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    Oracle Advanced Procurement

    Oracle Advanced Procurement automates purchasing to make buyers more productive, improves

    management of your supply base and adapts to any procurement process. As the heart of the Oracle

    Advanced Procurement suite, Oracle Purchasing provides a rich store of policy and supplier information,

    a robust workbench for buying professionals, and consolidated visibility into all spending. OraclePurchasing turns demand into orders with the least possible manual work. Configurable automation

    executes routine transactions without intervention, making buyers more productive while enforcing

    compliance at every step. So procurement professionals spend less time processing paper, and more

    time discovering and exploiting new savings opportunities.

    Web-Shopping Interface Ensures Rapid Deployment and Adoption

    Oracle iProcurement lets you control spending by all employees because it is easy for you to implement

    and for them to use. Oracle iProcurement gives employees an intuitive web-shopping interface that is

    instantly familiar to anyone who has shopped online. Powerful search features and logically grouped

    online stores lead users to the products and services they need. Requesters can place and track orders

    from any web browser. This web architecture also allows rapid deployment to every employee because

    there is no desktop software to install. Your employees have immediate access to the 'iProcurement'

    system and an interface they can use right away.

    Content Control Guides User Choice

    With Oracle iProcurement, Purchasing departments completely control the products, services and views

    that employees see; based on organization, responsibilities, and more. The content can be easily loaded

    into iProcurement and you can use your existing supplier agreements. Requesters find the items using a

    configurable category structure or employ the powerful advanced search capabilities. You can providerich information on the items so employees make informed decisions. Suppliers can also manage

    content on your behalf. Oracle iProcurement allows users to punch-out to supplier-hosted sites,

    returning for checkout and approval. Additionally, iProcurements unique Transparent Punch-Out even

    allows users to access content from external sites without ever leaving the familiar iProcurement

    interface. By providing flexible options for user content, Oracle iProcurement gives you unparalleled

    ability to guide employees to make compliant purchasing choices.

    Key Functionality of Oracle iProcurement

    Catalog Management

    Purchasable content is made available for shopping from internal or external sources based on the

    organizations needs.

    Shopping

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    Process where users search for, compare, and select items that they need to purchase. Users can search

    the internal catalog, lists, table of contents, and categories. They can also punch out to either supplier-

    hosted or marketplace-hosted catalogs to shop. Once found, the items can be quickly added to a

    shopping cart.

    Checkout and submit

    Requestors enter quantities, billing information, and delivery information in the shopping cart for their

    order. Their cart contents are converted to a requisition and submitted for approval.

    Approval and order creation

    Workflow routes requisitions to the correct approvers based on predefined business rules. Approved

    requisitions are used to create purchase orders and blanket purchase agreement releases. Additionally,

    approved requisitions can be placed on Sourcing RFQs and auctions.

    Receive order

    Process where users specify information about the delivery of their order.

    Buyer Hosted Supplier Hosted Online Marketplace Hosted

    Extract Local Item content

    Base and Local descriptors

    Oracle iProcurement Submit Request Data Flow

    Once the shopping cart is complete, it is processed:

    iProcurement

    The shopping cart contents become requisition lines during checkout and are submitted for approval.

    Purchasing

    The iProcurement requisition becomes part of the requisition pool awaiting action by workflow or

    AutoCreate.

    Workflow

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    PO Requisition Approval workflow routes the requisition for approval.

    PO Create Documents workflow creates a purchase order or release from the approved requisition.

    PO Approval workflow routes the purchase order for approval.

    e-Commerce Gateway

    Outbound 850

    Outbound 860

    XML Gateway

    New Purchase Order (standard or release)

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    Verify Profile Options That Impact Oracle iProcurement: Oracle Applications

    System Administrator Responsibility

    (N) Profile > System

    These are a few key profile options. Refer to product user guides for more complete lists.

    Audit Trail: Activate

    If you want to keep track of the changes made to your data by application users, you should set up Audit

    Trail for the relevant tables. Defining Audit Trail for your site involves defining Audit Groups, which are

    groups of tables and columns for which you intend to track changes. You then define Audit Installations

    to instruct Audit Trail which ORACLE IDs you want to audit. Finally, you run the Audit Trail Update Tables

    Report, which allows your Audit Trail definitions to take effect.

    Default Country

    This is the default source for the Country field for all address zones and is used by the Flexible Address

    Formats feature, the Flexible Bank Structures feature and the Tax Registration Number and Taxpayer ID

    validation routines.

    Help Localization Code

    This is the localization code for localized Help files.

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    GL: Set of Books Name

    Specify your set of books. This option also associates a set of books with a responsibility.

    Sequential Numbering

    Sequential numbering assigns numbers to documents created in the Oracle financial products.

