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8 best practices for developing a team to support your growing firm

8 best practices for developing a team to support your growing firm

Michael Davis
Contributing writer, BILL
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What do the leaders of modern accounting firms have in common? They’re focused on growth! And as you well know, growth doesn’t happen overnight and it certainly doesn’t happen without proper change management.

So what changes are required for growth?  Depending on the firm, the changes required can include anything from adopting new cloud-based technologies and supercharging your marketing program to enhancing the client onboarding process and upping your website and mobile game.

But not so fast. While any one of these actions may be necessary to support healthy business growth, if you don’t have a top-performing team in place, it can quickly derail you. Staff represent your biggest asset. They serve as both the front line with clients as well as keepers of your systems and processes. So, when you hire the best talent, it helps bolster operational efficiency, supports scalability, and frees partners to get out of the day-to-day and focus on higher-level strategy.

“Proper staff development is critical to support firm growth because it’s the strength of your staff that will make or break you.” - Jeff Phillips

How do you build a staff for the modern era? That was the focus of our webinar, How To Develop Your Team in a Growing Firm with Jeff Phillips, CEO of Padgett Business Services and Co-Founder of Accountingfly. Jeff shared insights how your team can be your greatest asset as you build your company. Read on for insights, tips, and best practices we pulled from his webinar, designed to help you build a team that supports your growing firm.

Modern accounting firm required

Finding qualified staff continues to be a major pain point in the accounting profession. Good people are scarce and everyone is fighting for them. So, how do you attract the best employees to your firm? You start by offering a modern experience.

To attract next-generation candidates and retain your best people, running a modern business is key. Consider a few core elements of a modern accounting firm:

  • No manual data entry: Modern firms run within an automated, streamlined cloud-based technology ecosystem. To attract qualified, progressive staff, you have to ditch old-school manual processes.
  • Real-time, proactive advisory relationships: Cloud-based technologies offer real-time views of client data, which enables proactive advisory relationships.
  • Better value and margins: The ability to offer higher-value advisory services (when you operate within an advanced technology ecosystem) leads to better service value and higher margins.
  • An environment of trust: Give your staff room to do their jobs…no micromanagement required.
  • A healthy, progressive culture: Developing a strong work culture helps keep your best people around longer as well as attracts top candidates. Your culture should exude positivity, trust, flexibility, and a modern feel.
“A modern accounting firm is a prerequisite for attracting and retaining a strong team.” - Jeff Phillips

The modern talent stack

Modern accounting firms also have a well-planned and well-structured team. The traditional firm hierarchy can no longer support rapid growth—one where partners maintain a strong presence in daily operations and are entrenched in technical work. Firm leaders must be far more intentional these days about how they build a staff to maximize impact.

Overall, you’ll want to structure your firm so it’s poised for growth. And that means figuring out the right seats and then putting the right staff in those seats. When this happens, it lifts leaders out of the day-to-day to focus on…well, leading.

A modern talent stack includes three key elements: 1) visionary/integrator (CEO/COO), 2) a production team, and 3) a support team. And it looks a little something like this:

This type of structure allows partners/leaders to keep their focus on strategy and vision fulfillment—while their team runs the day-to-day.

It’s also important to note that today’s workforce looks drastically different. New-age workers are predominantly millennials, span multiple industries, and have expectations that are modern-focused. Consider that today’s pool of candidates:

  • May not be accountants
  • May not work in your market
  • May not want full-time work or are looking for seasonal-only
  • May be projects-based
  • Require a flexible work environment and will expect the ability to work remotely
  • May not be long-term (and that’s okay)
  • Are technologically savvy

It’s critical to understand who makes up the candidate pool if you are going to successfully attract them to your firm.

8 best practices to develop your team

Now that you understand the necessity of running a modern accounting firm and building a modern talent stack, it’s time to dig into the details.

The following 8 best practices serve as a guided roadmap as you build your dream team.

Best practice 1: Craft and repeat a clear vision

Everything starts with your vision. So important is the firm’s vision that you need to take the time to write it down and consistently live it within your firm (lead by example). Your vision informs your staff on where your firm is going, why it exists, who it serves, and what it will do in the future.

Be sure to over communicate your vision, train staff to help fulfill it, and build a culture that supports it. Communication of your vision is key to retaining high-performing staff.

