LivePlan vs Square
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
LivePlan rebuilds the plan editor and lets you feed it your own files for AI context.
Two structural moves anchor the period. In late January, LivePlan launched a fully reimagined plan editor — modern templates, custom themes, real-time collaboration with comments, flexible images/charts/tables, and contextual AI writing — and shipped a beta that lets users import notes, spreadsheets, and research so the AI builds on actual business context. Earlier, the forecast editor was rebuilt with a sleeker layout and inline forecast-vs-actuals comparison, and forecast items can now be organized into groups for clearer revenue/cost rollups.
LivePlan is methodically replacing every legacy editor in the product — first forecasting, then the plan itself — and wiring AI more deeply into each. The reference-files beta is the more telling move: it pulls user context into the model rather than relying on generic templates, which is the only way AI authoring becomes useful for a real lender-facing plan. Together it's a clean shift from "template + spreadsheet" toward "AI co-author with your data."
Expect the reference-files beta to graduate and expand to more file types (PDFs, accounting exports), with deeper agentic suggestions that pull numbers and competitive notes directly into the plan. The forecast and plan editors converging — shared collaboration, shared AI writing — is the next natural step.
Square is rebuilding itself around restaurants — and using AI and Cash App as the wedge.
Square's recent shipping pattern centers on food-and-beverage operators: voice-AI taking phone orders, side-by-side vendor cost comparison, multi-channel menu sync, and tighter integrations with Grubhub, DoorDash, and Uber Eats. The pricing model has been collapsed into a single monthly rate per tier (Free / Plus / Pro), replacing a patchwork of feature-by-feature add-ons. Underneath, Cash App's 57M-account network is being repositioned as a marketing surface for Square sellers via Neighborhoods. The old horizontal-POS positioning is visibly giving way to vertical depth in restaurants.
Square is converging on a thesis that vertical software plus AI doing operational work beats horizontal POS plus general-purpose payments. Voice ordering and Square AI Beta both push the product toward replacing labor and decisions, not just transacting. The Cash App side is moving from payment rail to demand-generation channel. Tier-flat pricing makes upgrade motions cleaner as more vertical features ship into Plus and Pro.
Expect voice ordering and Square AI to graduate from beta into paid tiers within the next two release cycles, with retail and appointments getting their own vertical AI surfaces after F&B. The Cash App Neighborhoods integration will likely expand from passive discoverability into outbound, seller-controlled campaigns.
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