Air Liquide has partnered with Zycus for seven years, building a unified procurement foundation across a complex global operation

Corinne Hodan of Air Liquide has spent seven years, building a unified procurement foundation across a complex global operation. At Horizon 2026, she explains how that foundation is now unlocking the next wave of value…

At Zycus Horizon EU & UK 2026 in Vienna, the focus was firmly on agentic AI and the shift from source-to-pay (S2P) to intake-to-outcomes (I2O). The event brought together Zycus customers at varying stages of their implementation journeys. Well into the process is Corinne Hodan, Group Procurement Digital and Change Management Director at Air Liquide – a highly decentralised industrial gas company.

Air Liquide chose Zycus to implement its worldwide procurement tool seven years ago. “We did a very thorough request for information and request for quotation,” explains Hodan. “There were two shortlisted companies, so we had a proof of concept session with more than 120 people involved. They voted for Zycus.” Hodan explains what drove the decision: “What attracted us was the user friendliness of the solution. Also, the fact that we could co-develop with Zycus. They were also very innovative.”

The company subsequently contracted Zycus for several modules. “We got the full source-to-contract suite,” says Hodan, “and we just renewed our contract.”  That renewal – after seven years of partnership – speaks to the depth of the relationship. It’s not a legacy arrangement running on inertia; Air Liquide actively chose to continue with Zycus for the next phase.

Taking the time to get implementation right

One aspect of digital transformation that separates successful rollouts from failed ones is the discipline to invest in proper implementation. Hodan says, “It was a long journey because from what you see during the pre-sale and what you actually have to implement, there’s a lot of work.”

That work has been worth it, though, as Hodan explains: “We have varying geographical processes and fragmented supplier databases. First, we wanted to break the silos between the different geographies and have one single source of truth for our spend consolidation, supplier management, and contract repository”. Hodan is clear that this has been achieved: “This is really so far the main benefit we see – and that was the basis.”

This kind of structural challenge can’t be fixed overnight. Hodan has been through the process, working closely with Zycus to get the basics right. “Now that we have this consolidation,” she continues, “it’s time to deliver value. That’s the next challenge we are going to address with Zycus.” 

This is exactly the kind of disciplined groundwork that positions Air Liquide to fully capitalize on Zycus’ agentic AI capabilities as they come online.

Corinne Hodan, Group Procurement Digital and Change Management Director at Air Liquide

Sharing knowledge at Horizon

For Hodan, sharing these experiences is important. On day three of the Horizon event, she spoke on a panel about AI strategy and choosing the right partner, where she shared her journey with Zycus. But the event is a chance to learn from others, too.

“It’s the second Horizon event I’m attending,” Hodan says. “There’s the opportunity to exchange with my peers, and it’s inspiring to see those testimonies. It gives me a lot of ideas that I will work on when I’m back.” For Hodan, the event goes beyond content. “It’s the opportunity to exchange with my peers — people I don’t have the opportunity to meet during the year,” she says.

As well as the sharing of knowledge, there’s an important networking element to the event. Building long-term relationships with other procurement professionals, as well as potential partners, is valuable. Hodan recommends the event, she says: “It’s definitely a good opportunity. First, it’s very well organised, Zycus knows how to receive its guests. During the year, we are really just focused on our pain points, so it’s an opportunity to have fresh air and discuss with everyone.”

In a market racing toward agentic AI, Air Liquide’s partnership with Zycus shows what it looks like to do it right – build the foundation first, then accelerate.

Tools such as Zycus’s Merlin AI – which automates workflows, extracts invoice data, and handles supplier queries – can only deliver a return on investment when the underlying data is coherent. This is why Air Liquide has taken the time to consolidate its data from fragmented systems spread over a large geographical area. With seven years of consolidated data now flowing through the platform, Air Liquide is exactly where it needs to be to unlock the full power of Zycus’s Merlin AI and agentic capabilities.

