Once seen as a transactional back-office function, procurement now plays a central role in supply chain resilience, risk management, and profitability. But fragmented data and manual, disconnected workflows limit its ability to drive innovation and respond to global disruptions. Artificial intelligence (AI) agents offer a way to overcome these challenges.
A new operating model for procurement
Unlike traditional automation and generative AI tools that simply generate responses, AI agents can independently execute multistep tasks. They reason, plan, and interact with enterprise systems, freeing procurement teams to focus on what they do best: building relationships and shaping strategy.
In doing so, agents unlock these key benefits for procurement:
- Augment decision-making by surfacing relevant, real-time insights
- Increase efficiency by handling routine tasks such as approvals and compliance checks
- Expand capacity by taking on work that teams never had the time to manage, such as sourcing tail spend
There’s a clear shift in procurement toward higher-value work: 60% of leaders say AI will significantly transform their job, according to Ivalua research. Rather than replacing people, AI agents are reshaping roles so teams can spend more time on strategic initiatives such as supplier collaboration, risk mitigation, and sustainability.
Transforming procurement with AI agents
To deliver these benefits, AI agents need the right data foundations and clear processes.
Layering AI on disconnected, inconsistent data risks amplifying the same silos and errors that already slow teams down. But a single source of truth gives procurement teams and their AI agents the visibility needed to respond more quickly to tariffs, supplier shocks, and regulatory shifts.
This connection between AI adoption and resilience is clear. According to Ivalua, 98% of mature AI users feel prepared for geopolitical disruption, compared to 0% of organizations with no AI plans.
The next step is to implement hybrid workflows where people focus on high-value work and agents automate time-consuming, repetitive tasks that create bottlenecks. For example, agents could automatically validate supplier documents and route contracts for approval while humans review exceptions and negotiate terms.
For CIOs, that means new technical responsibilities and strategic opportunities. They must design and maintain the data architecture and system integrations that support these agent-based workflows. And they own their governance frameworks, including strong data access, security, and ethical AI usage controls. But CIOs also have a growing opportunity to partner with chief product officers (CPOs) to embed intelligence and automation into procurement, which drives greater resilience, responsiveness, and scalability.
How Ivalua makes it work
Ivalua’s purpose-built platform helps bring this vision to life across complex supply chains. Its unified architecture connects procurement, finance, and supply chain functions through a single data model and semantic layer, providing shared visibility across the organization — with built-in tools for collaboration, supplier engagement, and governance.
Ivalua uses multi-agent orchestration to automate complex workflows, such as sourcing new suppliers and routing decisions based on business logic and context. And with the platform’s no-code configuration tools, teams can easily refine and expand their AI use cases over time.
Rethinking procurement’s future
The future of procurement is about doing the right things, faster — with the help of intelligent agents and unified data. Learn how leading organizations are building hybrid human/agent procurement models to move beyond reactive firefighting and set new benchmarks for resilience and agility.
To learn more, visit us here.
Read More from This Article: How AI agents will redefine procurement in 2026
Source: News

