Digitalization in procurement is no longer a future topic – especially in indirect procurement, where eProcurement offers enormous advantages. Purchasing managers who want to reduce manual processes and increase transparency can hardly avoid digital solutions. This article explains the specific benefits of eProcurement and shows how a flexible service provider like FACURA effectively complements existing processes.
eProcurement describes the digital handling of purchasing processes – from need identification and order placement to invoicing. This involves not only technical tools, but also the structural optimization of day-to-day purchasing operations.
For purchasing managers, this means greater transparency, less manual work, and improved controllability. Especially in indirect procurement, where many small individual requirements come together, eProcurement helps to streamline processes and make them more efficient.
Despite modern tools, many purchasing departments still work with isolated solutions or unstructured workflows. The result:
These problems lead to a lack of transparency, extra work, and unnecessary process costs – this is exactly where eProcurement solutions come in.
Not every requirement fits into a standardized eProcurement system – especially special requirements, C-parts, or one-off orders. This is precisely where FACURA complements existing structures:
FACURA is particularly suitable where systems reach their limits – as operational relief for purchasing, not as a replacement.
Anyone who wants to make indirect procurement more efficient cannot avoid structured processes – the right mix of systems and operational support makes all the difference.
Yes, many solutions are now cloud-based and don't require deep system integration. FACURA, for example, works completely independently of the ERP system.
Costs vary depending on the provider, number of users, and range of functions. Many systems operate with monthly licenses and setup fees. FACURA itself incurs no fixed costs, but works purely on a flat-rate processing fee.