Check out the full edition of CPOstrategy here.

Zycus founder and CEO Aatish Dedhia explains how his company built for the agentic AI era long before it became mainstream

Zycus founder and CEO Aatish Dedhia explains how his company built for the agentic AI era long before it became mainstream, and why a deeply embedded, platform-first approach is now reshaping what autonomous procurement really looks like…

There is a familiar narrative that has shaped the enterprise software industry for decades. A company builds something valuable, scales successfully and gradually becomes comfortable. Then a faster, more agile competitor arrives with a new architecture and a more compelling proposition. The incumbent struggles to adapt, weighed down by its own legacy, and the market moves on. It is a cycle that has repeated itself time and again. Zycus does not follow that pattern. The disruption did not come from a new entrant. It came from within.

Zycus founder and CEO Aatish Dedhia

When artificial intelligence became the defining conversation across enterprise technology in 2023, many procurement vendors reacted quickly, but superficially. Copilots were added, existing tools were reframed and point solutions were positioned as transformation. The urgency was clear, but so too was the lack of depth behind many of those moves. Zycus, by contrast, did not need to reposition. It had already been building toward this moment for years, embedding AI into procurement long before the current wave.

At the centre of that strategy is founder and CEO Aatish Dedhia, whose engineering background continues to shape how the company approaches innovation. His view is that transformation cannot be layered onto legacy systems. It has to be architected from the ground up, with each technological shift building on a strong and connected foundation. “Because we’ve been building AI into procurement since long before it was fashionable and we have the scars, the patents, the production deployments and successful customers to prove it,” he tells us.

That long-term commitment predates the generative AI boom by several years. As he explains, the company’s journey has unfolded in distinct, but connected phases, each building on the last rather than replacing it. “Our AI journey did not start with ChatGPT. We were embedding AI and machine learning into spend classification, contract analytics, AP automation and risk scoring years before generative AI existed. Merlin AI launched in 2018.”

Rapid evolution

This early investment created the conditions for rapid evolution when new technologies emerged. Rather than starting from scratch, Zycus was able to extend an already mature platform into new areas of capability. “When generative AI arrived, we moved to cognitive procurement – using LLMs to understand unstructured data at scale. And when it became clear that copilots and point agents were not going to transform anything, we pivoted hard to agentic AI,” he explains.

The result is a layered progression that places the company several steps ahead of newer entrants. As Dedhia sees it, many of the startups now positioning themselves as AI-native are still grappling with foundational challenges that Zycus addressed years ago. “That’s three distinct waves of AI capability – ML, generative, agentic – each built on top of the previous one,” he tells us. “A startup entering today is building wave one. We are on wave three, with trillions of dollars of spend data analysed and 32 patents behind us.”

This depth, he argues, is what enables genuine transformation. Simply adding AI capabilities onto existing workflows is not enough to fundamentally change how procurement operates. “You cannot take new technology and fit it onto the way you were doing things in the past just by adding apps,” he says. “The transformational effect is going to come through agentic AI.”

However, even that is only part of the equation. The effectiveness of AI depends heavily on the environment in which it operates, and that is where architecture becomes critical. “Here is the critical point: AI alone is not enough. You also need the transactional backbone – the workflows, the policies, the audit trails, the supplier data, the contract repository – to give that intelligence something to act on.”

Without that backbone, the promise of autonomy quickly breaks down. Many organisations, and indeed many vendors, still operate across fragmented systems that limit what AI can realistically achieve. “A startup can build a beautiful intake layer. But what happens after intake?” he posits. “Where does the request go? Who enforces the policy? Where is the contract? Where is the three-way match?”

It is this fragmentation that prevents true autonomy, turning what should be seamless workflows into complex integration challenges. “If those things live in different systems, you’re not autonomous; you are integrated, which is a very different and much harder problem,” he warns.

