A startup that uses technology to stop employees from abusing corporate expenses just raised 8 million euros ($8.6 million) of funding from investors, defying a slump in investment for the financial technology industry.
CleverCards, a Dublin-based firm, uses a digital platform linked to configurable expense cards to give companies control over how their employees use their corporate payment cards.
According to a 2016 global survey of CFOs by human resources firm Robert Half, employees have made several improper expense report requests including a doggie day spa, taxidermy services, dance classes, a side of beef and even a welder.
These requests, though odd, reflect a tough reality for many companies when it comes to corporate expenses: sometimes they can't trust an employees' judgment.
CleverCards CEO Kealan Lennon says his platform aims to tackle exactly that.
Rather than handing employees corporate credit cards they can go out and use for purchases anywhere in the world, CleverCards allows businesses to deliver prepaid cards that can be configured to only be used by certain members of staff and block certain transactions if they're viewed as inappropriate.
«Businesses want to make sure the right employee is the one that gets the card, and that it's only used for certain purposes,» Lennon told CNBC in an interview.
«It's finance control,» he added. «The idea of a configurable payments platform hadn't been done before. And by doing it digitally, that allowed customers come along and say, I want to be able to do this with the press of a button.»
CleverCards told CNBC exclusively Friday that it raised new funds in an investment round led by strategic investor Pluxee. The fresh investment takes the total money raised by
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