Best practice 2: Improve how work and communications get done

Take the time to implement change that improves workflow and communication processes. The goal here is to enhance efficiency by reducing busy work like checking emails, participating in multiple meetings, and adhering to numerous check-ins.

Consider a few workflow hacks:

  • Encourage staff to record questions during the day and ask them in batch to reduce workflow interruptions.
  • Meet only when needed (e.g., to answer batch questions) or when leadership is required on projects.
  • Put email rules in place. For example, enforce a 24-hour response-time rule for internal emails. This will limit the number of times staff check and respond to emails during the day.

Improving basic processes will get staff out of busy work and into higher-value tasks that improve the bottom line.

Best practice 3: Hire better talent

Move upmarket in your talent and hire staff that can run your firm—even when you are not there. This pulls leaders out of the technical work and allows them to focus on vision fulfillment.

To attract the best talent, be open to hiring remote staff, part timers, and those outside of the accounting profession. Also be sure to position your firm to stand out from the crowd, which means being able to recite your vision and sell the value of working in your modern accounting firm.

Best practice 4: Implement a structured onboarding process

Most firms spend a lot of time to ensure a rich client onboarding experience. The same attention must be given to your employee onboarding process. Remember, onboarding represents an employee’s first major interaction with your firm, so make it a frictionless and positive one.

Here are a few ideas to ensure a structured and stellar onboarding experience:

  • If you have more than one new hire coming onboard, bring them in as a cohort. This offers an immediate connection to fellow colleagues and promotes a feeling of inclusion.
  • Have new staff complete paperwork online prior to their first day.
  • Put new staff on a training track right out of the gate. Get them learning and keep them interested.
  • Offer a new hire gift box from the firm or a hand-written welcome note from firm leaders (or both).
  • Pre-schedule introduction meetings between new staff and team leads (and other key team members). Promote a feeling of comfort by letting staff know who is who and who does what.
  • Ask new staff for feedback so you can continually enhance your onboarding process.

Best practice 5: Delegate to win

Work to improve your delegation skills every day. Why hire the best and smartest talent if you’re just going to constantly tell them what to do...or do it yourself? Creating a high-performing team requires that staff feel empowered to do their work and suggest/make process improvements. This is where a strong training program comes in. When staff members are properly informed, it empowers them to lead and you to let go. And when you let go, you win.

Best practice 6: Train repeatedly

Develop a training calendar and stick to it. When you train your staff throughout the year, you empower them to take command of their work and their role. Commit to developing in-house training on your technology stack, workflow, and even such areas as security and culture. To balance your time, you can also outsource some training to reputable sources.

“One of the main reasons top talent leave firms early is because they weren’t trained properly.” - Jeff Phillips

Best practice 7: Build in accountability

Accountability should be a primary component of your firm’s culture—because where there is great accountability, you will find a highly productive workforce. It’s important to note that accountability starts with leadership. It requires leaders to offer clarity around staff roles and the firm’s vision so that team members understand exactly what they are accountable for. It also requires having the right systems in place to help staff achieve accountability with projects, tasks, and duties (e.g., practice management software).

Best practice 8: Codify processes

The goal here is to build a system where your people can thrive. That means developing workflows that are streamlined and efficient—workflows that allow your business to scale. Then make sure your staffers are trained and thoroughly engaged on those workflows. Best practice is to record core processes, reinforce them consistently, and share them with your team on a regular basis. Also ask for feedback periodically to ensure continual improvement.

“You need a playbook on how things are done in your firm. Someone needs to be in charge of the playbook and work to consistently improve it.” - Jeff Phillips

Move into modern…

The tax and accounting profession has evolved immensely over the past several years. Remote workspaces are more prominent. Cloud-based technologies dominate firm tech stacks. And higher-value advisory services rule.

What hasn’t changed is the staffing shortage. Firms continue to feel the pain of this ongoing issue. Yet, to grow, you need staff. And to grow successfully, you need high-performing talent.

The best practices laid out in this article serve as a roadmap to help you build a strong team—a team that supports growth, scalability, and long-term success. Take the first step to building a high-performing, growth-bolstering team by applying one or all of the tips offered here.

