Over 52,000 supplier disputes resolved without human intervention. Buyers managing 17% more spend. Issues resolved 30 hours faster. No extra headcount required.
AUSTIN, TX — Every day, manufacturers and distributors manage thousands of moving parts: delivery dates that slip, prices that shift, quantities that change after an order is already placed. Most companies handle this through emails, spreadsheets, and endless follow-up calls. SourceDay is changing that — and for the first time, the company is sharing data that shows just how far AI-driven automation has come.
Over the past year, SourceDay analyzed more than $20 billion in purchase orders across 120,000 suppliers. Its AI identified nearly 600,000 supplier-initiated changes that could be resolved automatically — without a buyer ever getting involved. Of those, 52,000 were fully executed by the system, no human required.
The results are striking. Buyers using SourceDay’s platform are resolving supplier issues 30 hours faster than before. They’re also managing 17% more in purchasing volume without hiring additional staff.
WHY THIS MATTERS
For manufacturers, a late delivery isn’t just an inconvenience — it can halt a production line, delay customer orders, and trigger costly rework. Traditionally, managing supplier changes meant constant back-and-forth between procurement teams, suppliers, and internal systems. Small errors compound quickly.
SourceDay’s approach puts guardrails around what the AI is allowed to do. Buyers set the rules — which changes can be auto-approved, how much price variation is acceptable, how far a delivery date can move. When a supplier request falls within those boundaries, the system acts immediately. When it doesn’t, a human steps in.
“Autonomous procurement only works when teams control exactly where AI acts and where it stops. 597,000 governed decisions across $20B in spend shows that model works.” — Mikey Wey, VP of Product and Design, SourceDay
FROM PILOT TO PRODUCTION
What makes SourceDay’s announcement notable isn’t just the scale — it’s that this is happening in live production environments, not controlled pilots. The most common automated decisions included accepting minor delivery date shifts, approving small price decreases, and clearing straightforward quantity adjustments.
“The data shows procurement teams aren’t waiting for AI to mature — they’re deploying it now, with guardrails they control. Resolving supplier changes 30 hours faster and managing 17% more spend without added headcount aren’t projections. They’re what autonomous procurement looks like in production.” — Mikey Wey, VP of Product and Design, SourceDay
The broader implication: AI in manufacturing isn’t coming. For companies using SourceDay, it’s already here — handling the routine so that buyers can focus on the decisions that actually require human judgment.
Manufacturers and distributors ready to move beyond manual purchase order management can learn more at SourceDay.com.
