Connect with us

Accounting

New Stampli procure-to-pay touts “conversation-first” approach

Published

on

AP-focused financial automation platform Stampli released an AI-driven procure-to-pay solution that works through dynamic conversations with the system itself. 

Stampli Procure-to-Pay, which uses the company’s AI assistant Billy the Bot, has the ability to turn plain conversational text into structured purchase orders and financial documents, replacing rote data entry. Stampli observed that procurement often involves dynamic conversations between multiple stakeholders, such as finance teams, employees and vendors. These conversations, though, tend to take place on separate channels, emails and chat tools versus the procurement platform itself, which breaks the audit trail. 

The conversation-first approach, on the other hand, allows the software to capture and contextualize all procurement discussions within each transaction’s workflow. It can support an existing intake process, approval workflow or business requirement. The system uses AI-powered approval flows guided by historical patterns. It automatically suggests preferred items and vendors based on an analysis of purchasing patterns. The program generates formatted purchase orders directly within customers’ ERP systems. 

“Only Stampli unifies all procurement processes, documents and discussion into a single intelligent workflow,” said Stampli CEO and co-founder Eyal Feldman. “Everything happens within Stampli: every step, every approval, every budget review, and every conversation, in perfect harmony with your ERP.”

For example, according to the CEO in a later email, a user could describe their office supply needs in plain language. Billy the Bot analyzes the text and extracts the item names, quantity and context, then maps them to stock-keeping units, descriptions and costs. This process requires no special training and is designed to encourage employees to use the system and not try to bypass or ignore it, which creates challenges in terms of compliance as well as workflow efficiency. 

Stampli said its new solution can be implemented within weeks. Once deployed, it will adapt to existing processes, reducing the amount of necessary change management. 

The announcement comes a few months after the release of another AI-powered solution, Stampli Cognitive AI, which the company said features “human-level” purchase order matching. Using large language models combined with nearly a decade’s worth of data on invoice-processing workflows, the model is said to understand the nuanced context of financial operations and replicate human decision-making processes.

Continue Reading

Accounting

Accountants on IRS and PwC layoffs, accounting students and more

Published

on

Complimentary Access Pill

Enjoy complimentary access to top ideas and insights — selected by our editors.

This week’s stats focus in part on the job titles seeing the greatest losses at the IRS during layoffs; as well as the states that have proposed or passed alternatives to the 150-hour rule; the percentage of master’s in accounting program applicants since 2020; the number of PwC employees laid off in May; the projected size of Deloitte’s new New York City headquarters; and the amount of 2026 HSA annual contribution limits, depending on coverage.

Continue Reading

Accounting

CrowdStrike says DOJ, SEC sent inquiries on firm accounting

Published

on

CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. said U.S. officials have asked for information related to the accounting of deals it’s made with some customers and said the cybersecurity firm is cooperating with the inquiry.

The Austin, Texas-based company said in a filing Wednesday that it has gotten “requests for information” from the U.S. Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission “relating to the company’s recognition of revenue and reporting of ARR for transactions with certain customers.” ARR refers to annual recurring revenue, a measure of earnings from subscriptions.

The company said the federal officials have also sought information related to a CrowdStrike update last year that crashed Windows operating systems around the world.

“The company is cooperating and providing information in response to these requests,” the filing states.

U.S. prosecutors and regulators have been investigating a $32 million deal between CrowdStrike and a technology distributor, Carahsoft Technology Corp., to provide cybersecurity tools to the Internal Revenue Service, Bloomberg News first reported in February. The IRS never purchased or received the products, Bloomberg News earlier reported.

The investigators are probing what senior CrowdStrike executives may have known about the $32 million deal and are examining other transactions made by the cybersecurity firm, Bloomberg News reported in May.

Asked for comment about the filing, CrowdStrike spokesperson Brian Merrill said, “As we have told Bloomberg repeatedly, this is old news and we stand by the accounting of the transaction.” 

A lawyer for Carahsoft previously declined to comment on the federal investigations, and representatives didn’t respond to subsequent requests for comment about them.

Continue Reading

Accounting

Elon Musk urges Americans take action to ‘kill’ Trump tax cut bill

Published

on

Tech titan Elon Musk ratcheted up his offensive against Donald Trump’s signature tax bill on Wednesday, urging that Americans contact their lawmakers to “KILL” the legislation.

“Call your Senator, Call your Congressman,” Musk wrote in a social media post. “Bankrupting America is NOT ok!”

The post came one day after Musk lashed out at the tax bill, describing it as a budget-busting “disgusting abomination” as Republican fiscal hawks stepped up criticism of the massive fiscal package. 

Trump hasn’t publicly responded to Musk’s comments, but the White House put out a statement Wednesday saying the legislation “unleashes an era of unprecedented economic growth.” 

And House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters that Musk is “dead wrong” about the bill and that the tax cuts will pay for themselves through economic growth.

Musk’s public condemnation pits him against the president at a critical time as Trump is personally lobbying holdouts on the bill. His campaign against the legislation threatens to stiffen resistance and delay enactment of the tax cuts and debt ceiling increase. 

Musk has attacked the legislation days after leaving a temporary assignment leading the administration’s Department of Government Efficiency initiative to cut federal spending. The Tesla Inc. chief executive officer’s high-profile role in the Trump administration eroded his business brand and sales of his company’s electric vehicles plunged. 

The House-passed version of the tax and spending bill would add $2.4 trillion to U.S. budget deficits over the next decade, according to an estimate released Wednesday from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

The CBO’s calculation reflects a $3.67 trillion decrease in expected revenues and a $1.25 trillion decline in spending over the decade through 2034, relative to baseline projections. The score doesn’t account for any potential boost to the economy from the bill, which Johnson and Trump argue would offset the revenue losses. 

Musk, the world’s richest man with a net worth of about $377 billion according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, has become a crucial financial backer of the Republican party. After making modest donations most years, Musk became the biggest U.S. political donor in 2024, giving more than $290 million.

Johnson said Musk had promised to help reelect Republicans just a day before savaging Trump’s bill. Musk did not respond to a request for comment. 

Most of Musk’s giving was aimed at electing Trump but he also supported congressional candidates. America PAC, the super political action committee that Musk largely funded, spent $18.5 million in 17 separate House races. Though that total pales in comparison to the roughly $255 million he spent backing Trump, the spending means a lot in a congressional election, where challengers on average raise less than $1 million.

Control of the House will likely be decided by the outcome of fewer than two dozen close races in the 2026 midterm elections. The GOP’s chances of holding their majority would suffer a major blow if Musk were to withdraw his financial support.

Continue Reading

Trending