Cluster H6 · Invoice Automation · Tutorial

How to automate invoice processing using your office MFP as the scanner

Vendor invoice processing is the highest-ROI automation use case for offices with a modern MFP. This guide walks through the deployment from first scan to live automation in eight steps.

Time saved per invoice
8–14 min
vs manual entry
Typical monthly volume
80–400
SMB to mid-market
Annual labour saving
€8k–€32k
at typical AP rates
Payback period
4–9 mo
platform licensing recovery

Vendor invoice processing automation delivers the cleanest ROI of any office-automation use case. The workflow is well-defined (invoice arrives, gets scanned, data captured, posted to accounts payable, archived), the data structure is well-understood (vendor, date, amount, IVA breakdown, line items), the downstream system integration is standard across major ERPs, and the labour savings are immediately measurable through the accounts-payable team's time tracking. For most SMB and mid-market offices, automating invoice processing recovers the platform licensing cost within 6 to 9 months and continues to deliver value for years afterward.

This guide walks through the deployment from first scan through to live automation, covering the eight stages of a typical SMB rollout. The pattern uses the office's existing MFP as the scanning entry point, layers OCR and forms recognition on top, and integrates with the downstream AP system through the office's chosen RPA platform or accounts-payable automation tool.

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Eight-step invoice-automation deployment

1

Map the current manual workflow

Document the existing invoice flow: who receives invoices, where they are scanned today, what AP team does to enter data into the ERP, how long each step takes. The baseline metrics become the comparison reference for automation ROI tracking.

Effort: 4–6 hours
2

Choose the automation platform

Three categories: dedicated AP automation (Tipalti, Bill.com, Yokoy), RPA platform (UiPath, Power Automate), or MFP-vendor solution (Canon Therefore, Konica Workplace Hub). Choice depends on existing IT stack, volume, and integration requirements with the ERP.

Effort: 1–2 weeks evaluation
3

Configure MFP scan-to-folder destination

Create a dedicated folder for invoice scans on the network or in cloud storage. Configure the MFP scan-to-folder destination to land scans there with consistent naming. Add a one-touch button labelled "Invoice Scan" to make the workflow obvious for AP staff.

Effort: 1 hour per device
4

Train the OCR and forms recognition

Most platforms include pre-trained models for common invoice layouts. For unfamiliar vendor formats, the office trains the system by reviewing the first 20 to 50 invoices and confirming field extraction. Accuracy improves to 95-plus percent after the training set stabilises.

Effort: 1–2 weeks training
5

Define business rules and approval routing

Configure rules: amounts above threshold route to manager approval, vendor matches against PO records, IVA percentage validates against expected rate. Approval workflows mirror the existing AP review pattern but automated rather than manual.

Effort: 2–4 days
6

Integrate with the ERP / accounts payable module

The automation platform posts validated invoice data into the ERP's AP module via API. Common ERPs in Spanish SMB market include SAP Business One, Sage 200, Holded, and a3ERP — all support API integration with major automation platforms.

Effort: 1–2 weeks integration
7

Run pilot phase with subset of vendors

Start with 5 to 10 frequent vendors with stable invoice formats. Run automation alongside manual entry for the first 4 weeks, comparing output for accuracy. The dual-track period builds confidence and surfaces edge cases before full cutover.

Effort: 4 weeks pilot
8

Scale to full vendor coverage

Once pilot accuracy holds, extend automation to remaining vendors. The AP team's role shifts from data-entry to exception-handling: reviewing low-confidence extractions and resolving validation failures rather than manually keying every invoice.

Effort: ongoing rollout

The pattern that produces consistent ROI

Invoice-processing automation produces measurable ROI when the office commits to the rollout structurally rather than experimentally. The pattern that works runs a 4-week pilot on a defined vendor subset, measures the time savings rigorously, then extends coverage in 4-vendor batches over the following 8 to 12 weeks. Offices that try to automate every vendor on day one typically over-commit configuration effort and produce inconsistent results; the staged pattern builds confidence and capability progressively.

For most SMB and mid-market offices, the configured automation handles 80 to 95 percent of invoices end-to-end without human intervention; the remaining 5 to 20 percent (low-confidence extractions, format anomalies, edge cases) flow to the AP team's exception-review queue. The team's role shifts from data-entry to exception-handling — a higher-value workflow that produces job-satisfaction improvement alongside the cost savings. The cluster's other articles on one-touch buttons and RPA platform integration cover the broader automation patterns this invoice-specific workflow sits within.

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