SAP S/4HANA Public Cloud Procurement Consultant
Rate: £675 a day
IR35 Status: Inside IR35
Location: Nottingham
Working Pattern: Hybrid: 2 days per week on site Nottingham minimum rest hybrid
You will join a global IT Consultancy delivering digital transformation to a public sector body.
Role Overview
We are seeking an experienced SAP S/4HANA Public Cloud Procurement Consultant to support a SAP S/4HANA Public Cloud implementation programme.
The role will focus on configuring procurement processes, supporting system integration testing, resolving defects, and ensuring that procurement functionality aligns with the approved solution design.
The consultant will work closely with solution architects, finance teams, integration specialists, and business stakeholders to ensure the Procure-to-Pay solution is built, tested, and ready for deployment.
Key Responsibilities
Procurement Solution Configuration. Configure and refine S/4HANA Public Cloud Procurement (Source-to-Pay) functionality.
Support Build & Realisation Activities. Support the build and configuration of procurement processes within S/4HANA Public Cloud.
Testing & Defect Resolution. Support the execution of: System Integration Testing (SIT) User Acceptance Testing (UAT)
Data & Master Data Validation. Support validation of procurement-related master data including: Supplier master data Purchasing organisations and groups Material master data
Stakeholder Collaboration. Work closely with procurement stakeholders and subject matter experts to validate system behaviour.
Documentation & Knowledge Transfer. Maintain configuration and process documentation.
Required Skills & Experience
. Hands-on experience configuring SAP S/4HANA Procurement (Source-to-Pay).
. Experience with SAP S/4HANA Public Cloud procurement configuration.
. Experience supporting SAP S/4HANA implementation programmes in the Realise phase.
. Strong understanding of Procure-to-Pay processes.
. Experience supporting System Integration Testing and User Acceptance Testing.
. Familiarity with SAP Activate methodology