    HR: User Type

    Use this profile option to limit field access when sharing Oracle Human Resources and Oracle Payroll.

    Verify Profile Options That Impact Oracle iProcurement: Oracle Purchasing

    System Administrator Responsibility

    (N) Profile > System

    These are a few key profile options. Refer to theOracle Purchasing Users Guidefor a complete list.

    PO: Set Debug Workflow On

    Used usually by technical support staff only for finding problems with the Oracle Purchasing workflow

    processes. The default value is No. The user can view and update this profile option. It can also be

    updated at the user, responsibility, application, and site levels.

    PO: Workflow Processing Mode

    Affects the performance of the Purchasing approval workflow processes:

    Online - Completes an entire approval workflow process before letting you proceed to the next activity,

    but provides you with an updated Status (for purchase orders) as soon as it finishes.

    Background - Enables you to proceed to the next activity while the approval process completes in the

    background. When this profile option is set to Background, you must start the Workflow Background

    Engine, which you access through the System Administrator responsibility. It is recommended that you

    set this process to run frequently, if you are using it for Background mode approvals.

    MO: Operating Unit

    Determines the operating unit associated with your responsibility.

    HR: Cross Business Groups

    Affects the suggested buyer functionality by including buyers from different business groups.

    HR: Business Group

    Associates a business group with a responsibility.

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    Verify Profile Options That Impact Oracle iProcurement

    System Administrator Responsibility

    (N) Profile > System

    These are a few key profile options. There were more complete lists of iProcurement profile covered in

    earlier sections of this course. See the Oracle iProcurement Implementation Guidefor a complete list.

    Attachment File Directory

    Specifies the directory where attachments are stored.

    ICX: Limit connect

    Determines the maximum number of page hits per session.

    ICX: Limit time

    Determines the maximum number of hours a user can be logged on per session.

    ICX: Override Location Flag

    Determines whether the default deliver-to location on orders can be overridden.

    ICX: Override Requestor

    Determines whether a user can override the default requestor code and create a requisition for

    everyone, the entire organization, or just the user.

    POR: Amount Based Services Line Type

    Determines the line type for amount-based non-catalog requests.

    POR: Goods Line Type

    Indicates the line type that should be used for all bulk loaded items and quantity-based non-catalog

    requests.

    Define Information Templates

    Purchasing Super User Responsibility

    (N) Setup > Information Templates

    Information templates provide a way to capture required information for ordering an item. The example

    in the slide might be used to create a business card order. Information templates are created and

    associated with an item or category by the purchasing system administrator. These templates list the

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    attributes field names in which data should be entered. Any of the fields can be designated as

    mandatory. These templates are set up in Oracle Purchasing.

    Set Up Catalog

    Prepare catalogs for requestors by first creating a blanket purchase agreement in Oracle Purchasing.

    Then upload item and schema content. Test the catalog (for example, by searching for or requisitioning

    the items in the catalog). See the Oracle iProcurement Implementation Guidefor more details or refer to

    the iProcurement Content Management topic of this course.

    What is an iProcurement Store?

    As organizations have expanded their use of Oracle iProcurement to additional and distinct key spend

    areas, it has become increasingly important to organize content in a way that provides easy access to a

    more specific range of goods and services. Using stores, organizations can define an intuitive collection

    of content areas. For instance, Oracle iProcurement could be configured to have a Promotional Items

    store, an IT store, a Temporary Labor store, a Chemicals store, a Power Equipment store, and an Office

    Supplies store. Within a store, items are grouped into content zones to allow access control.

    Where Does the Catalog Content Come From?

    Catalog content for Oracle iProcurement shopping can come from both internal and external sources.

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    Note: It is important to keep in mind that the Oracle iProcurement shopper is intended to only see the

    online stores that you create as a homogenous catalog. Behind the scenes the content is actually

    loaded into Oracle Purchasing blanket purchase agreements and then made available to shoppers in

    an easy to navigate environment. Content can also come from marketplace and/or supplier punchouts

    as well.

    Oracle iProcurement Content Management

    You don't define or setup catalogs in Oracle iProcurement. Instead you define content zones. Catalog

    Administrators partition local catalog content into local content zones, define punchout or transparent

    punchout content zones, and then assign these content zones to stores. The combination of content

    zones that you assign to a Store determines what catalog content your users see. This slide indicates

    sources and uses of content.

    Content Type

    Local: Locally hosted catalogs maintained by the buying organization. Provides maximum control overcontent and a requesters access to that content.

    Supplier-hosted: A supplier organization provides access to their externally hosted catalogs.

    Marketplace-hosted: A third party organization hosts multiple suppliers catalogs.

    Commodities

    Direct material: mass-produced mechanical parts; products with pre-negotiated or stable prices;

    strategic maintenance, repair, and operation (MRO) items (such as packing material).