Ready to grow your firm for the modern era? Watch Jeff's webinar ondemand today: How To Develop Your Team in a Growing Firm, and follow our Scaling Growth webinar series to hear from today’s industry thought leaders who have been there, done that, and are sharing what they've learned along the way.

Author
Michael Davis
Contributing writer, BILL
Michael specializes in helping businesses optimize financial operations by staying up-to-date with industry trends and translating insights into real-world applications. With expertise in AP, cash flow, and fintech, Michael breaks down complex topics to help businesses continue to grow.
Author
Michael Davis
Contributing writer, BILL
Michael specializes in helping businesses optimize financial operations by staying up-to-date with industry trends and translating insights into real-world applications. With expertise in AP, cash flow, and fintech, Michael breaks down complex topics to help businesses continue to grow.
Get more from BILL
Subscribe to finance insights and thought leadership content delivered straight to your inbox.
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Software Comparison

BILL Spend & Expense
Best for AI expense automation
4.5 on G2
  • Smart corporate cards with real-time tracking, flexible limits, and instant visibility into every transaction across your team [1]
  • Unlimited free virtual cards with unique numbers for each vendor or subscription—freeze, delete, or set custom limits instantly to prevent overcharges and reduce fraud risk [5]
  • AI-powered auto-categorization and receipt matching that connects card transactions and expenses into a single reconciliation workflow [1]
  • Customizable budgets with spend controls based on merchant, amount, receipt requirements, and configurable approval workflows [3]
  • Auto-freeze on cards with incomplete transactions, ensuring receipts and documentation are captured before additional spend is approved [1]
  • Up to 7x points on restaurants, 5x on hotels, 2x on recurring software, and 1.5x on all other purchases (rates shown are for weekly or daily billing cycle; rates vary by billing frequency) [2]
  • Two-way sync with QuickBooks, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero, and Microsoft Dynamics; additional integrations with Acumatica, Slack, and HRIS platforms [1]
  • Pro: $0/user/month with all features included—no paid tier to unlock [4]
  • Pro: Merchant controls and auto-freeze cards at no extra cost [1]
  • Pro: Credit lines that don't fluctuate daily based on bank balance [4]
  • Pro: All ERP integrations (NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero) included free [1]
  • Con: 12-month holding period before rewards can be redeemed [2]
  • Con: Category reward multipliers cap at $5,000/month per category [2]
  • Con: Less established in global, enterprise-scale expense programs with multi-country regulatory requirements

BILL Spend & Expense pairs corporate cards with AI-powered expense management and budget controls in a single platform at no cost—teams aren't paying per user or upgrading to unlock features that competitors gate behind paid tiers.

Merchant-level spend controls and auto-freeze on incomplete transactions give admins granular oversight without manual policing, and two-way ERP integrations are included free where Ramp and Brex charge for NetSuite and Sage Intacct access. The main trade-off is an initial 12-month rewards holding period before accumulated points can be redeemed. [1][2][3][4]

Commonly compared to: Ramp and Brex (for card-first expense management), and SAP Concur (for enterprise expense programs).

Pricing
$0/user/month with no annual fee
Integrations
Two-way sync with QuickBooks, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero, and Microsoft
Ideal company size
SMB to mid-market
SAP Concur
Best for large enterprises
4 on G2
  • AI-powered receipt capture via ExpenseIt on the SAP Concur mobile app, with smart matching that combines credit card charges and e-receipts into expense reports automatically [7]
  • Configurable approval workflows with built-in audit rules that flag policy exceptions, plus optional Intelligent Audit and Verify add-ons for automated compliance checks [6][7]
  • Modular product suite: Concur Expense, Concur Travel, and Concur Invoice are separate products that can be purchased individually or together, so organizations can start with expense management and add capabilities over time [6]
  • Bank card feed integrations that import corporate card transactions directly into expense reports for automatic reconciliation [6]
  • Joule, SAP's AI assistant, for expense report review, spend analysis, and cost estimation [6]
  • Budget tracking and monitoring tools that give finance teams visibility into spend against departmental or project-level budgets [6]
  • Support for global operations with multi-currency expense reporting and country-specific tax and regulatory compliance tools [6]
  • Pro: 300+ pre-built integrations including native SAP ERP sync [7][8]
  • Pro: Global coverage with multi-currency and regulatory compliance tools [6]
  • Pro: Modular—add travel or invoice management without switching platforms [6]
  • Pro: AI-powered receipt capture and smart matching via ExpenseIt [7]
  • Con: Quote-based pricing; no published rates on the website [6]
  • Con: No corporate card offering; relies on bank card feed integrations [6]
  • Con: Implementation can be complex for smaller organizations [6]
  • Con: Live support requires purchasing the User Support Desk service [6]

