Sourcing intake guided experience with playbooks

  • Release version: Yokohama
  • Updated January 30, 2025
  • 3 minutes to read
  • Summarize
    Summarized using AI
    This content was generated using new OpenAI-powered functionality. Results are provided on an as is basis and are not guaranteed to be accurate or complete.

    Summary of Sourcing intake guided experience with playbooks

    ServiceNow’s sourcing intake and negotiation setup playbooks provide sourcing managers with guided workflows to efficiently handle complex sourcing requests and negotiations. These playbooks streamline the intake process, facilitate collaboration, and help focus efforts on productive activities such as negotiating supplier savings.

    Show full answer Show less

    Key Features

    • Sourcing Intake Playbook: Enables review of employee or requester requirements including purchase lines and approvals. It allows requesting clarifications, collaborating with cross-functional teams by creating tasks and cases, and deciding on negotiation timing.
    • Negotiation Setup Playbook: Supports managing sourcing events by reviewing and adding sourcing requests, purchase lines, suppliers, and handling qualification work. This playbook can be accessed either immediately or after initial qualification based on the sourcing manager’s approach.
    • Configurable Playbooks: Customers can tailor playbook stages, activities, declarative actions, and the user experience to align with their specific processes through the Playbooks and Activity Definition modules.
    • Troubleshooting Guidance: Provides steps to diagnose and resolve issues with playbook activities, including process navigation, workflow checks, and activity experience reviews within configuration tables.

    Practical Use and Benefits

    By using these playbooks, sourcing managers can:

    • Gain clear visibility into sourcing requests and their progress with guided steps.
    • Make informed decisions on whether to start negotiations immediately or after qualification.
    • Collaborate effectively with internal teams and manage supplier interactions within a structured framework.
    • Customize playbooks to fit organizational sourcing workflows and improve user experience.
    • Quickly identify and fix issues when playbook functionalities do not perform as expected.

    Additional Support

    ServiceNow provides related playbooks and tasks to support sourcing processes such as contract fulfillment, NDA routing, delivery address verification, and supplier risk assessment, as well as handling various purchase order and requisition edits within the sourcing lifecycle.

    As sourcing managers, you can use the sourcing intake and negotiation setup playbooks to guide you through the complex request intake process so that you can focus on actual productive work such as negotiating savings from suppliers.

    The sourcing intake playbook and the negotiation setup playbook embedded in the sourcing intake playbook as a flow, guide you through these actions with clear steps to view your progress​.

    Here's a quick breakdown of the playbooks and their associated tasks.

    Sourcing intake playbook

    Sourcing intake playbook

    The sourcing request playbook, also known as the sourcing intake playbook, enables you to:
    • Review an employee or requester’s requirements, which include details of the sourcing intake, purchase lines, and approvals.
    • Request clarifications or more information from the requester, if necessary.
    • Collaborate with cross-functional teams and create other work such as tasks and cases for them, if necessary.​

      For more information on how to perform these actions on the sourcing intake playbook, see Review details and request clarification on a sourcing request in playbook.

    • Decide if you should negotiate in a sourcing event or not.

      Here, as the sourcing manager, you can select a sourcing approach to source with similar employee requests. You can decide whether to work on negotiations with suppliers right away or at a later stage. In case of the former, you must add the sourcing request to a new or existing sourcing event​ to proceed.

      For more information on how to perform these actions on the sourcing intake playbook, see Select a sourcing approach in playbook.

      Note:
      If you have skipped negotiations at this stage, you have the option to work on negotiations after the qualification is complete. You can add the sourcing request to an exiting sourcing event or create a new sourcing event as required, before working with the sourcing event.

    Negotiation setup playbook

    Negotiation setup playbook

    The sourcing event playbook, also known as the negotiation setup playbook, enables you to:
    • Review and add sourcing requests and purchase lines, if necessary.
    • Review and add suppliers, if necessary.
    • Manage qualification work.

      For more information on this, see Set up negotiations with suppliers and manage qualifications in playbook.

      Note:
      This action in available in both the playbooks, depending on when you want to get started with managing qualification work.

    Configurations

    The playbook stages and activities of sourcing requests and sourcing events can be modified by the customer from Playbooks. ​The Declarative Actions can be edited or newly created, and their mappings modified in the Activity Definition section. The look and feel of the activities can also be configured from Activity Experience in the Activity Definition section.​

    For details on how administrators, agents, and fulfillers can configure playbooks, see Running playbooks. For more information on Playbooks stages and activities, see Stages and activities.

    Troubleshooting

    If your playbook activities aren’t working as expected, perform these actions.
    1. Navigate to the respective process in Playbooks. For sourcing requests and sourcing events, the processes are Sourcing Intake and Negotiation Setup respectively.​
    2. Within the process, go to the corresponding activity that is not working as expected.​ For example, in the Sourcing approach section, which is the second stage of the playbook:
      • If stage 2.1 is skipped, it should go to the Qualification workflow.​
      • If stage 2.1 is completed, it should go to the Add to an existing negotiation workflow.​
      • If stage 2.1 is canceled, it should go to the Create new sourcing event workflow.​
    3. Under the Automation tab, navigate to the corresponding subflow in Workflow Studio.​
    4. Open the executions of the subflow and check further.​
    5. To check the activity experiences, go to the sys_pd_process_definition table and check the process configurations. This table contains all the activity definition configurations and action mappings for Declarative Actions.​