A single source

Zycus’ answer has been to build everything on a single, unified codebase, allowing AI to operate directly within the system rather than across disconnected tools. “We built everything organically, on a single codebase. Our AI does not talk to our Source-to-Pay system through middleware,” Dedhia explains. “It is the Source-to-Pay system that gives us access to ten times the data that an external bolt-on tool would have. Data is the fuel for AI. More fuel, better outcomes.”

This philosophy of building deep, rather than bolting on, extends into how the company has evolved over time. Reinvention is not a response to market pressure, but more a deliberate and recurring strategy. “Completely deliberate. If you look at our history, we reinvent roughly every three to five years. We started with spend analytics and sourcing optimisation. Then we built the full Source-to-Pay suite. Then we built in Merlin AI for AI & machine learning-driven capabilities across contracts, AP, spend, and risk. Then cognitive procurement with generative AI. And now, the Merlin Agentic Platform.”

Strong foundations

Each phase strengthens the foundation rather than replacing it, creating a compounding effect that becomes increasingly difficult for competitors to replicate. “Each cycle does not replace the previous one. It builds on it. The Source-to-Pay suite is still the backbone,” he says, adding that what changes is the layer of intelligence and user experience built on top.

This compounding advantage is particularly significant in the context of AI, where access to data and system-wide integration directly influences performance. “That’s actually the advantage of being an established player with a proven foundation. A startup has to build the foundation and the AI simultaneously. We already have the foundation. We can focus entirely on what is next,” he explains.

To put the current moment into perspective, Dedhia draws a comparison that goes beyond software cycles and into industrial history. “I’ve been in technology long enough to have seen the personal computer revolution, the internet, mobile, cloud. All of them were significant. But the transformation that AI will drive is on a completely different scale. You have to go back a century, to the industrial revolution, to find something comparable.”

The analogy is not just about scale, but about the nature of the transformation itself. “What the industrial revolution did for muscles, AI is doing for brains. It’s already reshaping industries, economies; the way work is organised.” Within that framework, large language models represent only the starting point.

“The LLM is today’s equivalent,” he explains, before extending the comparison further. “But the steam engine alone did not transform manufacturing. The assembly line did.” In this context, agentic AI becomes the mechanism that turns raw capability into real-world outcomes. “Agentic AI is the assembly line. It harnesses the raw power of LLMs to deliver outcomes. The LLM is 99%. Agentic AI is the 1% on top that organises that power into workflows that actually achieve something.”

Income to outcomes

This current emphasis on outcomes has led Zycus to rethink how it builds AI tools. Early experimentation with a wide range of smaller agents revealed a clear limitation.“Because agent sprawl doesn’t deliver value. We were guilty of it too. At one point we had 50 to 60 small agents,” he says.

While individually useful, these tools failed to deliver meaningful transformation at scale. So, Zycus asked itself a fundamentally different question. Instead of ‘what can AI do?’ they started asking ‘what work can AI replace?’ That shift in thinking reframed the company’s entire approach, focusing on replacing substantial portions of roles rather than automating isolated tasks. “Not a task. A significant chunk of a role; 30, 40, 50% of what a person actually does.”

From that point on, development was guided by a clear principle. “If an agentic flow does not replace a meaningful portion of someone’s workload, it isn’t worth building as a blockbuster flow,” Dedhia explains.

This thinking is reflected in ANA, the Autonomous Negotiation Agent, which moves far beyond suggestion into execution. “ANA is the clearest example of what we mean by a blockbuster flow. It doesn’t summarise a negotiation or suggest a strategy. It executes the negotiation autonomously,” he tells us.

The system handles sourcing events end to end, from supplier discovery to negotiation and final recommendation, with human involvement limited to approval. It is a clear example of how agentic AI shifts the role of technology from support to execution.

Underpinning all of this is the Merlin Agentic Platform, a significant architectural investment that enables this level of capability to be developed and deployed at speed. “This is perhaps the most important investment we have made,” he says.