SAP Concur is the incumbent in expense management software, with the largest partner ecosystem and broadest global footprint on this list. Its modular approach gives large organizations flexibility to start with expense management and layer on travel or invoice capabilities independently.

The trade-off is complexity—pricing is opaque, there's no corporate card offering, and smaller teams may find the platform more than they need. Organizations already in the SAP ecosystem will get the most value from native S/4HANA integration. [6][7][8]

Commonly compared to: BILL (for SMB expense management), and Coupa (for enterprise spend management).

  • Best for: Mid-market and enterprise organizations that need a globally scalable expense management platform with configurable compliance tools and a large partner ecosystem. [6][7][8]
  • Highlights: AI-powered receipt capture via ExpenseIt, configurable approval workflows with built-in audit rules, optional Intelligent Audit and Verify add-ons for automated compliance checks, 300+ app integrations, and native SAP ERP sync. [6][7][8]
  • Ideal if you need: An expense platform that integrates natively with SAP S/4HANA or other enterprise ERPs, with the flexibility to add modules like Concur Travel or Concur Invoice over time. [6][7]
Pricing
Quote-based
Integrations
QuickBooks, Xero, Sage,TSheets, Gusto, & most business credit cards.
Ideal Company Size
Mid-market to enterprise
Ramp
Best for a broad spend platform
4.8 on G2
  • Corporate cards with customizable spend controls by merchant, category, employee, or department, plus unlimited virtual and physical cards [9][10]
  • AI-powered receipt matching, transaction coding, and memo suggestions that auto-populate as soon as a card is swiped [9]
  • Policy agent that reviews every expense against company policy, auto-approves compliant transactions, and escalates only exceptions with full audit trail [9]
  • Expense submission via SMS, Slack, or Microsoft Teams in addition to web and mobile app [9]
  • Reimbursements for out-of-pocket expenses paid to employees' bank accounts in 1–2 business days [9]
  • Real-time spend reporting with custom dashboards, natural-language queries, and proactive overspend alerts [9]
  • Broader spend platform that includes AP automation, procurement, vendor management, and treasury alongside expense management [9]
  • Pro: Free plan includes corporate cards, expenses, and bill pay [11]
  • Pro: AI policy agent reviews 100% of expenses automatically [9]
  • Pro: Submit expenses via SMS, Slack, or Teams—no app required [9]
  • Pro: Broader spend platform covers AP, procurement, and vendor management [9]
  • Con: Budget tracking requires Ramp Plus at $15/user/month [11]
  • Con: NetSuite, Sage Intacct, and Dynamics integrations require a paid plan [11]
  • Con: HRIS syncs and auto-lock cards require a paid plan [11]
  • Con: Credit limits fluctuate daily based on connected bank balance [12]

Ramp's strength is breadth—it's not just an expense tool but a full spend management platform that includes AP automation, procurement, and vendor management alongside expenses. The AI policy agent is a differentiator, reviewing every transaction against company rules rather than relying on manual manager approvals.

The trade-off is that several features mid-market teams rely on—budget tracking, ERP integrations beyond QuickBooks and Xero, and HRIS syncs—require upgrading to Ramp Plus at $15/user/month plus a platform fee. [9][11]

Commonly compared to: Brex and BILL (for corporate cards and expense management), and SAP Concur (for enterprise expense programs).

