AI for  SAP: Joule or Copilot — What CFOs and Business Leaders Need to Know

AI for SAP: Joule or Copilot — What CFOs and Business Leaders Need to Know

Most executives no longer ask whether AI makes a difference. We have all seen how quickly a draft board paper or customer email can appear on screen. What once took hours now takes minutes. The question has shifted. It is no longer “does AI help?” It is “where do we apply it, and how do we apply it safely?

For organisations that run SAP and Microsoft 365, the practical conversation almost always comes down to two names: SAP Joule and Microsoft Copilot.

There are plenty of other AI products in the market. ChatGPT, Gemini and Grok are all part of the landscape. But for CFOs and CIOs leading organisations built on SAP, and with Microsoft 365 as the productivity backbone, the real decision point is whether to adopt Joule, Copilot, or both.This article explains what each option offers, why they matter for finance and operations leaders, and what questions you should be asking before you take the next step.

 

Why This Matters Now

Most executives no longer ask whether AI makes a difference. We have all seen how quickly a draft board paper or customer email can appear on screen. What once took hours now takes minutes. The question has shifted. It is no longer “does AI help?” It is “where do we apply it, and how do we apply it safely?

For organisations that run SAP and Microsoft 365, the practical conversation almost always comes down to two names: SAP Joule and Microsoft Copilot.

There are plenty of other AI products in the market. ChatGPT, Gemini and Grok are all part of the landscape. But for CFOs and CIOs leading organisations built on SAP, and with Microsoft 365 as the productivity backbone, the real decision point is whether to adopt Joule, Copilot, or both.This article explains what each option offers, why they matter for finance and operations leaders, and what questions you should be asking before you take the next step.

 

SAP Joule: AI inside the ERP

SAP Joule is not an add-on. It is built into SAP’s cloud applications, including S/4HANA Cloud and SuccessFactors. That means it already understands SAP’s data models, transactions, and authorisations.

Think of it as a native assistant. Ask Joule why a purchase order is blocked, and it will respond using the same rules and data you trust inside SAP. Ask it to provide a summary of supplier performance, and it draws from your live transactional data. There is no need to build connectors or map roles. Joule already knows who you are and what you are allowed to see.

This is its greatest strength. Joule inherits SAP’s governance model. If your role in SAP restricts you from seeing certain data, Joule respects that same rule. SAP has also confirmed that customer data processed by Joule is not used to train external foundation models. For leaders, this offers a level of confidence that consumer AI tools cannot provide.

Joule is also designed to evolve as SAP evolves. SAP has committed to extending Joule’s reach across its portfolio, with new skills and agents arriving over time. That roadmap is important. It means that adopting Joule is not a one-off project. It is a way of ensuring that AI becomes part of how you run SAP, release after release

Microsoft Copilot: AI where your people work

While Joule is embedded in SAP, Microsoft Copilot lives in the tools your teams use every day — Outlook, Excel and Teams. This is where most finance teams spend their time, so the productivity benefit is immediate.

The way it works is straightforward. Copilot connects into SAP using certified APIs. From there, it can bring live data into the Microsoft 365 environment. Ask Copilot in Outlook to prepare a collections email, and it can pull the relevant balances from SAP, merge them with customer details, and draft the email ready for review. Ask Copilot in Excel why operating expenses are above budget, and it can analyse the variance, link to SAP transactions, and draft commentary that you can paste straight into a board pack.

The real advantage of Copilot is that it can combine SAP data with other corporate information managed inside Microsoft 365. That might include policy documents stored in SharePoint, supplier contracts in OneDrive, or communications in Teams. This cross-system capability is powerful because real decisions are rarely made on ERP data alone. Leaders often need context, documents and communication history. Copilot can surface these in one place.

Microsoft has also developed a specific Copilot for Finance. This is designed for finance teams and supports scenarios such as reconciliations, variance analysis and collections. While some of these features are still in preview, the direction is clear: Microsoft is making finance a core focus for Copilot inside Microsoft 365.

Why not just use ChatGPT?

It is a fair question. ChatGPT is quick, flexible and already used by many teams. For some tasks it works well. But when it comes to ERP data, the risks are obvious.

ChatGPT does not enforce SAP authorisations. It does not integrate with Microsoft tenant security. And while consumer versions of ChatGPT may use prompts to improve their models, both SAP and Microsoft have been clear that enterprise data accessed through Joule or Copilot is not used to train foundation models for others.

ChatGPT can generate answers, but it cannot act directly on SAP data. It cannot approve an invoice, prepare a live collections email, or provide commentary linked to transactions in your ERP. That is why organisations serious about AI in finance and operations look to Joule or Copilot. They are designed for enterprise use, with security, governance and auditability in mind.

Security and governance considerations

For most CFOs and CIOs, the attraction of AI is tempered by a single concern: security. Productivity gains are only valuable if they do not compromise compliance or governance.