The full stack

Rather than building isolated solutions, Zycus focused on creating the full stack required for agentic AI to function effectively. “Over the past 18 to 24 months, we have been building the entire architectural stack for agentic AI. Not a single agent – but the platform that agents run on.”

That decision is now paying off. “Now, the platform is proven. And the implication is enormous: every subsequent agentic flow can be built dramatically faster because the stack is already validated,” he enthuses.

Internally, the company has applied the same principles to its own operations, using AI to drive measurable productivity gains. “We believe you can’t sell AI credibly if you are not using it aggressively internally,” he tells us.

The results are clear

The results have been significant, particularly within engineering, where productivity has increased dramatically even as team size has reduced. Looking ahead, Dedhia expects the very structure of procurement software to change. Traditional modules will remain, but largely as invisible infrastructure supporting a new, conversational interface driven by agents.

“Everything we have today in terms of traditional software will slowly move to the back,” he says. What users interact with will instead be a set of agentic flows that operate dynamically across the system. The software modules become invisible. “The agents become the interface,” he explains.

For procurement leaders, the message is clear. The shift to AI is not simply about adopting new tools, but about rethinking how work is structured and executed. “First, experiment – but experiment on deep use cases, not point tasks,” Dedhia advises.

At the same time, according to the Zycus CEO, success depends on organisational commitment and a clear understanding of the underlying technology landscape. “AI will not fix a fragmented technology landscape. It will simply amplify the fragmentation,” he warns.

Ultimately, the companies that succeed in this next phase will not be those that move fastest to adopt AI at the surface level, but those that have built the foundations to support it at scale.

Check out the full edition of CPOstrategy here.

At Horizon EU & UK 2026, procurement leaders gathered to explore the shift from source-to-pay to intake-to-outcomes

At Horizon EU & UK 2026, hosted by Zycus in Vienna, procurement leaders gathered to explore the shift from source-to-pay to intake-to-outcomes, whilst celebrating stand-out leaders and unveiling the Next 50 who are shaping the future of the function. CPOstrategy was among the guests…

Staged at the InterContinental, Vienna from March 10-12, the event, hosted by Zycus – pioneers in agentic AI – brought together more than 200 senior leaders from across Europe and the UK – from global multinationals, digital transformation directors, sustainability leaders and category heads spanning banking, manufacturing, FMCG, energy, logistics and more – reflecting Horizon’s positioning as a high-level, insight-led forum rather than a traditional conference. The venue itself – blending historic grandeur with modern sophistication – mirrored the event’s central theme: bridging classical procurement thinking with the fast-emerging world of Agentic AI. 

CPOstrategy at Horizon EU & UK 2026, hosted by Zycus in Vienna

From the outset, Horizon demonstrated its emphasis on community. The opening day’s registration and icebreaking activities quickly dissolved the usual formality of industry events, as delegates moved from introductions to collaboration. A creative, team-based painting session and an AI-themed welcome reception set the tone: this was a gathering designed not just to inform, but to connect. By the end of the first evening, conversations were already flowing with a level of openness that would thread through the following days.

Day two, billed as “The Grand Stage”, delivered the intellectual core of the conference. Proceedings opened with a welcome from Daniel Schmitz, Enterprise SaaS Executive, Zycus, who framed the day’s narrative and guided delegates through a tightly curated agenda. Early insights from Magnus Bergfors, Senior Director Analyst – Sourcing and Procurement Technology at Gartner established a clear message echoed throughout the event: agentic AI is rapidly becoming a defining force in procurement, separating leaders from laggards in the near term. Agentic sourcing is no longer merely a vision, and the window for positioning is now. “By 2028, 90% of all sourcing events, by transaction volume, will benefit from some degree of AI assistance,” he declared. “with 25% running fully autonomously.”

Building upon this, Zycus founder and CEO, Aatish Dedhia presented a compelling vision for the evolution from source-to-pay to intake-to-outcomes, positioning autonomous agents as decision-makers capable of transforming procurement from a process-driven function into one focused on outcomes.

