Overview
Oracle Payables
provides the integration and flexibility you need to efficiently manage
disbursements while keeping strong controls over matching, budgets, approval
processes, and payments. As a cornerstone to the Procure to Pay flow, Payables
provides process collaboration across departments within the enterprise and
beyond to suppliers. As a key member of the Financial Management Chain, Payables
assists users in meeting the demands of corporate governance, promotes fiscal
discipline, and meets complex and diverse statutory requirements.
Features
Legal Entity
Legal Entity is a
new addition to the Oracle E-Business Suite that enhances the ability to
manage one’s legal corporate structure and track data from the legal perspective.
The solution presents the foundation for features that help daily operations
comply with local regulations. Invoices and Payments indicate the operating
unit and the legal entity owner of the transaction. The legal entity can be
used as selection criteria when preparing pay runs. For more details, please
see the Legal Entity section of this document.
Multi-Org Access
Control
Multi-Org Access
Control enables companies that have implemented a Shared Services operating
model to efficiently process business transactions by allowing them to access,
process, and report on data for an unlimited number of operating units within a
single applications responsibility. This increases the productivity of Shared
Service Centers for users no longer have to switch applications responsibilities
when processing transactions for multiple operating units at a time. Data
security is still maintained using security profiles that are defined for a
list of operating units and determine the data access privileges for a user.
In Oracle Payables,
you’re Multi-Org Access Control and Preferences allow users to enter invoices
or batches of invoices for one operating unit, and then seamlessly enter
invoices for another operating unit. Select invoices across operating units for
payment processing within a single pay run. Setup is more manageable and gathering
information and running concurrent programs are more efficient. For more
details, please see the Multi-Org Access section of this document.
Representation of
Suppliers in the Trading Community Architecture (TCA)
The Trading
Community Model is a highly flexible architecture that allows you to fully
model real world entities in your trading community and accurately represent
the complex relationships among those entities. It is the core data model for
trading partners used by Oracle E-Business Suite applications. By representing
Suppliers as part of the trading community, you have access to many of the
features provided by TCA. These include:
• Data
Librarian Function & Processes
• Integrated
Enrichment Capabilities including D&B
• Address
Validation
• Data
Consistency
• Ease
of Data Maintenance
New User Interface
for Supplier Entry and Maintenance
This new user
interface presents a clear distinction between the supplier’s Company details
and terms and controls for the trading relationship. Managing the attributes
specific to particular functional areas such as Oracle Payables, Purchasing and
Receiving can be controlled with the use of Function Security. Adding new
locations or relationships with additional operating units is streamlined.
Additional tax and legal registrations provide key information to meet your
reporting and compliance needs. Tailor a quick update page with those values
most often updated for even faster maintenance. Along with the many attributes
that could be captured using the previous Forms based user interface, the new
supplier UI also includes a Survey section that provides administrators with
access to the results of questionnaires that the supplier has been asked to
complete, either during self-registration or as part of profile maintenance
through suppliers Portal. Purchasing Category assignments further designate the
type of goods and services the supplier will supply.
Supplier Bank
Accounts
Enhancements to the
setup of supplier bank accounts remove some processing restrictions and achieve
greater control and security. Bank accounts are modeled centrally providing the
following features:
• The
bank account is tied directly to the trading partner allowing one bank account
definition to be leveraged by a ‘supplier’ trading partner and shared if the
trading partner is also an employee or customer. This approach provides for
easier and centralized maintenance and security of the bank account information
• This
definition is targeted directly towards ‘trading partner’ bank accounts leaving
internal bank accounts out of the user interface. In other words, the
supplier’s banking information is entered and assigned right in the Supplier
Entry and Maintenance user interface.
• Notification
when trying to inactivate a bank account that is associated with unpaid
invoices or pay runs that are in process
Introduction of
Invoice Lines
Oracle Payables
incorporates Invoice Lines into the invoice model. Adding
Invoice Lines is a
key architectural change, which enables Oracle Payables to better model the
paper or electronic business document yet maintain key features that exist at
the invoice distributions level.
Merged into the
current invoice transaction business flows, Invoice Lines supports the
representation of the goods or services as well as tax, freight, and other
charges as lines with distributions tied to each line. Additional field’s record
attributes such as serial numbers and item descriptions.
This feature offers
the ability for line level approval and matching between an invoice line and a
purchase order shipment pay item, or receipt. Furthermore, it facilitates the
capture and transfer of additional, pertinent information to and from Oracle
Projects and Oracle Assets.