With Joule, the rules are clear. It inherits SAP’s security model. Authorisations apply and the ERP remains the system of record. With Copilot, governance is handled through Microsoft tenant controls. Data policies and loss-prevention rules set the boundaries for how SAP data is used inside Microsoft 365. In both cases, prompts and actions should be logged so there is always an audit trail.

There is also the question of ownership. AI that draws on ERP data is not just an IT project. Finance leaders need to be directly involved in shaping use cases, testing outputs, and defining success measures. CIOs bring the technical expertise to manage connectors, security and compliance. CFOs bring the accountability for process integrity and financial outcomes. Both roles must share ownership from the outset.

Data quality and readiness

Another consideration is data quality. AI is only as good as the data it draws from. If your SAP master data is inconsistent, if roles and authorisations are poorly managed, or if your processes rely heavily on manual workarounds, AI will simply amplify those issues.

This is where experience shows that sequencing matters. Organisations that have stabilised their ERP first — cleaned master data, simplified processes, built trust in the system — are better placed to benefit from AI. If those foundations are weak, AI adoption can expose flaws instead of delivering value.

Joule or Copilot? The Practical Answer

So which should you choose? In reality, most organisations will end up using both. Joule is best for AI inside SAP transactions. Copilot is best when SAP data needs to be combined with other information inside Microsoft 365.

For example:

  • A supply chain manager may use Joule to explain why a purchase order is blocked and suggest the next step.
  • The finance team may use Copilot in Outlook to prepare a collections email that merges SAP data with customer contact details.
  • A CFO may use Copilot in Excel to draft board commentary based on SAP variances, while relying on Joule inside SAP to confirm transactional accuracy.

The two products are already being integrated. SAP and Microsoft have announced bi-directional links between Joule and Microsoft 365 Copilot. That means users will increasingly be able to start in either environment and reach into the other.

The choice is not either/or. The real decision is where to start, how to scale, and what guardrails to put in place.

Adoption guardrails: a practical roadmap

Executives need more than a vision. They need to see a disciplined approach. A simple adoption roadmap could look like this:

Phase 1: Identify scenarios (0–30 days)
Start with 2–3 scenarios that matter most to Finance. Collections, variance commentary and reconciliations are common candidates. Define the KPIs you want to influence, such as DSO, close cycle time or audit preparation hours.

Phase 2: Secure governance (30–60 days)

Review SAP roles and authorisations to ensure they are accurate. Configure Microsoft tenant policies, including data loss prevention rules, for Copilot. Establish a process for logging prompts and responses.

Phase 3: Run pilots with Finance ownership (60–90 days)

Deploy Joule or Copilot in the chosen scenarios. Have Finance own the outcomes while IT ensures compliance. Measure progress against the defined KPIs.

Phase 4: Scale carefully (beyond 90 days)

Extend to additional use cases once the first pilots prove reliable. Continue reviewing governance and data quality. Treat AI adoption as a business discipline, not a technology experiment.

This phased approach keeps expectations realistic, avoids technical debt, and demonstrates value early.

What CFOs and CIOs should ask now

Before you commit to a path, ask yourself these questions:

  1. Do we have a clean ERP foundation that AI can build on?
  2. Are our SAP roles and authorisations accurate and enforced?
  3. Do we have Microsoft tenant policies in place to govern the use of SAP data inside Copilot?
  4. Which finance metrics matter most in the next 90 days — cash, close cycle time, audit readiness — and how could AI improve them?
  5. What guardrails will we use to measure and control the impact of AI adoption?

These questions ensure that AI adoption is not just a technology choice but a business discipline.

Act with Intent

AI in SAP is no longer theoretical. Joule and Microsoft Copilot are here now. Each has distinct strengths. Joule is embedded in SAP and designed for in-system intelligence. Copilot is integrated into Microsoft 365 and designed for cross-system context. Together, they cover most use cases CFOs and CIOs face.

The question is not which is better. The question is how to apply them safely, in the right sequence, and with the right guardrails.

At Coriza, we help organisations answer that question. We focus on practical adoption that delivers results in 90 days. Whether it is accelerating cash collections, shortening the close, or strengthening governance, we ensure AI adoption is measurable, secure and aligned with your business.

Book a 30-minute AI Readiness Review with Coriza. We will map out your Joule and Copilot opportunities, review your governance posture, and create a plan that works for your organisation.

 

“We Had to Change Everything”: Leading Business Transformation in PNG with SAP and Coriza

“We Had to Change Everything”: Leading Business Transformation in PNG with SAP and Coriza

Running a market-leading business in Papua New Guinea is not for the faint-hearted.

by Simon Barstow – General Manager Dulux PNG

 

At Dulux PNG, we manufacture and distribute paints, coatings, and chemicals across some of the most complex and challenging terrains in the world. Our teams operate in a fast-paced, resource-constrained environment, and we take immense pride in doing it well.

But a few years ago, it became clear that we couldn’t keep going the way we were. Our systems were outdated, our processes manual and error prone, and our people didn’t trust the ERP platform. Each department kept its own spreadsheets, and decisions were made in a silo rather than based on validated information.