Zycus founder and CEO, Aatish Dedhia

Dedhia’s keynote was a genuine operating model argument: that the procurement function as currently architected – workflow-heavy, process-first, tool-centric – was built for a world that no longer exists. The shift he articulated, from source-to-pay to intake-to-outcomes, reframed the entire purpose of procurement technology; the human role moving upstream: to judgment, strategy and relationships that machines cannot replicate. “Workflow-heavy S2P systems weren’t built for today’s velocity,” he told the audience. “Agentic AI doesn’t just execute – it decides, orchestrates, and delivers outcomes. This is the operating model shift procurement has been waiting for.” This was a founder who has spent years building toward a thesis, standing in front of 200 senior procurement leaders and saying: the model has shifted, and here is exactly how. 

Forrester’s Jeffrey Rajamani followed with a sharp case for autonomous negotiation in tail spend – where most teams aren’t yet looking, and where the yield is highest. IDC’s Patrick Reymann provided the most practically useful contribution: a maturity model for assessing where your organisation actually stands, not just where it aspires to be.

Crucially, Horizon balanced visionary thinking with grounded, real-world application. John Mahjoubi, Procurement Director at Bolt offered a candid account of implementing intake-to-outcomes in practice, while Hervé Le Faou, the CPO of Heineken brought the best practices of scaling consistency across 80 business units without destroying local relevance. Stedrick Saayman, heading procurement at Tiger Brands, Andreas Stylianou, Manager Finance Systems and Processes, Bank of Cyprus, George Charalambous, Sr. Procurement Consultant and Gabriel Kiewek, the COO from Nippon Gases added sectoral and geographic breadth that kept the programme from feeling like a single-industry showcase.

The ‘Procurement 2030: Humans + AI Agents’ panel – featuring EY’s Armijn Verweij and Professor David Loseby from Leeds University Business School – treated the central question (what remains meaningfully human when agents can analyse, negotiate and execute?) as a genuinely open question, not a prompt for reassuring platitudes. The ‘AI Strategy: Securing the Right Partner’ panel with Tenneco, Tate & Lyle, and Air Liquide produced the clearest takeaway of the day: choosing an AI partner is no longer a technology decision – it is a strategic operating commitment.

Up close and personal

One of the most significant elements of Horizon happened behind closed doors. Aatish Dedhia personally chaired the AI Council – an invitation-only forum for senior CPOs and industry experts to discuss the next phase of agentic AI vision, use cases and roadmap in an unfiltered setting.

No slides. No vendor pitch. Dedhia in the room, listening as much as leading – a founder stress-testing his own roadmap against the real-world priorities of the people who will have to implement it. The quality of that exchange, and Zycus’s willingness to host it without agenda, signalled something important: this is a company that sees its relationship with procurement leadership as a genuine thought partnership, not a customer management exercise.

The live demo: no script, no safety net

The Merlin Agentic Platform demo – run live by Zycus Product Experts – Bikash Mohanty, Chinmaya Behera, and Shiv Agarwal – walked the room through real procurement workflows end to end: including intake handling, sourcing orchestration and autonomous negotiation. Watching a system actually perform, in real time, in front of 200 senior professionals, moved the conversation from conceptual to credible. Indeed Horizon’s real strength lay in its culture of openness. Networking breakfasts, informal discussions, and hands-on demo pods created space for genuine knowledge exchange. Delegates shared not only success stories, but also challenges and lessons learned, contributing to an atmosphere that felt notably collaborative rather than performative.

