Advanced Pricing With Purchasing: An Oracle White Paper August 2007
Advanced Pricing With Purchasing: An Oracle White Paper August 2007
Advanced Pricing With Purchasing: An Oracle White Paper August 2007
Purchasing
An Oracle White Paper
August 2007
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Goal
What are the basic steps involved in setting up and using Advanced Pricing with Oracle
Purchasing ?
Solution
First a quick overview on Advanced Pricing :
Prices can be manually entered or default into purchase orders from the item setup in
Oracle Inventory, pricing information in a referenced purchase blanket agreement, or
from more complex pricing rules set up in Oracle Advanced Pricing.
Oracle Advanced Pricing is now integrated with Oracle Purchasing and Oracle
iProcurement. Oracle Advanced Pricing is a flexible pricing engine capable of addressing
complex pricing needs of customers. Using Oracle Advanced Pricing, purchasing
professionals can setup complex pricing structures in the form of price lists, price
formulas and modifiers. Price lists contain the basic information that associates price and
currency with an item, service, group of products or services, or sub-component. Pricing
formulas let you model mathematical relationships for product pricing using certain order
attributes. Price modifiers allow you to setup discounts or surcharges that can be applied
on top of base prices. To price requisitions and purchase orders based on pricing rules
setup in Oracle Advanced Pricing, the requisition or purchase order line need simply
reference a contract purchase agreement.
To enable advanced pricing, the profile option 'QP : Licensed for Product' must be set
correctly. For the purposes of this Note, this profile option must be set to 'Purchasing' to
enable Advanced Pricing to be used with Oracle Purchasing.
To set the profile, navigate to System Administrator Responsibility : Profiles -> System
and then query the profile option 'QP : Licensed for Product' and set it at Site or
Application level to 'Purchasing'.
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Once done, the setup should resemble the following screenshot :
1 - Basic Requirements :
In order to utilize Advanced Pricing with Oracle Purchasing, there must be an Item
defined and this Item must be linked to a Supplier through a Contract. Once this has been
done, the Item must be correctly Sourced to this Contract using Sourcing Rules, Sourcing
Assignments and Approved Supplier Lists. This setup is detailed below :
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i - Item Setup (Purchasing Responsibility : Items -> Master Items) :
The only consideration here is that the item must be purchasable. The following
screenshots show the setup for the Item Main and Purchasing tabs :
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Please note that no List Price has been assigned to this Item and as such any document
referencing the item will not have a price defaulted (if Sourcing or Advanced Pricing are
not in effect)
iii - Sourcing Setup (Purchasing Responsibility : Supply Base -> Sourcing Rule/Assign
Sourcing Rule) :
The Item created must be associated with the same Supplier and Site specified in the
Contract through Sourcing Rule and Sourcing Rule assignment.
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A Sourcing Rule must first be created specifying the Supplier and Supplier Site as the
Buy-From source as shown below :
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The Sourcing Rule can be assigned to the appropriate Item through the Assign Sourcing
Rules form as shown below :
Please note that the Sourcing Rule must be assigned to the same Assignment Set
specified in the profile option 'MRP: Default Sourcing Assignment Set' in order for the
Sourcing Rule to be effective.
iv - Approved Supplier List Setup (Purchasing Responsibility : Supply Base -> Approved
Supplier List) :
Once the Item has been sourced to the appropriate Supplier and Supplier Site, the next
step is to create an Approved Supplier List entry to link the Item - Supplier/Site to the
created Contract.
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First the entry must be created in the Approved Supplier List form as follows :
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Click on the Attributes button and reference the Contract as shown in following
screenshot :
Advanced Pricing Price Lists allow different prices to be stored for Items and then these
Price Lists can be applied to specific Suppliers/Revisions/etc through the use of
Qualifiers. Price Lists are also very flexible and allow mass changes to Item prices as
well as bulk import for Item prices.
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i - Price List Creation (Purchasing Responsibility : Advanced Pricing -> Price Lists ->
Price List Setup) :
To specify an Item price on a Price List, simply create a new Line under the existing
Price List (or create a new Price List as appropriate) and include the Item Number and
price on the Price List Line as shown below :
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Prices can also be assigned to Categories rather than specific Items if required. In the
example shown above, Item 'QP Test Item' has been assigned a price of 10. Since no
Qualifiers have been attached in this case, it is to be expected that any document (be it
Purchase Order or Requisition) that contains this Item will have a price of 10 defaulted in
the document line.
ii - Testing the Price List using a Requisition (Purchasing Responsibility : Requisitions ->
Requisitions) :
To test that the Item price defined in the Price List is in effect, create a new Requisition
and enter the Item Code.
