A lot of enterprise software vendors have spent the last two years announcing AI features. Most of what they’re describing is AI-assisted—a recommendation here, a summarization there, a chatbot layered on top of a legacy interface. Coupa’s announcements at Inspire 2026 in Las Vegas are a different kind of move, and it’s worth understanding what they’re actually claiming and why it matters.
The company unveiled Coupa Compose, an environment for building and orchestrating AI agents across procurement, finance, and supply chain. It also introduced Catalyst, a services offering designed to help customers actually deploy those agents. And it announced the acquisition of Rossum, an intelligent document processing company it has been partnered with since 2024. The three announcements are connected, and understanding how they fit together tells you more than any one of them does on its own.
What Coupa Compose Is
Coupa Compose is built around the idea that AI agents—rather than humans—should be doing most of the routine work in enterprise spend management. The core component is Navi Agent Studio, a no-code interface that lets organizations build and configure custom agents using natural language, monitor their activity, and manage access by role. Generally available in May, it’s designed for business users, not developers.
The platform also includes Smart Intake and Orchestration, which serves as a single entry point for requests and routes them to the appropriate agents. And Navi Connect is intended to link Coupa’s agents with third-party systems and enable agent-to-agent communication—though that piece isn’t expected until September 2026.
Coupa CEO Leagh Turner argued that the platform’s foundation sets it apart. “While others are bolting AI onto aging systems, we have one platform that scales—with governance—for your data, your workflows, and your agents,” she said. “This architecture, built on a foundation of $10T in spend data, is why we can say we are AI-native.”
Coupa says it has deployed more than 20 specialized agents across its platform, with May’s release adding agents for sourcing event creation, bid comparison, risk monitoring, and sanctions screening, among others. The company claims these agents can reduce setup time by 40 percent and surface significant efficiency gains—figures it attributes to its agent capabilities.
The Rossum Acquisition
The acquisition of Rossum may be the most consequential piece of the Inspire announcements, even if it’s overshadowed by the platform launch.
Rossum is an AI-first intelligent document processing company. Its technology is built around a transactional large language model—a domain-specific model trained on tens of millions of documents that learns continuously from each customer’s document set. Coupa had already embedded Rossum’s capabilities in its accounts payable workflows under the partnership. The acquisition extends that reach across the full source-to-pay process.
The logic here is practical. AI agents need data to work with, and in procurement and finance, a lot of that data is locked inside documents—invoices, purchase orders, contracts, shipping records. Without reliable document processing, agents are making decisions on incomplete information. Rossum is Coupa’s answer to that problem.
Turner made a notable claim about what the combination could mean for customers. “We’ve been able to deliver over $300 billion in customer savings over the past 20 years,” she said. “With Rossum, we believe we can help them save the next $300 billion in five.”
Rossum CEO Tomáš Gogár described the deal as a natural extension of the existing partnership. “By combining our proprietary T-LLM transactional intelligence with Coupa’s massive $10T data set, we are well positioned to create immediate customer value and fundamentally change how the world buys and sells,” Gogár said.
Catalyst and the Deployment Gap
Anyone who has watched enterprise AI rollouts knows the pattern: a company buys a capable platform and then spends months—sometimes years—failing to get real value from it. Coupa is trying to address that directly with Catalyst.
Catalyst is an AI transformation services offering built around forward-deployed engineers and business solution architects who work alongside customer teams during implementation. The idea is to close the gap between what the platform can do and what customers are actually able to use on day one.
Chief Product and Technology Officer Salvatore Lombardo framed it plainly: “To win in the agentic era, your ability to absorb change must match the speed of the technology.” The services layer is an acknowledgment that technology alone isn’t enough—especially when organizations are being asked to hand over significant workflow decisions to autonomous agents.
What to Make of All This
Coupa is making a coherent argument: that a unified platform with proprietary spend data, document intelligence, and a managed services layer can deliver autonomous spend management in a way that point solutions cannot. Whether that holds up in practice remains to be seen.
The agentic AI space is also competitive. Coupa isn’t the only platform pursuing this architecture, and the differentiation story it’s telling—centered on the scale of its community data and the Rossum acquisition—is one that competitors will respond to. The Inspire announcements position Coupa well for where the market is heading.