Invoice Processing
for Contract Financing, Retain age, and Progress Terms
Complex payment
terms and conditions for fixed price contracts is captured during the
procurement contract flow. This includes options to schedule points of progress
for invoicing, request an advance or progressive financing support, and record
negotiated amounts to retain until completion of the purchased item, service,
or project. These terms and conditions are supported in Oracle Payables when
recording invoices and managing payment execution during the lifetime of the
contract.
Financing:
Advances and Progressive Contract Financing
Advances are
generally one-time prepayments made before work on the contract begins while
contract financing infuses money to the supplier as work progresses. Oracle
Payables ensures that the amounts financed are recovered by automatically
applying financing to subsequent invoices per the specific terms captured in
the purchase order.
Retain
age and Retain age Release
Retain age is the
common practice of withholding a fixed amount / percentage of payment until all
work under a contract is complete and accepted. The retain age terms are agreed
upon by the buyer and supplier and are intended to make sure that the supplier
finishes the work as per the contract. Retain age is also called ‘retention’ or
‘contractual withholds’. At the end of the project or when agreed events have
occurred, the supplier requests the amount retained and payment is made to
release it. Payables automatically retains per the purchase order on invoices
coming in and supports the retain age release and payment process.
Invoices
for Progress
Invoices
representing progress are matched to the purchase order, updating the purchase
order with the progress. A percentage of the invoice may be retained and
contract advances and financing may be automatically applied seamlessly
bringing together the relevant contract terms with each invoicing event. In
some cases, the progress is reported via a work confirmation process. Suppliers
entering a work confirmation directly in Oracle i Supplier Portal have a
receipt recorded in Oracle Receiving. Pay on Receipt terms recorded on the
purchase order are translated into a self-billed invoice, in Oracle Payables,
to be paid.
Enhanced Invoice
Approval Includes Line Level Approval
With the
introduction of Invoice Lines, users are able to further extend their approval
policy granularity in Oracle Approvals Management for individual lines of an
invoice.
Notification
details are targeted to the level of approval required and embedded with a view
of the invoice including summary amounts, essential line information, approver
sequence, and attachments. Approvers of invoices submitted without a purchase
order can enter accounting details as they approve.
Non PO Invoices Entered
via I Supplier Portal
Invoices entered by
Suppliers where a purchase order has not been obtained are represented as
Invoice Requests. Invoice Requests are visible in Oracle Payables but are not
paid or accounted until the invoice can be verified and approved.
Collaboration with Suppliers to Resolve Disputes Holds on invoices that are a result of
differences between the invoiced and planned amounts or quantity result in
disputes that must be resolved. Invoices that have been approved by the owner
of the purchasing transaction but rejected during the approval process may also
be subject to disputes with the supplier.
Leveraging workflow
notification, disputes are communicated and negotiations can be suggested to
the Supplier. Suppliers are able to accept the suggested changes, withdraw
their invoice, or submit their counter proposal. The negotiation continues
until the issues are finally resolved. Additionally, Suppliers are able to
negotiate online via i Supplier Portal. All changes and comments entered during
the collaboration are tracked in Payables and can be viewed at any time.
Oracle E-Business
Disbursement Requests
Disbursement
Requests are requests to make a payment to a company or individual that is not
a supplier. This feature empowers the Payables Manager with visibility and
control over the items selected for payment processing. Disbursement requests carry accounting
entries and support funds checking for budgetary control. Oracle E-Business
Suite products may submit the request as already approved or take advantage of
Oracle Payables’ Approval Workflow.
Currently, Oracle
Loans takes advantage of this feature for loan disbursements to borrowers and
Oracle Receivables for customer refunds.
Enhancements to
Payment Banks, Branches, and Accounts
Banks and Bank
Branches are represented in Oracle’s Trading Community Architecture and shared
by other Oracle E-Business Suite applications. The Bank Account is centrally
defined, managed and secured and includes the legal ownership and operating
unit access for each bank account. The Oracle Cash Management section of this
document provides further details.
Payment Process
Enhancements
Payment processing
is significantly enhanced with this release. Along with a new user interface,
the management and visibility of the payment process are much more robust and
easier to use.
Toolset
for the Payment Manager
Manage fewer pay
runs by choosing selection criteria with multiple currencies, operating units,
and pay groups. A new Selected Invoices page displays summary and detail
information used to view and analyze invoices selected in a pay run. Powerful
search tools improve online inquiry to invoices that you may want to review,
modify, or remove. In addition, you can view invoices that matched the invoice
selection criteria but could not be selected because they were not validated or
approved. This allows you to quickly identify key invoices that you might want
to resolve so they can be included in the pay run. Resolve missing exchange
rates easily within the pay run itself. Save pay run invoice selection criteria
and processing requirements in a template to be reused and/or scheduled.
