SAP adding e-procurement software firm
SAP is acquiring Procurement Automation Institute, whose automated procurement package is used by more than 20 government customers
In an attempt to make its e-procurement solutions more robust and appealing
to federal customers, SAP Public Sector and Education Inc. is acquiring
Procurement Automation Institute Inc., the company announced Thursday.
PAI's automated procurement package, IPRO, is used by more than 20 federal,
state and local government customers. The IPRO software features a customized
"knowledgebase" to deal with government agencies' unique purchasing policies
and procedures.
"PAI has been a complimentary software partner of ours for about a year
and a half," Tom Shirk, president of SAP Public Sector and Education, said
at the company's e-government symposium in Washington, D.C., Thursday. "This
allows us to add contract management to mySAP.com...with the goal of one
procurement solution with a government twist."
The mySAP Workplace business platform is the company's "outside-in"
approach to the government space, Shirk said. State governments, including
SAP's largest state customer — Pennsylvania, and its 90,000 users — are
adopting mySAP Workplace for services ranging from financial management,
logistics and human resources to customer relationship management and integration
with non-SAP components.
PAI is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Digital Systems International Corp.,
an e-government solutions firm based in Arlington, Va. The company's federal
customers include the departments of Agriculture, Defense, Education and
State, the U.S. Postal Service and NASA.
SAP is expected to complete its acquisition of PAI by the end of the
year.
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