Coupa, SAP Ariba and Oracle Procurement Cloud are built for large Western groups. African SMEs need something different. Here's why.
Procura team · May 2026 · 7 min readWhen a CFO at an SME in Cotonou, Abidjan or Dakar sets out to digitize procurement, the path is usually the same. They evaluate Coupa. Then SAP Ariba. Then Oracle Procurement Cloud. And they go back to Excel.
This isn't a budget problem. It's a fit problem. The Procure-to-Pay platforms that dominate global rankings are built for companies running on French GAAP or IFRS, with EUR or USD bank accounts, SEPA or ACH wires, and structured suppliers on standardized e-invoicing. Across Africa — and especially in the OHADA bloc — those assumptions don't hold.
SYSCOHADA is the accounting framework that applies across the 17 OHADA member states, including the eight UEMOA and six CEMAC countries. It rests on a standardized chart of accounts defined by the Uniform Act revised in 2017 and in force since January 1st, 2018.
Global tools handle this through configuration. You set up the chart of accounts by hand. You create each account. You map every operation manually. It's doable — but slow, integration-heavy, and drifts every time the regulator publishes an update.
A procurement tool built natively for SYSCOHADA ships that foundation out of the box. Class 1–9 accounts are present the day the ledger opens. Entries posted from the procurement cycle are routed to the correct account automatically. Exports to the tax authority, the standardized FEC file and annual statements are ready with zero configuration.
Mobile Money is now a common B2B payment channel across French-speaking Africa, tracked yearly by the GSMA in its State of the Industry Report on Mobile Money. Orange Money, MTN MoMo, Wave and Moov Money handle a significant share of settlements to small suppliers.
None of the major international P2P platforms integrate these rails natively. At best, they offer a Stripe or Adyen connection, which does not cover most African use cases.
On the currency side, an African SME has to handle XOF, XAF, EUR and USD with rates published by BCEAO or BEAC. On the language side, everything has to run end-to-end in French, with a clean toggle to English without breaking any workflow.
A SaaS license priced at $50 per user per month lands at roughly 30,000 XOF per user per month in West Africa. For a fifteen-person SME, that's around 5.4 million XOF a year — before implementation, training or connectors. The cost no longer matches the perceived value.
On AI, the international tools are calibrated on overwhelmingly Western datasets. An AI agent that understands the African context has to recognize local suppliers (CFAO, Orange CI, Pullman), parse French-language expense descriptions, and produce sales briefs framed in CFO-vs-DAF, XOF-vs-USD, SYSCOHADA-vs-GAAP terms.
A SYSCOHADA procurement tool isn't a translated Coupa. It's a tool that takes Africa's specific constraints as its starting point.
The outcome shows up on four axes. First, a unified procurement cycle from request to payment, with no re-keying. Second, SYSCOHADA accounting kept automatically from procurement transactions, with no double-entry by the accountant. Third, full traceability, one click away from a tax-authority-ready export. Fourth, a team that gets its time back from repetitive work and can focus on the work that creates value.
See how Procura digitizes your SYSCOHADA procurement cycle, from request to payment.