Dive Brief:
- SAP is rolling out a broad new set of agentic artificial intelligence tools for CFOs, the company announced Tuesday, as competition intensifies among enterprise software vendors racing to embed the technology across finance operations.
- The rollout is designed to span most aspects of corporate finance, including cash management, tax, financial planning and billing, according to David Imbert, SAP’s head of finance product marketing.
- “We’re announcing innovations for every major department in finance,” Imbert said in an interview. Previous AI initiatives, by contrast, only touched certain parts of the finance function, he said.
Dive Insight:
The move follows a wave of recent agentic AI-focused announcements from competing enterprise software vendors including Oracle and Workday.
SAP’s latest rollout is part of a broader effort dubbed “Autonomous Enterprise,” which spans multiple business functions including supply chain, procurement, human resources and customer operations, according to a press release.
The broader suite deploys more than 50 domain-specific AI assistants that coordinate subsets of more than 200 specialized agents to execute workflows and business tasks, the release said.
The company also introduced Joule Studio, a development environment designed to let users build, deploy and manage AI agents within SAP’s broader business AI platform.
Imbert said CFO interest in agentic AI has accelerated over the past two years.
“I think the interest is there and people do see that AI, when it is deployed, is creating an impact,” he said.
Still, he said challenges remain in areas such as data readiness, workflow integration and workforce skills as companies look to scale AI across finance operations. “If people can establish a trusted central place for data that AI can then leverage off, that’s very important,” Imbert said.
He added that AI cannot remain “a side project or side layer,” but must be embedded directly into business decision-making and day-to-day processes, alongside a baseline level of AI literacy across finance teams.
The AI shift is also pushing CFOs beyond traditional finance responsibilities into enterprise system strategy, an area once largely overseen by IT departments.
“The CFO is starting to also really have a role and responsibility for those decisions,” Imbert said.
As part of its Autonomous Enterprise initiative, SAP is introducing a suite of specialized agents that can reason across business contexts and make “explainable decisions,” the company said.
The rollout includes a financial closing assistant designed to “surface bottlenecks, automate postings and reconciliations, and resolve discrepancies in real time with accuracy and auditability.” It also includes assistants for financial planning, billing, governance, tax and compliance, accounts receivable, and cash management and treasury.
“It’s a full set of capabilities coming to market — some in Q2, others in Q3 — that will allow companies to rethink how they design their finance processes,” Imbert said.
