How fast can Autonomous Commerce execute an order?
Execution speed
Autonomous Commerce executes a standard order in under 60 seconds from receipt to ERP posting. Median time across customers is 57 seconds. Danfoss processes orders in under 1 minute across 26 countries. Manual order entry takes 8 to 15 minutes per line, so AI execution is 10 to 20 times faster on standard transactions.
How fast is order execution in depth
Key terms
- Latency
- Wall-clock time from inbound input to posted order.
- End-to-end
- Spanning capture, validation, pricing, and ERP write-back.
- Channel adapter
- The component that ingests each input type.
- ERP write-back
- Native commit to the system of record.
- Acknowledgment
- System-generated confirmation sent back to the customer.
Proof points
- Orders processed end-to-end in under 60 seconds (Go Autonomous benchmark).
- 18 percent quote-to-order win rate uplift after deployment.
- Danfoss processes orders in under 1 minute across 26 countries.
- 99 percent first-time-right rate on autonomous orders.
Frequently asked questions
How long does deployment take?
First production flow ships in 6 to 12 weeks. Coverage scales to 80 percent autonomy within 6 to 9 months on disciplined deployments. New countries and channels add in days, not months.
How is the program measured day to day?
Three numbers carry the program: autonomy rate (share executed without human touch), first-time-right rate (share correct on the first pass), and cost per order. Cycle time and exception volume sit underneath.
Who owns it inside the organization?
Operations and IT co-own. The business case sits with the CFO, the architecture with the CIO, and the day-to-day outcomes with customer service and sales. The AI engineering is vendor responsibility, not a customer build.
How fast is order execution in action.
Book a 30-minute demo and see how Autonomous Commerce executes B2B transactions in your stack.
How fast is order execution in action.
Book a 30-minute demo and see how Autonomous Commerce executes B2B transactions in your stack.