Schedule the submission of your payment runs using a particular template
periodically or with a more flexible schedule such as every other Friday and
the last day of the month. You are also able to include the pay run in a
request set if you want to group other programs or reports with your pay run
processing. A Payment Dashboard empowers your payment manager with the ability
to monitor all current pay run processing and payment processes that require attention.
More
Robust and Flexible Payment Processing Engine
Oracle Payables, in
partnership with Oracle Payments, offers the latest generation of electronic
payment transmission technologies, formats, and security meeting most industry
standards ‘Out of the Box’. For more details, please see the Oracle Payments
section of this document.
Accounts Receivable
/ Accounts Payable Netting
When a trading
partner is both a customer and a supplier, you may choose to offset open
receivables’ against open payables’ items. Netting Agreements add trading
partner terms as well as deploying company controls. A selection program
automatically pulls information from Oracle Receivables and Oracle Payables
taking into consideration discounts, late fees, and withholding taxes prior to
determining the final netting amount. A review process and trading partner
approval afford further verification to support the netting event.
Oracle
Payments
Overview
Overview Oracle
Payments is a new product in this release. Oracle Payments provides a highly
configurable and robust engine to disburse and receive payments. Oracle
Payments is a fundamental part of the Oracle Applications architecture, and is
provided with multiple products that require support for payment processing. As
the new central payment engine, Oracle Payments processes invoice payments from
Oracle Payables, bank account transfers from Oracle Cash Management, and
settlements against credit cards and bank accounts from Oracle Receivables.
Oracle Payments provides the infrastructure needed to connect these
applications and others with third party payment systems and financial
institutions. In addition to new features, Oracle Payments offers functionality
previously released as Oracle i Payment, which will be obsolete as of Release
12.0. The centralization of payment processing in the Oracle Payments engine
offers many benefits. Companies are able to efficiently centralize the payment
process across multiple organizations, currencies, and regions. Better working
capital management can be achieved by providing cash manager’s real-time
visibility into cash inflows and outflows. A full audit trail and control is
supported through a single point of payment administration. The product
supports features designed specifically for its two payment process activities:
funds disbursement (paying money owed to creditors, such as suppliers) and
funds capture (electronically receiving money owed by debtors, such as
customers). In order to centralize the funds disbursement process so that
supplier invoices, employee expense reports, loan disbursements, customer
refunds and other payments can be made in a consistent way, the payment
processing functionality and setup in Oracle Payables has moved to Oracle The approval
and selection of invoices for payment remains in Oracle Payables, but Oracle
Payments now handles all creation and validation of payments, aggregation of
payments into files, format and transmission of files, and so on.
Country-specific Oracle Globalizations features are now standard and have also been
moved within Oracle Payments. Most of the release 11i Oracle i Payments
functionality already supported the funds capture process. This functionality
has been enhanced in some cases to take advantage of the new payment
architecture. Country-specific Oracle
Globalizations
features are now standard and are included in Oracle Payments.
Features
Advanced and Highly
Configurable Formatting Framework
Financial
institutions and payment systems require compliance with certain payment
formats in order to disburse or capture funds. These formats are created as
templates in Oracle XML Publisher, and applied to an XML data file produced by
Oracle Payments. These templates can be created or modified with minimal technical
effort, using a standard text editor such as Microsoft Word. In the future,
when a payment system or financial institution requires a change to its format,
the change can be made in a matter of minutes, without costly external consulting
help. Oracle Payments offers a rich library of payment formats that support
various types of payment files and messages. EFT disbursements, printed checks,
ACH debits, bills receivable remittances, and credit card authorizations and
settlements are all supported. Deploying companies can use any format in this
library.
When a format is
required, and it is not provided, it is simple to copy a similar format
template, and use it as the basis for creating the new format. This greatly speeds
time to implementation and testing, as well as reducing implementation costs.
Special
consideration has been given to the complexity of creating fixed position and
delimited formats. Oracle XML Publisher’s e Text feature is used for these format
types. E Text allows the format layout to be presented in an understandable
tabular structure.
