
Control Components Inc. Implements PROACTIS Spend Control
PROACTIS, the spend control and eProcurement specialist, today announced that Control Components Inc. (CCI) has successfully completed the first phase of a purchase-to-pay system company roll-out. As part of a process improvement project for its financial management processes, it has invested in PROACTIS to increase visibility and control of indirect spend in North America and throughout its international operations.
CCI is the world's leading provider of severe service control valve solutions. The company develops, designs and manufactures a wide range of valves for use in the power industry, oil and gas industry, and pulp and paper plants worldwide.
The PROACTIS solution has been deployed at CCI's North American headquarters in California, to streamline the purchasing process for indirect goods and services. The next phase of the project will roll-out the solution internationally to CCI's operations in Europe and Asia, and integrate to their forthcoming ERP system.
Nengi Krukrubo, Supply Chain Manager at CCI said "Although it's still early, employees are successfully raising purchase orders on PROACTIS which gives us control and visibility of these commitments right away. Also, because of the built-in workflows, the system ensures that all purchases are properly authorised."
CCI made the decision to adopt PROACTIS as a quantum leap forward by applying best practices to its purchasing processes and address compliance concerns. "We have used this project as an opportunity to review and streamline our business processes with PROACTIS consultants," explained Mr Krukrubo.
The system's easily deployable web browser will make rolling-out a single instance purchasing system worldwide straightforward, and will allow CCI to standardise its financial processes across the whole company.
CCI is the newest organisation in PROACTIS' growing North American customer base, which includes both public and private sector organisations spanning construction, manufacturing, financial services, transportation, and government.

