Title: Best Practice Financial Processes: Accounts Payable
1Best Practice Financial Processes Accounts
Payable
2Accounts Payable - Best Practice Objectives
Organisation
People
- Centralised processing
- Outsourcing potential
- Supplier relations
- Creditor control
Accounts Payable Objectives
- To maximise processing efficiency
- To ensure invoices are processed to agreed terms
- To ensure payments made only when due and payable
- To ensure liabilities are fully recorded and
distributed correctly - To achieve effective balance between extending
credit and maintaining good relations with
suppliers - To take full advantage of opportunities to
recover VAT
Processes
Information Systems
- Maintaining supplier details
- Process vouchers
- Process payments
- Period end processing and reporting
- Interface between Accounts Payable and other
related processes - Shared employee and supplier details
- System validation and approval checks
Measures
Controls
- Speed of processing supplier amendments
- Invoices processed
- Invoice processing time
- Number of payments
- Period end closure time
- Authorisation rules
- System access controls
- User procedures
- Validation and matching rules
3Accounts Payable - Measures/Cost drivers
Number of purchase invoices per FTE per annum
Cost per purchase invoice processed
15,000
6
7,000
3,000 or less
2
17
10 percentile
90 percentile
90 percentile
Median
10 percentile
Median
Cost drivers
Invoice processing time in days
- Number of invoices received per month
- Number of suppliers
- Number of different terms and conditions
- Complexity of authorisation process
- Proportion of invoices automatically matched with
PO's - Number of supplier queries
- Proportion of invoices received electronically
- Proportion of payments made electronically
16 days
49 days
6 days
10 percentile
Median
90 percentile
Source statistics taken from Benchmarking
database 21 January 1997
4Accounts Payable - Trends
From
To
- Integrated systems
- Electronic payment
- On-line matching
- Shared Service Centres or outsourced services
- Separate AP module
- Payment by cheque
- Manual matching
- Performed by finance department
5Accounts Payable - Critical Success Factors
- These are a summary of the key business
requirements, which must be met to achieve the
objectives.
- Single supplier database
- Staff trained in AP process and have clear roles
and responsibilities - Payment terms defined and agreed with supplier
- Effective communication and feedback mechanisms
in place to handle queries - Establish and maintain good supplier relations
- Process in place for monitoring the status of
invoices and payment schedules - AP calendar in place and communicated to staff
- Authorisation levels and payment terms held on
the system - Automated workflow to route documents to relevant
personnel when problems need to be resolved - Forward payment schedule to cashflow management
- Flexible matching criteria
6Accounts Payable - Appendix 1 IDEF Process Flow
The diagram below provides a key to the process
diagrams used in this document.
Controls
(i.e.
- Procedures
- Standards
- Requirements for rework)
Process / activity
Output
Input
(i.e.
(i.e.
Resources
(i.e.
- People
- Functions
- IT systems
- Machines)
7Accounts Payable - Level 0 Context Diagram
8Accounts Payable - Level 1 Overview
9Accounts Payable - Notes Maintain Supplier
Details
- Best Practice Features
- Shared supplier database with Purchasing.
Purchasing responsible for approving suppliers
(having made the required checks), agreeing terms
and conditions and maintaining general and
purchasing related supplier details on the
database, including payment terms. Accounts
Payable responsible for maintaining all payment
related supplier data, such as bank details,
payment method, payee name and address, payment
contacts. - Shared employee database with Human Resources.
Employee details are maintained by Human
Resources, but sufficient details must be held
and maintained by Accounts Payable, to allow
payment of expenses. Employee details required
include payment method, bank details, remittance
address, payee name and employee cost centre.
Accounts Payable should not have access to other
confidential employee data. - One payment address for each vendor. Where a
vendor provides goods or services from a number
of locations, the consolidation of the payment
process not only reduces the number of payments
necessary but also removes the potential need to
reconcile a number of individual accounts. - Centralise the vendor set-up capability in order
to minimise the risk of unauthorised or duplicate
vendors being set up more than once. From an
audit point of view, the control over vendor set
up is also viewed as a critical activity which
needs to be tightly controlled. - Changes to supplier details are processed
expeditiously. - If, the vendor is also a customer, details are
consistent in both databases.
10Accounts Payable - Notes Maintain Supplier
Details
- Internal Control requirements
- New suppliers must be checked and approved by
Purchasing in accordance with company policy.
Similarly, Purchasing are responsible for
processing any mergers, acquisitions or
deletions. To enable efficient invoice payment
processing and ensure segregation of duties,
Accounts Payable are responsible for the
maintenance of all payment related supplier data.
In addition, authorisation for payments within
Accounts Payable should be separate from the
responsibility of maintaining supplier payment
data and processing vouchers. Audit of changes to
supplier payment details must be possible. - Key Performance Indicators
- Time taken to process supplier amendments.
11Accounts Payable - Notes Process Payments
- Best Practice Features
- Use of electronic banking systems for payments,
thus minimising the need for manual intervention
in the process. - Centralisation of the payment processing in order
to minimise the risk of making duplicate
payments. - Payments made no sooner than the due date in
order to maximise cash flow benefits. - Facility to suspend individual payments. The
withholding of payment can be a powerful tool in
ensuring that the vendor complies with any
requirements asked of it. - Avoid payments in cash. Apart from being costly
to administer, the potential for fraud is greatly
increased.
12Accounts Payable - Notes Process Payments
- Internal Control requirements
- Payment processing needs to be tightly controlled
and totally segregated from vendor set-up and
invoice processing activities. - Key Performance Indicators
- Number of payments per FTE.
- Number of overdue payments.
- Number of payments made too early.
13Accounts Payable - Notes Process Payments
- Cost Drivers
- The following generate the costs for the
processing of payments- - Number of payment runs.
- Number of manually prepared payments.
- Number of payment media (cheques, vouchers,
diskettes, etc.). - Number of foreign payments.
- Varied payment terms.
- Reports
- Summary of payments per run.
- Payments on hold.
- Reports on Key Performance Indicators.
- Overdue unpaid invoices
14Accounts Payable - Notes Period end processing
and reporting
- Best Practice Features
- Automatic process requiring little or no manual
intervention. - Posting to GL should be daily. This ensures GL
data is up to date and also reduces the time
taken for the period end posting as fewer records
are being processed. - Internal Control requirements
- The basic requirement is to ensure that the data
transmitted to the general ledger is complete and
on time. There is a requirement to ensure that
the information recorded in the general ledger
agrees with the output from accounts payable. - Key Performance Indicators
- Delivery of information to general ledger on time
- Timely delivery of end of period reports
- Cost Drivers
- Volume of transactions
- Time to close periods
- Degree of automation in the interface with
general ledger