Flexible Validation
Model
In payment
processing, it is critical to ensure that payment messages and files sent to
third-party payment systems and financial institutions are valid in addition to
being correctly formatted. In order to help achieve straight through processing,
Oracle Payments introduces a flexible way to ensure that payment related validations
are in place. Oracle Payments provides an extensive library of payment
validations that are associated with the supported payment formats. The payment
validations are implemented using a flexible framework that allows a user to
add new rules. Deploying companies are able to choose between using the
prepackaged library of validations, using their newly added validations, or
using a combination of these rules.
The timing of
validation execution also has flexibility. Payment validation rules can be
assigned upstream or downstream in the payment process. Or a combination of
upstream and downstream rule assignment can be used. Users have the flexibility
to adapt this assignment to best support their business model. For example, the
upstream assignment and execution of validations may be best for a
decentralized payment environment. Or a downstream validation execution may be
better in a shared service environment, where payment specialists can resolve
any validation failures.
Secure Payment Data
Repository
Oracle Payments
serves as a payment data repository on top of the Trading Community
Architecture (TCA) data model. The TCA model holds the party information.
Oracle Payments then stores all of the party’s payment information and its
payment instruments (such as credit cards and bank accounts). In release 11i,
this information was held separately in different applications such as in the Oracle
Purchasing supplier and the Oracle Payables bank account entities. This common
repository for payment data provides improved data security by allowing central
encryption management and masking control of payment instrument information.
Improved Electronic
Transmission Capability
Oracle Payments
provides secured electronic payment file and payment message transmission and
transmission result processing. All previously existing electronic transmission
features in Oracle i Payment, Oracle Payables, and Oracle Globalizations is
obsolete and replaced by the new central payments engine. The following new
industry-standard transmission protocol is supported out-of the- box: FTP,
HTTP, Https, and AS/2.
Flexible Support
for Various Business Payment Models
Companies model
their business units in various ways in order to obtain performance
improvements and cost savings. Oracle Payments can be flexibly configured to
support a variety of payment models. Oracle Payments works in a completely
decentralized mode where it is part of accounts payable or collection administration
within each business unit. If a company has decided to centralize these kinds
of financial activities in a shared service center, Oracle Payments works to
efficiently support the shared service center model. This flexibility in Oracle
Payments also provides support to companies who wish to use a payment factory
model. A payment factory allows operating units to maintain their own accounts
payable and other payment administrative functions.
The role of the
payment factory is to handle communication and transactions with the company’s
banking partners. Invoice selection can be done in Oracle Payables within a
single operating unit. Then a payment factory administrator using Oracle
Payments can consolidate payments from different operating units into a single
payment file for transmission and settlement, thereby reducing transaction
costs.
Oracle Payments
supports the new Multi-Org Access Control component throughout its processes to
build payments and create payment files, as well as in the dashboard pages
provided for users to monitor and manage the payment process. Multi-Org Access
Control allows users to efficiently process business transactions by processing
and reporting on data that resides in an unlimited number of operating units,
within a single applications responsibility. Data security is still maintained
using security profiles that are defined for a list of operating units and
determine the data access privileges for a user.
Funds
Disbursement Features
Enhanced
Disbursement Process
The new Oracle
Payments disbursement engine allows businesses to greatly simplify their user
procedures around managing complex payment processes that span multiple payment
methods, formats, check stocks, transmission protocols, currencies,
organizations, and bank accounts. Oracle Payments has redesigned the payment
build process that Oracle Payables used in previous releases. The Oracle
Payables payment batch process required the submission of the invoice selection
process to be segregated according to the way the invoices needed to be paid
(printed checks, electronic funds transfer, different formats, and so on). The
new Oracle Payments funds disbursement process allows the invoice selection
process in Oracle Payables and other products to be neutral to the way documents
will be paid. This is achieved by effectively splitting the payment build
process into two separate processes. The first process creates payments by grouping
documents according to various rules such as the payment method and currency.
Accounts Payable managers are able to simplify their processes by submitting
fewer invoice selection batches, each one spanning multiple payment methods,
formats, bank accounts, and payment currencies. Invoices can be selected for
payment based on business reasons such as maximizing discounts.
The second process
then aggregates payments into formatted payment instruction files, and handles
any additional processing. The cost of the disbursement process is lowered by
creating fewer check runs and EFT payment files by grouping payments across the
criteria of the first process.
Enhanced
Electronic Payment Processing
In previous
releases, various solutions for electronic payment processing were available
throughout the Oracle E-Business Suite. Not all solutions supported a complete
information flow. For instance, in some cases an electronic file could be produced,
but not automatically transmitted to a bank. Now, Oracle Payments offers
end-to-end electronic payment processing that includes validation, aggregation,
formatting and secure transmission of payments to financial institutions and
payment systems.
