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Personal finance got simple. But business finance is still catching up
Think about how you manage money in your personal life. You open an app, see every transaction as it happens, move funds instantly, and get notified the moment something leaves your account. Not only does it take seconds, but it doesn’t require any training either. You don’t even think about it, which is precisely the point.
Now, think about how your company manages its spending. Most likely, it involves spreadsheets, monthly reconciliations, approval chains that move at the speed of email, and expense reports submitted weeks after the fact. The gap between the two experiences is significant. It’s also getting increasingly difficult to justify or tolerate.
The Expectation Problem
That’s mainly because the gap is one of expectation more than technology. The people running business finances today are the same people who bank via app, pay with a tap, and split dinner in seconds. They have been conditioned – in large part by consumer fintech – to expect speed, visibility, and control as a baseline. But then they walk into the office and encounter systems that feel a decade behind.
“The reality is simply that small businesses can no longer afford to wait weeks for credit decisions, physical card delivery, or receipt collecting,” saysEdouard Roca, Head of Business Development at Wallester.
“In today’s market, time literally is money. And if a company can’t provide its teams or customers with the same instant, digital-first payment experience they know from their personal lives, they lose stickiness and fall behind.”
According to the Capgemini World Payments Report 2026, roughly 40% of small and mid-sized merchants plan to switch from traditional banks to payment technology providers (PayTechs) within the next 12 months. Slow onboarding, poor visibility, manual processes, and legacy infrastructure – which can cause up to nine hours of downtime annually – are structural inefficiencies, not minor issues. The standard that consumers crossed years ago still hasn’t been met.
Why B2B Has Lagged
Business payments are inherently more complex – multiple users, approval layers, compliance requirements, spending across departments and geographies. Nobody expects corporate treasury to work like a consumer banking app. Yet complexity should not be an excuse for opacity.
A finance team should not have to wait until month-end to know where money went. An employee should not have to photograph a receipt and then hope someone will actually process it. At a strategic level, a CFO should not be making decisions based on three-week-old data.
“The primary friction point we see isn’t the payment itself but the aftermath of the payment,” Edouard Roca says. “In the traditional model, a transaction happens, and then a manual paper trail begins. Finance teams are flying blind for 30 days at a time. But by integrating physical and virtual cards that capture data at the moment of purchase, we move control to where it matters. You aren’t just spending money – you’re capturing data, categorising expenses, and triggering accounting workflows instantly. We’re helping businesses eliminate the recovery phase of bookkeeping entirely.”
The consumer world solved these problems not by eliminating complexity but by hiding it really well. The infrastructure behind an instant payment remains genuinely sophisticated. But the user never sees it. That same principle – sophisticated back end, simple front end – is what business finance needs to adopt.
What Good Looks Like
The shift is underway, though unevenly. The companies getting it right tend to share a few things: real-time visibility into every transaction, controls that work before money is spent rather than after, and the flexibility to adjust quickly when circumstances change.
“The companies leading this shift treat financial infrastructure as a competitive advantage, not a back-office necessity,” Roca explains. “Instead of a rigid corporate credit limit, they issue instant virtual cards with pre-defined rules for specific teams, vendors, or projects. That means launching a new department or scaling across borders no longer has to wait on the finance setup to catch up. You can do it in days.”
These capabilities have existed in consumer finance for years. The revolution, if there is one, is simply applying it to business and accepting that the old way of doing things is no longer good enough.
The Closing Gap
Tolerance for friction has never been lower. From banking to food delivery to how people shop, the expectation of speed, visibility, and simplicity has become the norm – not the exception. That expectation no longer stops at the door of the office.
Business finance does not need a philosophical overhaul. It needs the same thing consumer finance got a decade ago. That is to say, tools that are fast, clear, and built for people who have no patience for systems that weren’t designed with them in mind. Luckily, the gap is closing. But for companies still running on monthly reports and manual reconciliations, it’s not closing fast enough.