Coupa Launches AI Agent Orchestration Platform for Procurement and Supply Chains

Coupa introduced a new orchestration platform, outcome-based pricing model, and AI deployment services at Inspire 2026 as enterprise procurement vendors compete to operationalize agentic AI across finance and supply chain workflows.
Coupa unveiled a new AI orchestration platform at its Inspire 2026 conference in Las Vegas this week, expanding its push into agentic enterprise software for procurement, finance, and supply chain operations.
The company introduced Coupa Compose, a platform designed to build, coordinate, and deploy AI agents across enterprise workflows. Coupa also announced outcome-based pricing and a new deployment offering called Catalyst AI transformation services, which includes forward-deployed engineers and solution architects.
The launch comes as enterprise software vendors move beyond standalone copilots toward orchestration systems that connect workflows, enterprise data, and autonomous agents. Similar shifts are emerging across enterprise infrastructure and operational AI platforms as vendors compete to integrate AI directly into business execution layers.
Coupa CEO Leagh Turner said the company’s architecture is built on more than $10 trillion in spend data.
“While others are bolting AI onto ageing systems, we have one platform that scales, with governance, for your data, your workflows and your agents,” Turner said during the keynote presentation at Inspire 2026.
The company said the platform is intended to support what it calls a “digital workforce,” where AI agents can automate operational tasks including supplier onboarding, sourcing workflows, contract analysis, and purchase order management.
Building an orchestration layer for procurement AI
Coupa Compose includes three primary components. The first is Navi Agent Studio, a no-code environment for building AI agents that the company said will become generally available in May. The second is Smart Intake and Orchestration, which routes requests and coordinates interactions between systems and agents. The third is Navi Connect, an integration layer that supports agent-to-agent communication and enterprise system connectivity.
According to Coupa Chief Product and Technology Officer Salvatore Lombardo, the system is designed to work without requiring large-scale migrations or custom code.
“With Coupa Compose, we are empowering our customers to easily build, deploy, orchestrate and connect agentic AI through our core platform,” Lombardo said in the company’s official announcement.
The company also said it has deployed more than 20 domain-specific agents across procurement and supply chain operations. These include sourcing event creation agents, bid comparison agents, sanctions risk agents, and scenario ranking systems.
Coupa claims the agents can reduce workflow setup time by 40% and identify operational inefficiencies using aggregated procurement and spend data from its customer network.
Enterprise procurement vendors have increasingly shifted toward orchestration and workflow automation as companies attempt to consolidate fragmented ERP, sourcing, and logistics systems. Similar competitive pressure has emerged procurement AI startups and enterprise infrastructure platforms.
Outcome-based pricing and AI deployment services
Alongside Compose, Coupa launched Catalyst AI transformation services, a deployment program that pairs customers with forward-deployed engineers and business solution architects.
The company said the service is intended to accelerate implementation and operational adoption of AI systems across procurement and finance teams.
Forward-deployed engineering models have become more common across enterprise AI deployments as vendors attempt to bridge the gap between software delivery and operational integration. Similar approaches are increasingly being used in enterprise transformation projects that combine workflow redesign, systems integration, and AI deployment.
Coupa also introduced outcome-based pricing tied to business performance metrics rather than traditional software licensing structures.
The company linked the broader AI push to its recent acquisition of Rossum, an AI document processing company that developed transaction-focused large language models for invoice and spend workflows.
Lombardo said the combination of Coupa’s platform, Rossum’s domain-specific language models, and enterprise integrations could help customers operationalize AI across procurement and supply chain environments.
Key Takeaways
- Coupa launched an AI orchestration platform to build and deploy AI agents for procurement.
- The new platform aims to automate operational tasks across finance and supply chains.
- Coupa introduced outcome-based pricing and AI deployment services for enterprise clients.
- The company leverages over $10 trillion in spend data to power its AI architecture.