An Algorithmic Approach to Invoice Payments

What can the payments industry learn from Google’s revolutionary search engine algorithm? Laurence Holmes and Joseph Heenan show how the artificial intelligence (AI) technology which powers Google’s PageRank could solve some of B2B payments’ knottiest problems.

A paper was written in early 1998, at a time when Yahoo! and AltaVista dominated the search engine market, that proposed using machine learning techniques to “propagate” rankings of website importance from well-ranked pages through to the pages they linked to in a recursive manner.#1 This approach represented a significant improvement on the search technology used by the incumbents at the time, which was largely based on independent analysis of page content.

To prove the thesis, though, the authors had the problem of writing such a search engine. As they described in the paper, “To test the utility of PageRank for search, we built a web search engine called Google”. Thus, was born one of the most valuable enterprises in the world today – from the idea of applying a better algorithm to a problem of information retrieval.

Bringing invoice handling into the 21st Century

What has this got to do with the world of purchase orders, invoices, and payments?

Currently, even the most advanced firms’ systems are a world away from the automated elegance of Google. Invoices are input into a simple ERP system and paid out after extensive manual review and according to rigid classification rules. The scope for human error increases the likelihood of duplicate payments, and the slow manual processes ultimately leads to late payments for suppliers and additional expenses for buyers.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Imagine that instead of processing invoices by timestamp, they were processed by an automatically-calculated ‘PayRank’ – a ranking that took into account the likelihood that each invoice needed a manual review. Invoices below a certain rank would be paid automatically and instantly. Invoices above a certain rank might need more attention, as the system may have flagged them due to a large monetary value or as representing a likely duplicate payment. Manual oversight of such an automated process would instil confidence and ensure transparency whilst maximizing efficiency gains.

Mimicking the mind

Such a system sounds useful in theory, but can a machine really detect duplicate payments, beyond simple pattern-matching on amounts? What about fraudulent invoices?

Within the last few years, computers have been trained to learn very robust models of language via a technique known as deep neural networks, which resemble the pattern for information processing in the human brain. This technique has been used to very accurately automatically recognise and classify text, for example through Google’s Tesseract OCR. In addition to all of the now common tasks they perform, such systems could be trained to recognize and make decisions based on data in scanned invoices. They would be capable of accurately checking millions of invoices before a human worker has finished making their morning cup of coffee.

But, of course, invoices are not spreadsheets with all the data neatly arranged in fully standardized rows and columns. So, any system which is going to analyse invoices accurately for potential problems needs to be able to understand what is called unstructured text – information which isn’t ordered in a predefined way.

Machine learning has the answer here too. For example, word2vec models, trained by neural networks on massive amounts of text, have been able to correctly identify all sorts of concepts. These models look for words which are frequently used together and create a network of interrelated associated words or ‘clusters’. Such systems have been able to identify everything from the names of capitals of major cities all the way down to the names of suppliers of hydraulic actuators from business directories. In these models, every word is mapped to a machine-readable format (a vector of numbers) and therefore can be clustered together in a virtual space of ‘word meaning’.

Let’s take a simple example like the word “piston” ##2.

Invoices related to “piston” also frequently reference engines, bolts, valves, and combustion. A machine learning system would identify these as related terms and use this association to immediately cluster and categorize all invoices for these parts. From there, it can determine across many business units whether it’s buying behavior is optimal and whether any payments are being duplicated.

The instant payment prize

The question is no longer, can invoices be ranked by machines? Rather, it is which enterprises will succeed in adopting these technologies first and obtain the cost savings and revenue generation possibilities that they promise.

Potentially problematic invoices can be identified instantly, allowing the human team to focus on assessment of these potentially risky invoices, whilst the remainder can be settled much faster.

Adoption of this technology is aligned with the government’s goal of a fairer outcome for buyers and suppliers. Such process step-changes will enable enterprises to adhere to regulatory requirements, notably the Prompt Payment Code in the UK. In addition, these buyers would also become ‘buyer of choice’ for their suppliers, as suppliers would receive a much simpler and faster payment experience. Suppliers will benefit through improved working capital and reduced financing costs, which will also spur investment.

The adoption of algorithm-driven invoice payment decisions is a perfect example of what Bradford Cross calls full stack vertical AI.

At Previse, we analyse historical data to build such algorithms, along with the auditable infrastructure required to process and fund instant-pay transactions. Using this technology we can ensure that suppliers are paid instantly without any process change and no additional risk to the multinational buyer. This approach results in savings of up to 2% of annual spend, alongside a host of strategic benefits. The buyer gets revenue (a share of the instant payment discount as a data fee), cost savings, reputation gains, happy SME suppliers, and actionable insights. All done in a low resource, almost frictionless way.

Google’s PageRank algorithm became the de facto standard for search, with Google capturing 90% of worldwide market share in search by 20093. In the process, the technology revolutionized the way we search and share information, enabling immeasurable productivity gains.

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