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1 UN electronic invoicing initiative update Geneva, April 2005
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2 Advantages of electronic invoicing 25 billion invoices/year ( B2B + B2C, US + Europe) 25 € cost/invoice (seller + buyer, B2B) 20 € [potential] saving/invoice ( automatic routing and reconciliation) “Social” advantages of e-invoicing: - less “grey” economy - less tax evasion - better corporate governance - more transparency - less corruption
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3 Other “winners” of e-invoicing Banks More efficient payment processing, possibility of offering new services to customers ERP vendors New business opportunities to “upgrade” companies (especially SMEs) that have accounting systems that are not “e-invoicing” enabled Consulting companies Process reengineering can be required, especially on the buyer side, to make potential gains of e-invoicing “real” Solution providers electronic signature/sealing solutions, presentment and payment portals, archiving solutions, format conversion, outsourcing of invoice print and delivery (for customers who “do not want” the e-invoice),…
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4 Present situation (USA and Europe) 95% of invoices are paper, the rest is EDI (little XML) Slow growth (Gartner estimates that Electronic Invoice Presentment & Payment market might [i.e. 0,6 probability] grow to 500 million USD by 2010[!]) Some “success cases” (Finland, 28% penetration): main characteristic very easy for sellers Many solution providers, some (according to Gartner) on “shaky financial ground”. Lots of interest from users and tax administrations It is [still] not happening
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5 Is it all about asymmetry? Most (about 18 €) of the savings go to the buyer, who can reconciliate the invoice much more efficiently For the buyer, processing e-invoices is rather straightforward, provided he has a “good” ERP The seller can save about 2 € per invoice (stamps, envelops, archiving costs,…) For the seller, migrating to electronic invoicing means going through a number of hassles and costs Until the seller has achieved 12-15% customer adoption e-invoicing ROI is negative
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6 Can buyers “force” sellers? Yes, if the buyer represents a large part of the seller’s business (ex. automotive sector) EDI’s adoption model is based on “forcing the sellers”, and had little success in “cross-industry” scenarios For the buyer, e-invoicing makes little ROI sense if many suppliers do not sign in “Gentle pressure” is OK, but sellers must believe it will happen
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7 Key levers Projects to achieve critical mass in “high visibility” scenarios/markets (after, it will grow by itself…) Lower the barriers for the seller (make it as easy and an inexpensive as possible) Convince sellers that e-invoicing will happen in the near future (if the seller is sure that more that 15% will require/accept e-invoices he is also sure he will save money with e-invoicing) build awareness get commitment from key stakeholders create “self-fulfilling prophecy”
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8 “Interoperability” obstacles Lack of an accepted invoice data content standard Lack of an accepted XML standard Lack of regulatory harmonization [Too] stringent legal requirements (ex. electronic signature)? Why isn’t happening in countries where there are less stringent legal requirements and where legal harmonization issues are less relevant (example USA)?
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9 UN standards & recommendations Formal (and relatively time consuming) approval process required to guarantee neutrality UN “backing” can create powerful consensus even before the recommendation is officially approved “Legal” recommendations can be a powerful tool to influence tax administrations, but cannot be enforced XML standards must be implemented into software products. Then, client installations must be upgraded Very important tool, but have a certain “time to market” and - per se - do not solve the “asymmetry issue”
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10 UN revision of Recommendation 6 project Data content for reconciliation and bank processing VAT/sales tax data content requirements Electronic signature and ”sealing” requirements Work group members: IATA, EU DG Enterprise, SAP, CEN, swissDIGIN initiative, Italian Banking Association, PricewaterhouseCoopers, ADLittle, LEDES Legal Standards Group, AdsML Media Standards Group, FINinvoice, EU IDABC programme, UK Tax & Excise, Microsoft, ENI, OB10, Utimaco,… Draft ready in June 2005
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11 UNeDocs electronic documents project A UN-backed global XML standard for digital trade documents Covers ”common” (i.e. non industry-specific) core of data elements (example “buyer, seller, VAT,…) Industry-specific data elements will be defined by industry bodies Consistent with UN and ISO standards (ebXML, Core Components,…) “Version 0” can already be implemented (example IATA travel agent e-invoicing project)
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12 Bridging the gap Third party web services “solve” [most of] the issues tied to lack of standards and of legal harmonization They provide invoice format translation, invoice signing/sealing, invoice archiving, assurance of respect of national VAT requirement They vastly reduce the e-invoice hassle for the seller Widespread use of these services would somehow “simulate” the implementation of UN standards E-invoicing will happen sooner if sellers embrace the use of third party services, which still have a limited market
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13 UN’s role UN’s objective is to make e-invoicing happen UN standards and recommendations provide a path to interoperability between industry-specific XML standards, and represent a solution for smaller ERP vendors to provide e-document functionality UN provides an “umbrella” to foster consensus among key players interested in e-invoicing happen The Recommendation 6 work group has attracted interest as a way to coordinate efforts between “national” invoicing forums UN “backing” can give visibility and “universal value” to industry-specific implementation projects
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