Automatically
pushing groups of payments through all the steps of electronic processing,
known as straight through processing or STP, results in lower costs. The new
formatting framework, flexible validation model, and improved electronic
transmission capability greatly minimize any need for writing payment customizations.
Configurability
Oracle Payments
offers flexible setup to configure funds disbursement processing. The new
configuration offers enhancements over the way payment processing was set up in
different products in prior releases. The benefit of these changes is to help
ensure an implementation that best support a controlled and efficient
disbursement flow. The configuration options are in these general areas:
• Payment
methods: each document to be paid requires a payment method to indicate how it
should be handled in the funds disbursement process. Payment methods can be
defined as broadly or narrowly as appropriate. Rules can be set for when
payment methods can be used on documents. Rules can also be specified to
default payment methods on documents when they are created
• Processing
Rules: the payment method on a document links it to processing rules configured
in Oracle Payments. A business user can specify these rules in an intuitive
user interface page. Oracle Payments holds these setup rules in a key entity it
calls the Payment Process Profile. Users can configure as many of these process
profiles as they need for their payment processes. Each profile holds rules for
how documents should be built into payments, how payments should be aggregated
into a payment instruction file, and how the payment file should be formatted.
Rules for printing checks, transmitting electronic files, generating separate
remittance advice notifications and other options can be easily configured
Payment
Processing User Interface
Oracle Payments
offers a new user dashboard for managing the funds disbursement process. The
dashboard allows payment administrators to manage every aspect of the process
across multiple organizations from the same place. This benefits companies by
providing full visibility of a payment as it moves through the financial supply
chain. The single location for monitoring the process also helps streamline
process management.
A payment
administrator can use the dashboard to monitor the payment process and ensure
that it is running smoothly. If there are any problems in the process, they are
highlighted in a pending actions region. This is also the place where notification
of any required actions is shown. Actions may be required based on the
configuration choices made at implementation. The dashboard automatically navigates
the administrator to the area to take corrective or required action, based on
the pending issue the user selects in the region.
These are just a
few of the actions an administrator can take from the dashboard:
• Review
validation errors
• Review
and optionally modify proposed payments
• Transmit
payment files or retry failed file transmission processes
• Initiate
check printing and record printing results.
Enhanced
Check Printing Process
The check printing
process has moved from Oracle Payables to Oracle Payments in this release.
Check printing has been enhanced to make the initiation of printing, recovery
from printing errors, and recording of print results simple and intuitive. Payment
document setup has been enhanced in Oracle Cash Management's new internal bank
account definition. Check stock can be set up to indicate if it is pre numbered
or if numbering is printed as part of the check format (common for laser
checks). Oracle Payments uses this setup to present the payment administrator
with the appropriate print actions for these different check stock types. The
new dashboard guides the payment administrator to each printing action that may
be performed.
Migration
of Global Features to Central Engine
In previous
releases, Oracle provided many payment features as country-specific Oracle
Globalizations. These global features have been merged into standard payment
processing features provided by Oracle Payments. They are available in all
deployments of Oracle Payments without any limitation by geography, while still
allowing the ability to configure processing by region where appropriate.
Most of the
migrated global payment features support the funds disbursement process. For
instance, the new standard processing features lets users:
• Provide
payment-level text messages for the payee
• Conditionally
report payments to a country central bank
• Specify
payment codes required by a financial institution for instructions on transaction
handling, which bears the cost of bank charges, and statutory payment reasons
• Sequentially
number EFT files for control purposes
• Configure
the payment process to place formatted payment files in secure file directories
Consolidation
of Payment Formats
All Release 11i
payment formats used in the funds disbursement process have been consolidated
as Oracle XML Publisher templates used by Oracle Payments. These formats
include all those previously supported in Oracle Payables, Oracle U.S. Federal
Financials, and Oracle Globalizations.
The following
payment industry standard formats are now supported for use by all products
that integrate with Oracle Payments: EDIFACT PAYMUL, ANSI X12.0 820, and U.S.
NACHA.
Improved
Remittance Advice Reporting
In release 11i,
Oracle Payables and certain Oracle Globalizations provided some formats to
support remittance advice reporting and notify a payee of the remittance detail
when a payment is made. Now, Oracle Payments consolidates these formats into an
enhanced Oracle XML publisher format. The notification process is improved by
allowing the ability to set conditions for when a remittance advice should be
produced. Configuration is also supported to set how the remittance advice
should be delivered to a payee: via e-mail, fax, or printing and sending
manually. All of these improvements help deploying companies better support
their payment relationships with suppliers or other payees.