  • Best for: Fast-growing companies that want corporate cards, expense management, and accounts payable on a single platform with AI-powered automation. [9][10]
  • Highlights: Corporate cards with built-in spend controls, AI-powered receipt matching and expense coding, a policy agent that reviews 100% of expenses and flags only exceptions, and submission via SMS, Slack, or Microsoft Teams. [9][10]
  • Ideal if you need: A card-first platform where expense management is one part of a larger system that also covers AP, procurement, and vendor management. [9]
Pricing
$0/user/month
Integrations
QuickBooks, NetSuite, Xero, Sage Intacct, Slack, & 100+ accounting tools.
Ideal Company Size
Startups to mid-market
Brex
Best for global teams
4.8 on G2
  • Corporate cards with customizable spend limits by role, department, or category, plus auto-approve for in-policy expenses and auto-decline for out-of-policy spend [13][14]
  • AI-powered expense reviews that auto-approve compliant transactions and surface only exceptions for human review, with clear visibility into why a transaction is flagged [13]
  • Auto-generated receipts and memos with OCR that matches receipts in any language or currency, plus automatic GL coding by department, project, and entity [13]
  • Live Budgets that let department heads set top-level budgets, provision spend to individuals or teams, and track usage in real time with anomaly detection [13]
  • Global reimbursements in 70+ countries in employees' local currency, with subsidiaries able to issue reimbursements from local bank accounts [13]
  • Expense submission and approval via Slack and WhatsApp, with in-app commenting on individual transactions [13]
  • Broader financial platform that includes bill pay, business banking with up to 3.68% yield, and treasury alongside expense management [14]
  • Pro: Free plan includes corporate cards, expenses, bill pay, and travel [15]
  • Pro: AI expense reviews with 99% average policy compliance rate [14]
  • Pro: Global reimbursements in 70+ countries in local currency [13]
  • Pro: Live Budgets with real-time tracking and anomaly detection [13]
  • Con: Live Budgets require Premium at $12/user/month [15]
  • Con: HRIS syncs and customizable ERP integrations require a paid plan [15]
  • Con: Credit limits fluctuate daily based on connected bank balance [16]
  • Con: Multiple expense policies and dynamic review chains require Premium [15]

Brex positions itself as a full financial stack for startups—cards, expenses, banking, and treasury in one platform. The AI expense reviews and 99% average compliance rate (per Brex's internal metrics) are notable, and the global reimbursement coverage across 70+ countries is broader than most competitors on this list.

Like Ramp, Brex gates budget management and HRIS integrations behind a paid tier, and credit limits fluctuate daily based on your bank balance. Teams that need predictable spending power or are past the startup stage may find the pricing structure adds up. [13][14][15]

Commonly compared to: Ramp and BILL (for corporate cards and expense management), and SAP Concur (for enterprise expense programs).

  • Best for: Startups and high-growth companies that want a global financial platform covering corporate cards, expense management, bill pay, and business banking. [13][14]
  • Highlights: AI-powered expense reviews that auto-approve compliant transactions, corporate cards with built-in policy controls, Live Budgets for real-time tracking, global reimbursements in 70+ countries, and OCR receipt matching in any language or currency. [13][14]
  • Ideal if you need: A financial platform built for startups that includes expense management as part of a broader stack with banking, treasury, and AP. [13][14]
Pricing
$0/user/month
Integrations
NetSuite, QuickBooks, Workday,SAP Concur, Slack, & global banking portals.
Ideal Company Size
Startups to mid-market
Expensify
Best for simple reimbursements
4.5 on G2
  • SmartScan receipt capture by photo, email forwarding (receipts@expensify.com), or text message; auto-extracts transaction details and categorizes expenses [17]
  • Bring-your-own-card support: link existing corporate cards from 10,000+ banks globally for automatic reconciliation without switching card providers [17]
  • Expensify Visa Commercial Card with cash back on US purchases; cash back first offsets the Expensify subscription cost, then flows to the company's bank account [17]
  • Concierge AI for automated expense categorization, policy violation flagging, rule enforcement, and error reduction [17]
  • Global reimbursements for employees and independent contractors in their local currency [17]
  • Chat-based collaboration directly on individual expenses to resolve questions in real time rather than through email follow-ups [17]
  • 45+ integrations including QuickBooks, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero, Workday, and Gusto [17]
  • Pro: Bring-your-own-card from 10,000+ banks globally [17]
  • Pro: Expensify Card cash back can offset the subscription cost [17]
  • Pro: SmartScan receipt capture by photo, email, or text message [17]
  • Pro: 45+ integrations including major ERPs and payroll systems [17]
  • Con: No free plan; starts at $5/user/month [18]
  • Con: Pricing structure varies by card spend volume [18]
  • Con: Budget management, advanced approvals, and expense policies require Collect or Control plans [17]
  • Con: No department-level budget management on par with card-first platforms

Expensify's strength is accessibility—it has the lowest barrier to entry for teams that just need to start tracking expenses and submitting receipts. The bring-your-own-card support from 10,000+ banks means companies don't have to switch card providers, and the SmartScan receipt capture (by photo, email, or text) is one of the more flexible input methods on this list.