We didn’t just need better software, we needed to fundamentally rethink how the business operated.

When I joined Dulux PNG, our ERP system wasn’t designed for manufacturing or commercial use, didn’t support remote sales, and offered zero visibility into procurement, production costs, or sales performance.

Everything from warehouse picking to delivery tracking was done manually. I still remember customers saying they couldn’t pay invoices because they hadn’t received the delivery docket, which meant we had to go digging through boxes to find it.

That kind of inefficiency wasn’t sustainable, not for our people, not for our customers, and certainly not for our future.

 

The Impact of the Systems and Partners You Choose

Since DuluxGroup uses SAP globally, it made sense for us to align from a platform perspective. But implementing SAP in Papua New Guinea is not a simple copy-paste. Our business environment is unique, fast-moving, hands-on, and full of operational nuances that don’t exist in a typical corporate playbook. We needed more than a system, we needed a partner who could navigate that reality with us.

I was looking for a team that wouldn’t just deploy technology, but one that would embed themselves in our business. A team willing to listen, challenge our assumptions, and work alongside us to build something sustainable for the long term. We didn’t need a vendor, we needed a true partner.

That’s exactly what we found in Coriza.

From the beginning, they were clear, honest, and deeply engaged. They didn’t try to impress with buzzwords or over promise outcomes. Instead, they asked hard questions, pushed us to rethink old habits, and helped us focus on what would truly drive value. That kind of straight talk, and their commitment to understanding our context, was invaluable.

 

Fixing the Foundations: Data, Process and People

Before we could move forward, we had to understand exactly where our processes were hitting a wall. That meant starting with a full health check across every core function: finance, warehousing, procurement, sales, and beyond. We looked at how transactions flowed, where handoffs stalled, and how data was being captured, shared, or lost along the way. It quickly became clear that our problems weren’t isolated. They were systemic.

Once we had that baseline, we went straight to the heart of it: the data. Poor-quality data was undermining everything: product codes were inconsistent, pricing data was duplicated, vendor records had gaps. Cleaning up our master data was no small job, but it was essential. Once that work was done, I could finally look at a report and know it reflected the truth.

With better data came the chance to revisit how our processes actually worked. We didn’t just want to replicate old habits in a new system. We mapped out how we wanted things to run, using SAP’s standard capabilities as the reference point. That forced us to rethink how quotes got created, how inventory moved, and how approvals were managed. In many cases, simplifying our processes created efficiencies we hadn’t even been aiming for.

And of course, none of it would stick without our people. This wasn’t just about learning to click the right buttons. We spent time explaining why the changes mattered, showing how their work connected to business outcomes, and giving them space to ask questions and test things out. It wasn’t always smooth, but gradually, people stopped seeing SAP as an obstacle and started seeing it as a tool they could trust.

One of the biggest turning points came when team members who had previously avoided SAP started coming to us saying, “I’m still doing this in Excel, how do I move it into SAP?” That shift, from resistance to ownership, was when I knew the culture was changing.

The Results: Faster, Smarter, More Agile

The transformation has been significant.

  • We now close our books on Day 1. The finance team has live, clean data and no longer needs to spend days chasing adjustments.
  • Quotes that used to take 4–5 days now go out in 24 hours. Our sales teams can act quickly, and our customers notice the difference.
  • Warehouse operations are dramatically faster. Bin locations mean our teams pick, pack, and move without wasting time.
  • OTIF is now over 95%. That’s a major boost to customer satisfaction.
  • We’re nearly fully paperless. This isn’t just about efficiency, it’s a big win for sustainability too.

And the biggest shift? We now run the business based on facts, not assumptions. Decisions are made with real-time data at our fingertips, giving us the confidence to act quickly and accurately. Whether it’s approving a purchase order, reviewing a sales pipeline, or assessing performance, we know we’re working from a single, trusted source of truth. I travel often, but even from a plane I can review quotes, approve POs, and stay in control. That visibility changes everything.

Lessons from the Journey

Looking back, here’s what I’d tell anyone starting a similar transformation:

  1. Avoid customisation wherever possible. Sticking to SAP’s standard features keeps the system simpler, cheaper to run, and easier to upgrade. The more you customise, the more you introduce long-term complexity and cost.
  2. Get your data right. Clean, consistent data is the foundation for everything.
  3. Choose a partner who tells you the truth. You want people who know your business and aren’t afraid to challenge you.
  4. Empower your team. The system only works if your people believe in it and take ownership.
  5. Treat it as a journey. We’re still improving, still digitising, and still finding ways to get better.

Where We’re Headed

We’ve laid a solid foundation, but we’re not finished. Next, we’re building out reporting dashboards, expanding forecasting capabilities, and digitising the last of our manual workflows.

With Coriza as our long-term partner, I’m confident we’ll get there.

SAP and Coriza haven’t just modernised our systems, they’ve helped us become faster, more resilient, and more in control. We’re leading the market in PNG, and we’re only just getting started.