    Configured products: products requiring high degree of configuration, such as computer hardware or

    office furniture; specialized services, such as printing or media services; products with fluctuating prices;

    extremely large or specialized catalogs, such as chemical supplies.

    Indirect material: office supplies; standard MRO items; products with unstable pricing.

    Instructor note: In this slide commodity refers to goods and services, not Oracle Purchasing categories.

    Content Type Description SuggestedCommodity

    Local iProcurement catalog to

    which the buyer adds items.

    Direct and indirect material

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    Local or Buyer-Hosted Content

    This approach is best suited for direct material (example: packing material) and is also referred to as a

    local content or internal catalog. This type of catalog provides the most local control of content and

    access to that content.

    Buyer-hosted content comes from following sources:

    Upload: Supplier creates an XML, cXML, CIFF or spreadsheet (tab delimited text) file, and the buyer

    uploads the file using the eContent Manager.

    External Marketplace-Hosted Content

    Best suited for indirect material (example: office supplies).

    Marketplaces (also known as hubs or third-party hosting services) offer:

    A central repository to which suppliers load catalog items and files. One-stop shopping for buyers who

    register or shop directly on the hub.

    Marketplace product examples:

    Oracle Exchange

    Supplier-hosted Supplier Web store to which

    the buyer links directly.

    Configured products

    Marketplace-hosted A third party site hosts

    catalog items for buyers andsuppliers.

    Direct material

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    Ariba Marketplace

    Commerce One MarketSite

    i2 TradeMatrix Procurement

    Choosing Content

    What kinds of items will requesters order? Local catalog provides the most consistent user interface. Local catalog is inside the firewall. Do suppliers already send EDI 832/843 (agreements and quotations)? Supplier-hosted and marketplace-hosted catalogs put the maintenance in the suppliers hands.

    Supplier-hosted and marketplace-hosted catalogs require more complex security and setup

    Requirements of Local Catalogs (Local Content)

    Local content requires eitherof the following:

    Quotations, blanket purchase agreements, requisition templates, or system items exist in OraclePurchasing.

    Supplier has completed XML or tab-delimited text file for uploading to the iProcurement catalog

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    Requirements of Supplier-Hosted Content

    Supplier-hosted content requires the following:

    Supplier has set up its site according to Oracle punchout implementation requirements. Buyer obtains supplier URL and password for setting up access to the site in iProcurement.

    Requirements of Marketplace-Hosted Content

    Marketplace-hosted content requires the following:

    Buyer and supplier registers with marketplace. Supplier has set up its site according to marketplace punchout implementation requirements. Buyer obtains marketplace URL and password for setting up access to the site in iProcurement

    UTILIZATION OF CATALOG CONTENT

    Another way of describing catalogs is in terms of how Oracle iProcurement requesters access the

    content.

    Oracle iProcurement supports the following types of catalogs:

    Local content:Punchout content hosted by a supplier or marketplace

    Standard punchoutwhere you shop on remote store

    Transparent punchoutwhere your search returns items to iProcurement Informational content (special

    variation of local catalog)

    CONTROL CONTENT USING CONTENT ZONES

    Control what catalog content to show:

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    Catalog Administrators can partition local catalog content into local content zones based on items

    supplier, supplier site, item category and browsing category information.

    Support for inclusion and exclusion rules. Ability to include Inventory items.

    Once defined, Content Zones may be made accessible to users of specific Responsibilities or Operating

    Units.

    Content zones may be assigned to multiple stores. Stores may contain multiple content zones.

    STORES: PULLING IT ALL TOGETHER

    Stores can be configured to include a combination of local catalogs (content zones) , regular punchout

    catalogs, transparent punchout catalogs and even informational catalogs. To ensure stores are easily

    configurable by administrators, Oracle iProcurement supports segmentation of local content into unique

    supplier catalogs.

    Punchout catalogs:Requesters can punch out or link directly to a suppliers Web store (supplier-hosted

    catalog) or a marketplace Web store (marketplace-hosted catalog). After selecting items for purchase,they return to Oracle iProcurement and proceed through the checkout process.

    Transparent Punchout catalogs:Requesters can search for items on an external site (supplier-hosted or

    marketplace-hosted catalog) without leaving Oracle iProcurement. From the Search Results page,

    requesters add the items to their cart and proceed through the checkout process.

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    Non-Catalog Requests :Non-catalog requests can be made using non-catalog request templates and/or

    Smart Forms.

    IPROCUREMENT CATALOG ADMINISTRATION

    At the highest level, there are two areas that define the catalog, the catalog content and the catalog

    schema. The content is what the requester sees. The schema controls the structure and ultimately the

    usability of the content.

    The iProcurement Catalog Administration home page provides all the tools you need to manage both

    the content and schema in one easy to use work center.