Spendflo vs Sequence
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Spendflo refocuses into an AI-agent-driven procurement platform, shedding its SaaS-management past.
Spendflo just shipped a ground-up redesign: a single left-nav, node-based visual workflow views for each request, high-density tables, consolidated settings, and a renamed vocabulary (Vendors become Suppliers, Agreements become Contracts) — all organized around an 'AI Agents' layer for Document QA, Contract Review and Vendor Due Diligence. Just before it, the company deprecated its usage-based and app-centric features, removing the Apps page, Shadow IT and SaaS-spend reports. Underneath sits steady integration work with Coupa, NetSuite and LinkSquares.
Spendflo is narrowing into a workflow-first, AI-assisted procurement platform and deliberately exiting the SaaS-management and shadow-IT discovery space it once occupied. The redesign and the deprecation are two sides of the same decision: concentrate the product on orchestrating the procurement lifecycle — intake, approval, vendor evaluation — and let autonomous agents do more of the work inside it. Integration depth with ERP and CLM systems keeps it embedded in finance operations.
Expect deeper AI Agent automation across the procurement lifecycle and continued ERP and CLM integration (Coupa, NetSuite, LinkSquares), with the agent layer becoming the product's central pitch.
Sequence opens its billing data to AI agents while deepening payments and automation
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.
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.
Expect Sequence to extend MCP from read-style querying toward agent-driven actions, and to keep adding automation templates and payment/tax integrations.
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