Time to clear those calendars. We’re running three virtual masterclasses this month and they’re all unmissable. 📆 Feb 19 | 11:30AM ET Nicolas Boucher is showing you how to build 5 AI agents that automate recurring finance work like commentary, variance analysis, contract review, and data cleaning. 📆 Feb 19 | 2:00PM ET Josh Aharonoff, CPA is sharing his 8 essential Excel formulas to help you build efficient financial models to manage and manipulate data. 📆 Feb 23 | 1:00PM ET Carl Seidman, CSP, CPA is going hands-on with Microsoft Copilot to show how GenAI fits into real FP&A workflows. Think building formulas, generating assumptions, and prepping management commentary. Register here: https://lnkd.in/dnTsKmUs
Ramp
Financial Services
New York, New York 272,431 followers
The all-in-one financial operations platform designed to save businesses time and money. Trusted by 50,000+ teams.
About us
Ramp is an all-in-one financial operations platform designed to save businesses time and money. Combining corporate cards, expense management, bill payments, accounting automation, procurement, travel, treasury, and more, Ramp empowers finance teams to do their best work. More than 45,000 companies, from family-owned farms to space startups, have saved $10B and 27.5M hours with Ramp since its founding in 2019. Investors include Founders Fund, Thrive Capital, Khosla Ventures, Sequoia, Greylock, Stripe, Goldman Sachs, Coatue, and Redpoint, as well as over 100 angel investors who were founders or executives of leading companies. The Ramp team comprises talented leaders from leading financial services and fintech companies—Stripe, Affirm, Goldman Sachs, American Express, Mastercard, Visa, Capital One—as well as technology companies such as Meta, Uber, Netflix, Twitter, Dropbox, and Instacart. Ramp has been named to Fast Company's Most Innovative Companies list and LinkedIn's Top U.S. Startups for over 3 years, as well as the Forbes Cloud 100, CNBC Disruptor 50, and TIME Magazine's 100 Most Influential Companies. Visit our website for a full list of US state licenses & disclosures: https://ramp.com/legal/state-disclosures
- Website
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ramp.com
External link for Ramp
- Industry
- Financial Services
- Company size
- 1,001-5,000 employees
- Headquarters
- New York, New York
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 2019
- Specialties
- Corporate Cards, Business Cards, Spend Management, Finance Automation, Expense Management, Reimbursement Management, Bill Pay, and Accounts Payable
Locations
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Primary
Get directions
New York, New York 10003, US
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Get directions
215 NW 24th St
Miami, Florida 33127, US
Employees at Ramp
Updates
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Ramp reposted this
“Ramp powers more than 2% of all corporate and small business card transactions in the United States, which is amazing for a product that you couldn't sign up for six years ago.” Eric Glyman is the cofounder and CEO of Ramp, the finance automation platform that scaled to over $1 billion in revenue in just seven years. He sits down with John and co-host Alastair (Alex) Rampell to discuss how Ramp uses AI agents to review 100,000 expenses a day with 99% accuracy, and why the future of fintech is "selling time, not money." They cover the "SaaS apocalypse" and why their internal data suggests the US economy is much stronger than the Census Bureau reports. YouTube: https://lnkd.in/ecHF9sK8 Spotify: https://lnkd.in/eJTpUeZq Apple Podcasts: https://lnkd.in/e7x_pnQM Full transcript on Substack: https://lnkd.in/eBKs87se
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Ramp reposted this
Ramp's profit is growing 153% year over year. At $1 billion in revenue. The median public SaaS company grows at 16%. The top 10 grow at 30%. Most companies get big and get slow. Ramp got big and got faster. In a letter to customers, CEO Eric Glyman broke down what their AI agents did in a single month. 26 million decisions across $10B in spend. Two examples that stuck with me: 1. Their travel agent saved an employee named Zain exactly $113.34 on his trip to New York. 2. Their policy agent blocked $291M in out-of-policy transactions. From $113 to $291 million. Same attention to detail. The AI cares about $113 because the org is built to care about $113. That's the whole secret. Conway's Law: your product mirrors the organization that built it. Before Ramp even existed, the Capital One CEO mentioned his grandson's hockey gloves arrived late from Amazon. Within a week, Eric had built a feature securing automatic refunds for late shipments. Ramp built a 1,200-person org that sweats the small stuff at scale. That's why the AI works at this level of granularity. Glyman calls their customers "heavyweights that move like lightweights." What your company cares about at 10 people is what your product will care about at 1,000.
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Ramp reposted this
Excited to be speaking at Ramp's Women Who Lead panel on March 6. We’re having a real conversation about what leadership actually looks like — building teams, making hard calls, scaling through ambiguity, and navigating growth without losing clarity. If you’re in finance, tech, or building something ambitious, this will be a good one. Register here: https://lnkd.in/gHFNsdJH
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Close the books. Complete the mission. Put your new Accounting Agent to work today: https://lnkd.in/ejw8WAXs
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What does it mean to have good taste in software? Can it be taught? Can it be bought? Is software just a means to an end? What does "taste" even mean anymore? Get to the bottom of it all at Ramp’s Engineering Roundtables: https://luma.com/w2t1nwzk
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Ramp reposted this
There are two non-negotiables in accounting: the books must be correct, and they must be ready on time. For decades, companies have satisfied those constraints through an extraordinary amount of manual effort. Highly trained professionals code transactions, re-approve familiar expenses, reconcile mismatches after the fact, and compress all of it into the ritual of month-end close. It works. But it is fundamentally retrospective. Today, Ramp introduced an Accounting Agent designed around a different premise: what if bookkeeping happened as the business operated, rather than after it? The agent captures, codes, reviews, validates, accrues, and reconciles spend continuously. It learns directly from the people who understand the nuances best, the accounting team itself, and applies that context in real time. At Perplexity, where velocity is core to the company’s identity, this allowed their team to stop choosing between speed and accuracy. The majority of transactions are now coded automatically and audit-ready, enabling close to start on day one instead of day thirty. What’s been most striking is how the system learns the subtle, company-specific logic that historically lived only in human judgment. As Jim Romano, CFO at Stateside Brands, described it, the agent is already identifying patterns like when spend belongs in samples rather than travel and entertainment — the kinds of decisions that typically require institutional memory. As he put it, the goal is simple: finance teams should focus on exceptions, not the easy stuff. We’re also seeing the second-order effects emerge quickly. Teams report spending dramatically less time reviewing transactions and substantially more time on planning, analysis, and growth. As one CFO told us, “What used to take hours of manual review now happens. I’m spending nearly all of my time thinking about where the business should go, not retracing where it’s already been.” There is a broader shift underway in accounting. The central question is moving from “what parts of close can be automated?” to “should close even be an event at all?” One belief that guides our work at Ramp is that information latency inside companies is an invisible tax. When financial truth lags behind operational reality, organizations make slower and often worse decisions. As transaction data becomes inherently digital and systems become capable of learning institutional context, continuous close stops being aspirational and starts becoming inevitable. One thing that surprised us while building this: accounting isn’t constrained by a lack of rules — it’s constrained by how many of those rules are unwritten. Seeing software begin to absorb and apply that tacit knowledge has been a clear signal that accounting is entering a new phase. Accounting has always been the record for business reality. Our goal is to help it become closer to real-time truth. Proud of the team, and grateful to the customers building this alongside us.
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First we multiplied America’s favorite accountant. Now we’re multiplying every accountant in America. Accountant Agent is here: https://lnkd.in/ejw8WAXs