leads to substantial cost of living increases, the relative share of consumer spending that will be spent on the organization’s products and services will drop, giving them less cash on hand to deal with their rising costs, increasing the spend pressures of their top joint risk.

Impact Potential

The impact is straightforward.

  1. If costs rise too much, not only does profitability fall significantly, but after a point, so does the sustainability of business operations. Cuts could hav to be made with devastating future conferences.
  2. If sales drop too much, critical revenue stops coming in, and the same problems arise.

Major Challenges/Risks

Inflation Projection
Predicting expected inflation over time based upon typical trends as well as from the impact of significant economic events that can cause rapid increases in inflation.

Impact Mitigation
Finding ways to mitigate the expected impact through alternate sources of supply, currency exchanges, operational efficiency improvements, investments, etc.

Final Words

This is a tough nut to crack, especially for Procurement. The organization needs to hire a top economist to help it predict and prepare for inflationary times.

Primary ProcureTech Concern: Compliance

Compliance is not something that any organization can shake.

Why?

As per our risk entry on compliance, compliance is a major risk. In any given country there are dozens (and dozens) of regulations that have to be adhered to. They cover all aspects of operations from workforce to production to distribution and all of the environmental and operational and labelling requirements that go with it.

Impact Potential

  • fines that can be serious as a result of violating any regulatory requirement
  • seizure and destruction if a product contains banned substances
  • criminal charges in some jurisdictions as gross negligence that leads to people getting hurt or killed by your product or service is sometimes enough for criminal charges

Major Challenges/Risks

  • international organizations are subject to hundreds of regulations and even itemizing what they are can be a near impossible task
  • reporting requirements can be quite onerous and exacting, especially when there are language laws, minimum disclosure laws, precise submission requirements, etc.
  • track and trace requirements that may require every raw material to be tracked and traced back to the source

Final Words

The topic of, risks resulting from non, and the barriers that are imposed by compliance could fill volumes, and has. That’s why compliance will always be a top concern, and why you need experts in the various areas and jurisdictions you need to be compliant in to make sure that you are.