Nissan’s partnership with predictive procurement specialist Arkestro marks a significant move towards digitalising supply chain operations in the automotive sector, aiming to improve visibility, reduce costs, and accelerate sourcing processes across North America.
Nissan is moving to digitise procurement across its North American operations through a partnership with predictive procurement specialist Arkestro, marking a notable example of the automotive sector’s...
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wider embrace of AI-driven supply‑chain tools.
According to Arkestro, the platform has been deployed to support Nissan Americas’ sourcing teams in the United States, Canada and Mexico, with the stated goals of improving visibility into spend, accelerating sourcing cycles and making procurement outcomes less reactive. The vendor says its technology combines machine learning with behavioural economics and game‑theoretic modelling to convert traditional event‑driven buying into a more predictive, data‑led process intended to reduce cost volatility and supply risk.
Automakers have faced repeated supply disruptions and cost shocks in recent years, prompting many to seek tools that can surface risks earlier and secure more competitive supplier responses. Arkestro contends its orchestration layer helps buyers run sourcing events faster without sacrificing competitiveness, by modelling supplier behaviour and recommending optimal bidding strategies. Nissan’s engagement is presented as part of that industrywide shift towards automating routine decisions and freeing teams to focus on higher‑value work.
The collaboration comes as Arkestro expands its footprint across other sectors. The company announced an expanded relationship with Chevron to roll its platform across the oil major’s global procurement footprint, and said it has integrated with Infor’s ERP marketplace to streamline data flows between sourcing and enterprise resource planning systems. Arkestro also disclosed a $36 million strategic investment led by Altira Group and Aramco Ventures intended to accelerate product development and commercial roll‑out.
While suppliers and procurement teams often welcome faster cycle times and clearer analytics, independent observers caution that effective transformation requires clean, integrated data and change management to ensure models reflect real‑world constraints. Arkestro’s releases emphasise the platform’s ability to work with existing ERP systems and to surface actionable insights for buyers; Nissan’s decision to adopt the service across North America suggests the manufacturer believes those prerequisites can be met at scale.
As vehicle makers pursue resilience and cost control, the use of AI and predictive techniques in sourcing is likely to expand beyond one‑off projects into standard operating practice. Nissan’s move illustrates how procurement is becoming a frontline for digital innovation in manufacturing, even as companies balance automation with the need to sustain supplier relationships and practical oversight of algorithmic recommendations.
Source: Noah Wire Services