Dubai, UAE
Previously, Maersk collected outstanding invoices using cheques and cash. This process was inefficient due to physical transport and storage of cheques, issues with stale and lost cheques, and cheque and cash handling costs. Reconciling these collections against open invoices was also manually intensive and prone to error. Process inefficiency sometimes saw clients queuing for more than two hours at Maersk counters.
This meant the UAE office had over 10% of its frontline resources working as cashiers, not doing more customer-enriching tasks. Additionally, the same number of staff in customer services were also handling the releases of such documents, not talking to clients.
Maersk set three key objectives for its virtual counter. These included: reducing the number of touch points between the client and Maersk from 22 to only two, starting from: “where are my documents?” to “what does my statement of account reflect?”; reducing the time taken for clients to receive their B/L from two days to two minutes. This would eliminate queues at Maersk’s counters; automation, reducing operational errors and enhancing time spent on issue resolution to improve customer experience.
This set Maersk on a three-year path of digitised receivables. Initial efforts to promote bank transfers proved fruitful, with customer adoption rates enabling the closing down of cash counters in the UAE. But this led to new challenges as customer needs evolved while old manual document exchanges persisted. Maersk had to find a way to cut down the document release process from the two-hour committed SLA to zero.
To address these issues, Maersk partnered with Citi’s Treasury and Trade Solutions to deliver an automated receivable solution, integrated with its own technology. This enabled customers to view, dispute and pay their invoices via the Maersk ‘MyFinance’ portal, using its global ‘SmartPay’ product to allow customers to settle invoices directly from a pre-registered bank account, via Citi’s Direct Debit solution and its CitiConnect® SWIFT FileAct infrastructure. The UAE central bank’s UAE Direct Debit System was also deployed.
Citi’s CitiConnect® for Files was also used as the primary host-to-host gateway for file transmission, integrating the bank’s payments, collections, supplier finance, and commercial card transaction products directly with Maersk’s ERP.
The ‘no-hand’ solution ensures that once the customer selects the invoices to be paid on the MyFinance portal, a host-to-host instruction is auto-triggered from Maersk to Citi, enabling Citi to collect the funds from the customer’s account based in any bank in the UAE and credit Maersk’s Citi UAE account. The entire transaction is tagged with a unique ID which ultimately forms part of the credit entry on Maersk’s account. An automated end-of-day report allows Maersk to recognise the collection and reconcile it against the outstanding invoice of the customer.
By incorporating the digitised solution, Maersk eliminated major processing bottlenecks and inefficiencies and helped the business lower its collection costs. Replacing redundant processes with technology helped Maersk optimise its cash flow by reducing late invoice settlements, mitigating risks of bad-debt/write-offs, improving cash forecasting and avoiding overwhelming manual reconciliation processes.
SmartPay is now available to the entire UAE client base and serves as the last step in reaching a 100% virtual cash counter.
Maersk is aiming to achieve the following quantifiable gains: