Series 3 - Architecture Is Tax: Designing the Compliant Enterprise
It is one of the most consequential architectural questions in global enterprise tax today — and it rarely gets the direct, substantive treatment it deserves. Should compliance architecture be centralised — built on a unified global platform, operating on a single data model, with all jurisdictions served from a common orchestration layer? Or should it be localised — built from the best available solution in each market, optimised for local regulatory requirements, maintained by teams with specific in-country expertise? Both positions have serious arguments behind them. Both have serious failure modes. And the organisations that have made strong commitments in either direction have learned things that the debate rarely surfaces. In this episode, we structure the argument formally and follow it to its logical conclusions on each side. The case for centralisation: a unified data layer, consistent compliance logic, true group-level visibility, continuous reconciliation, and the ability to activate new jurisdictions as configuration rather than implementation. The case for localisation: the genuine complexity of local regulatory requirements, the risks of over-standardising in markets with unique compliance demands, and the organisational realities that make centralisation difficult even when the architectural case is clear. We then examine the conditions under which each approach is genuinely preferable — because the right answer is not universal. It depends on the organisation's ERP landscape, the maturity of its data architecture, the jurisdictional complexity of its compliance obligations, and the strategic ambition it has for using compliance data as a financial intelligence asset. What the debate ultimately reveals is that the question itself has evolved. The organisations asking "centralised or localised?" as a binary choice are operating on an outdated frame. The organizations asking "how do we build an architecture that achieves the intelligence benefits of centralization while accommodating the regulatory specificity that local complexity genuinely requires?" are closer to the right question. This is the most strategically important architectural conversation in global tax technology. This episode gives it the treatment it deserves. Keywords: centralised vs localised compliance architecture, global tax compliance strategy, e-invoicing platform centralisation, CTC compliance design, multi-country tax technology, SAP global compliance architecture, hybrid compliance model, ERP tax architecture debate, real-time compliance global enterprise, tax data orchestration central platform, Peppol network compliance, VAT compliance global platform, compliance intelligence centralised, multi-ERP tax architecture, SAF-T centralised reporting, enterprise compliance scalability About the Host Rıdvan Yiğit is the Founder & CEO of RTC Suite — the world's first Autonomous Compliance and Payment Intelligence platform, built natively on SAP BTP and operating across 80+ countries. Connect with Rıdvan: 🔗 linkedin.com/in/yigitridvan✉ ridvan.yigit@rtcsuite.com 📞 +90 545 319 93 44 Learn more about RTC Suite: 🌐 rtcsuite.com
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