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The Supplier and Site should default automatically as per the defined Sourcing Rule as
shown below :
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Note that the Requisition line price field is empty. Click on the Source Details tab and
select the Contract in the ASL as the Source document for this Requisition as shown
below :
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Once the Source Contract has been specified, go back to Lines tab and you will see that
the Item price has defaulted correctly from the Price List as shown below :
iii - Testing the Price List using a Purchase Order (Purchasing Responsibility : Purchase
Orders -> Purchase Orders) :
Verify that the Item Price also defaults correctly on Purchase Orders by creating a
new standard Purchase Order. Make sure to specify the correct Supplier and Supplier Site
on the document header.
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On the Purchase Order line, specify the Item as shown in the following screenshot :
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Note that the Item price field is empty. Click on the Reference Documents tab and
specify the correct Contract as shown below :
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Once this has been done, go back to the Purchase Order line and you will see that the
Item Price has defaulted from the Price List as shown below :
Modifier lines can be added to an already existing Modifier or a new Modifier can be
created as required. In the Modifier Line, the Item can be specified as well as the actual
price modification be done. In this example, a discount of 10% is applied to the Item
price defined in the Price List. Formulas can also be used to apply complex price
calculations if required. Please note that the 'Pricing Phase' field must be set to 'PO
List Line Adjustment' for Modifier lines to be effective in Oracle Purchasing. No
other values for this field will work.
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The below screenshots show an example of a Modifier :
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ii - Testing the Modifier using a Requisition (Purchasing Responsibility : Requisitions ->
Requisitions) :
To test that the Discount defined in the Modifier is in effect, create a new Requisition and
enter the Item Code. The Supplier and Site should default automatically as per the
defined Sourcing Rule as shown below :
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Click on the Source Details tab and select the Contract in the ASL as the Source
document for this Requisition as shown below :
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Once the Source Contract has been specified, go back to Lines tab and you will see that
the Item price has defaulted correctly from the Price List and the Discount specified in
the Modifier is now in effect as shown below :
iii - Testing the Modifier using a Purchase Order (Purchasing Responsibility : Purchase
Orders -> Purchase Orders) :
Verify that the Discount correctly affects the Item price on Purchase Orders by creating a
new standard Purchase Order. Make sure to specify the correct Supplier and Supplier Site
on the document header.
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On the Purchase Order line, specify the Item as shown in the following screenshot :
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Click on the Reference Documents tab and specify the correct Contract as shown below :
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Once this has been done, go back to the Purchase Order line and you will see that the
Item Price has defaulted from the Price List as shown below :
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FAQ
No. Oracle Purchasing only supports Advanced Pricing by referencing Contract Purchase
Agreements .
(Ref: Note 258521.1 Section 1. New and Changed Features)
2 - Can different prices be setup for same item in Advanced Prices list?
Yes, Multiple price lines can be maintained for same item with different effective dates in
Advanced Prices list as long as these effective dates do not overlap with each other.
3 - Is it possible to define a Price List entry with currency different from the Supplier
currency ?
This is not possible and will result in the Price List entry not being effective. The
currency in the Price List and the Supplier currency must be the same.
No, this is currently not possible. Promotions will have no effect on Purchasing
documents.
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References
@ Note 258521.1 - About Oracle Purchasing in Oracle Supply Chain Management
Family Pack J
Note 293991.1 - Advanced Pricing Is Not Defaulting Price From Price List
Note 299698.1 - 11.5.10: Does Advanced Pricing In Purchasing Require Oracle Pricing
To Be Installed?
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Advanced Pricing with Purchasing
August 2007
Author: Fadi Timo, Mohamed Emara, TC Cheng
Oracle Corporation
World Headquarters
500 Oracle Parkway
Redwood Shores, CA 94065
U.S.A.
Worldwide Inquiries:
Phone: +1.650.506.7000
Fax: +1.650.506.7200
www.oracle.com
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