The evening Gala Dinner, held at the opulent Liechtenstein City Palace, provided a standout moment of recognition and celebration. Among the award winners, John Mahjoubi was honoured with the High Performing Leader Award on behalf of Bolt and its procurement team acknowledging a transformation journey that exemplified the event’s core themes of innovation and execution. The full run-down of all the award winners are here…

STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP AWARDThe HEINEKEN CompanyHIGH PERFORMING LEADER AWARDJohn Mahjoubi, Bolt
ACE ORGANIZATION AWARDSwissportAGENTIC AI PIONEER AWARDNippon Gases 
PROCUREMENT VISIONARY AWARDPwCTRANSFORMATIVE TRAILBLAZER AWARDTiger Brands
AGENTIC AI PIONEER AWARDAhold DelhaizeINNOVATIVE CHANGEMAKER AWARDCorinne Hodan, Air Liquide
AGILE COLLABORATOR AWARDEYREGIONAL SUSTAINABLE PARTNER AWARDLetsema

The evening of Day two also saw the launch of the Next 50 – CPONext 50 Executives to Watch in Europe and the UK 2026 – spotlighting a new generation of procurement leaders shaping the future of the function. Building on Zycus’ established CPONext programme, the initiative highlights rising and established executives driving digital transformation, innovation and strategic impact across the region, reinforcing the conference’s focus not just on technology, but on the people leading change from firms such as Danone, Air France, BP and Barclays, emphasising transformation leadership, strategic impact and the adoption of agentic-driven AI for sourcing, contracting and invoicing. It was a night that will live long in the memory.

Final day

Day three shifted toward reflection and future readiness. Sessions explored the maturity journey from automation to full autonomy, alongside a renewed emphasis on the human skills required to lead in an AI-enabled environment: communication, adaptability and strategic judgement. The closing sessions reinforced a crystal clear takeaway: while the technology is advancing rapidly, procurement leadership will ultimately be defined by how effectively organisations combine AI capabilities with human insight and governance.

Across the three days, Horizon 2026 delivered a cohesive and compelling narrative. Procurement is no longer simply evolving, it is being redefined. And in stunning Vienna, surrounded by a highly engaged community of peers and leaders, Horizon its guests left not only with new ideas, but also with a shared sense of direction for what comes next. Just make sure your name is down for the next Horizon event.

More Horizon coverage coming up!

Check out the full edition of CPOstrategy here.

Zycus founder and CEO Aatish Dedhia who reveals how his company built for the agentic AI era long before it became mainstream

This month’s cover star is Zycus founder and CEO Aatish Dedhia who reveals how his company built for the agentic AI era long before it became mainstream, and why a deeply embedded, platform-first approach is now reshaping what autonomous procurement really looks like…

In fact, CPOstrategy is brought to you this month with the support of Zycus – with loads of exclusive content from its Horizon EU & UK 2026 event in Vienna, where procurement leaders gathered to explore the shift from source-to-pay to intake-to-outcomes, whilst celebrating stand-out leaders and unveiling the Next 50 who are shaping the future of the function. CPOstrategy was among the guests…

Staged at the InterContinental, Vienna, Horizon, hosted by Zycus – pioneers in agentic AI – brought together more than 200 senior leaders from across Europe and the UK – from global multinationals, digital transformation directors, sustainability leaders and category heads spanning banking, manufacturing, FMCG, energy, logistics and more – reflecting Horizon’s positioning as a high-level, insight-led forum rather than a traditional conference. The venue itself – blending historic grandeur with modern sophistication – mirrored the event’s central theme: bridging classical procurement thinking with the fast-emerging world of Agentic AI. 

From the outset, Horizon demonstrated its emphasis on community. The opening day’s registration and icebreaking activities quickly dissolved the usual formality of industry events, as delegates moved from introductions to collaboration. Inside, we feature interviews with procurement leaders present at Horizon, from Bolt, Tenneco, Air Liquide, Tiger Brands, Bristol Myers Squibb, Università Bocconi, Chelsea FC, Bekaert and Filtration Group. Plus, loads more essential coverage from the procurement space, including actionable insights from Amazon Business and a compelling report on human rights in the supply chain from ethica26Enjoy!

Check out the magazine here.

Zycus founder and CEO Aatish Dedhia