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Comparison · Finance

Fathom vs Sequence

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

F
Fathom
FINANCE
2.5

Fathom keeps deepening consolidations and forecasting, but half its feed is scraped marketing pages.

◆ Current state

Fathom is a financial analysis, management-reporting, and cash-flow forecasting tool (part of The Access Group) aimed at accountants and advisors, with consolidated reporting as its center of gravity. The genuine changelog entries show steady, focused work: division-level consolidated financials and a batch of forecasting usability gains. Much of the feed, however, is crawl noise, customer-story pages and scraped 'what's new' listing pages ingested as if they were releases.

◆ Where it's heading

Real product effort concentrates in two areas: deeper consolidated reporting, now able to analyze performance across divisions within a group, and forecasting usability, with bulk driver actions, a higher microforecast limit, and a more interactive cash-flow grid. The direction is incremental depth in the reporting and forecasting core rather than any new capability surface.

◆ Prediction

Expect continued incremental deepening of consolidation and forecasting, more grouping options and forecasting controls, rather than a directional move. Separately, the crawl source needs attention: customer stories and listing pages are polluting the changelog.

S
Sequence
FINANCE
6.3

Sequence opens its billing data to AI agents while deepening payments and automation

◆ Current state

Sequence is a billing and revenue-automation platform whose recent releases cluster around three areas: payment-rail integrations (GoCardless direct debit, Sphere tax), workflow automation (visual Automations with Watchtower review, Dunning reminder sequences), and finance-team reporting (revenue waterfall export, credit-note detail). Its newest move exposes all of this billing data to AI agents over MCP.

◆ Where it's heading

The product is becoming programmable and agent-accessible. Automations and Dunning turn billing operations into configurable, reviewable workflows; the payment integrations broaden how money moves; and Sequence MCP lets external AI agents query invoices, schedules, customers, pricing, and revenue in natural language. The direction is billing as an API-and-agent surface, not just a UI.

◆ Prediction

Expect Sequence to extend MCP from read-style querying toward agent-driven actions, and to keep adding automation templates and payment/tax integrations.

See more alternatives to Fathom
See more alternatives to Sequence