Funds
Capture Features
Note that Oracle
Receivables retains its existing features for lockbox processing and the
electronic upload of remittance messages.
Enhanced
Configurability
Oracle Payments
offers enhancements in its setup to configure funds capture processing. The
benefit of these changes helps ensure an implementation that best supports
consistent and seamless funds capture processing. The enhancements can be
grouped into three general areas:
• Payee
Configuration: a Payee is defined for each entity in the deploying company that
will process payments; typically only one setup is needed for the enterprise.
This setup is done in payment card processing to define the merchant. The Payee
setup provides various options for payment processing.
The Payee setup
user interface has been enhanced to add new options and clarify existing
options. In prior releases, products needed to have their own way to link to
the Payee entity. This is improved in release 12.0 by linking operating units
to the Payee within Oracle Payments setup Routing Rules:
routing rules can be configured to specify how a transaction should be
processed. For example, the payment system that a transaction should be sent to
is determined by this setup. The input criteria to the routing rules is
enhanced in release 12.0, along with improving the user interface
• Improved
Ability to Configure Processing Rules: previously in Oracle i Payment some
processing rules required configuration by a technical administrator with
software coding skills. In release 12.0, a business user can set all processing
rules in an intuitive user interface page. Oracle Payments holds these setup
rules in a key entity it calls the Funds Capture Process Profile. Users can
configure as many of these process profiles as they need for their payment
processes. Each profile holds the configuration for how to format and transmit
authorization messages and settlement files. Rules for aggregating settlements
into batches, limiting the number or amount of settlements in a batch,
notifying payers of settlements, and processing acknowledgements can be easily
configured
Improved
Support for Credit Card Security Features
Oracle Payments
consolidates the setup and management of credit card security features such as
address verification, capture of a card security code, and masking of credit
card numbers. Oracle Payments consolidates the setup and management of these
features in release 12.0. This ensures a consistent implementation of credit
card security functions throughout the funds capture process.
Enhanced
Payment Processing User Interface
Oracle Payments
offers an enhanced user interface for managing the funds capture process. The
new dashboard page provides a clear overview of the payment process status, and
provides the user with greater insight into rejections received from payment
systems and into process failures such as communication errors. Reconciliation
of funds capture transactions (such as credit card payments) is much easier
with the new dashboard.
PIN
less Debit Card Transaction Support
Oracle Payments
offers support for PIN less debit card funds capture transactions.
Sometimes referred
to as “Debit Bill Pay”, this payment method is allowed by the debit networks in
certain industries, including utilities, telecom, cable/satellite, government,
education, and financial services.
Improved
Payer Notification of Settlement
In release 11i,
certain Oracle Globalizations provided a notification letter that could be
generated and sent when a payer's bank account was debited to capture funds for
payment. Now, Oracle Payments consolidates these letters into an enhanced
Oracle XML publisher format. The format supports notification for all types of
automatic funds capture settlements supported by Oracle payments - card
payments or bank account transfers. The notification process is improved by
allowing the ability to configure how a notification should be delivered to a payer:
via e-mail, fax, or printing and sending manually. All of these improvements
help deploying companies’ better support their payment relationships with
customers or other payers.
Direct
Debit Enhancements
Oracle Payments
supports online validation for electronic funds transfers through enhanced
API’s. The validation service is provided by some payment systems to perform
validity checks on the payer bank account to be debited. Typically this service
verifies that the bank account number is valid and not cited for fraudulent payment
activity.
Oracle Payments
extends its support for electronic funds transfer by adding third party certifications
for Payment and Concord EFS net.
Improved
Batch Settlement Performance
Bulk processing is
now supported in the settlement interface from Oracle Receivables to Oracle
Payments. The result is improved performance when running the automatic
remittance program in Oracle Receivables.
Terminology
Term Definition
Payment Process
Profile the Payment Process Profile holds all of the rules for how funds
disbursement processing will happen on a document to be paid.
The assignment of a process profile to a
document is determined by the payment method on the document. When a user
creates a process profile, he specifies rules such as:
• Which
payment methods should use the profile and under what conditions
• How
documents should be built into payments
• How
payments should be aggregated into a payment instruction file
• How
the payment file should be formatted
• If
and how a payment file should be transmitted
• If
and when a payment file should be printed
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