The trade-off is that several features mid-market teams expect—budget management, advanced approvals, and expense policies—require upgrading to the Collect or Control plans, and spend controls are primarily limited to the Expensify Card rather than extending across all connected cards. [17][18]

Commonly compared to: Zoho Expense (for budget-friendly expense management), and BILL and Ramp (for integrated cards and expenses).

  • Best for: Small and midsize businesses that want a mobile-first expense management tool with flexible card options, including the ability to link existing corporate cards from 10,000+ banks. [17]
  • Highlights: SmartScan receipt capture by photo, email, or text message; bring-your-own-card support from 10,000+ banks globally; Expensify Visa Commercial Card with cash back that offsets subscription costs; and Concierge AI for automated categorization and policy enforcement. [17]
  • Ideal if you need: A lower-cost entry point for expense management where employees can start submitting receipts immediately without switching corporate card providers. [17]
Pricing
From $5/user/month
Integrations
QuickBooks, Xero, Sage, TSheets, Gusto, & most business credit cards.
Ideal Company Size
Small to mid-market
Zoho Expense
Best for budget-conscious teams
4.5 on G2
  • Autoscan receipt capture with OCR that auto-categorizes and itemizes each expense, plus the ability to split or tag expenses across departments, projects, or cost centers [19][20]
  • Automated per diem calculations with pre-defined rules based on country, location, and trip details for regional compliance [20]
  • Corporate card management with real-time feeds that automatically match transactions to uploaded receipts for faster reconciliation [20]
  • Mileage tracking with four input methods across Android, iPhone, and Apple Watch [20]
  • Configurable approval workflows, expense policies, and audit rules with detailed audit trails for compliance [19][20]
  • Custom modules, workflow automation, webhooks, and configurable UI elements for businesses that need tailored expense processes [19]
  • Active-user pricing model: only employees who actually create expenses are charged, so admins and approvers who don't submit reports are free [21]
  • Pro: Free plan available for up to 3 users with core expense tracking [21]
  • Pro: Active-user pricing—admins and approvers aren't charged [21]
  • Pro: Automated per diem calculations by country and location [20]
  • Pro: Deep customization with custom modules and workflow automation [19]
  • Con: Corporate card feeds and multi-level approvals require Standard plan [21]
  • Con: Deepest value requires the broader Zoho ecosystem (Books, People, CRM) [19]
  • Con: No corporate card offering; relies on connecting existing cards [20]
  • Con: Travel booking, per diem, and live budgets require Premium plan [21]

Zoho Expense offers unusually deep customization at a low price point—custom modules, workflow automation, webhooks, and configurable UI elements that most competitors don't expose. The active-user pricing model is genuinely cost-effective for companies where only a portion of employees submit expenses regularly.

The trade-off is that there's no corporate card offering—you'll need to connect your existing cards—and the platform delivers its deepest value when used alongside other Zoho products like Zoho Books and Zoho People. [19][20][21]

Commonly compared to: Expensify (for budget-friendly expense management), and SAP Concur (for global compliance and customization).

  • Best for: Small and midsize businesses that want an affordable, highly customizable expense management platform with strong global compliance features and active-user pricing. [19][20][21]
  • Highlights: Autoscan receipt capture with OCR, automated per diem calculations by country and location, corporate card reconciliation with real-time feeds, mileage tracking across multiple input methods, and active-user pricing starting at $4/user/month. [19][20][21]
  • Ideal if you need: A low-cost expense management tool with deep customization options and native integration with the broader Zoho ecosystem (Zoho Books, Zoho People, Zoho CRM). [19][20]
Pricing
Free (3 users); from $4/user/month
Integrations
Zoho Books, QuickBooks, Xero, Sage, Microsoft Dynamics, & Google Workspace.
Ideal Company Size
Small to mid-market