A constructive, public-data read on one of NYC's fastest-growing fintechs — and the strategic questions even a category leader has to keep answering when the software is free and the revenue is downstream of customer spend.
Free software funded by interchange is a brilliant wedge — but it couples revenue to a metric the customer controls (their spend) and to macro conditions. When spend tightens, revenue can soften without a single logo churning.
What we'd test: the mix of spend-tied vs. subscription revenue (Ramp Plus, Bill Pay, Treasury) and how fast paid-software attach is de-risking the interchange dependency. Connected → F19 (Unit Economics).
With a free core, expansion isn't seats — it's getting card customers onto Bill Pay, Travel, Treasury and procurement. The whole growth engine depends on secondary-product adoption velocity within the first 90 days.
What we'd test: attach-rate by cohort and the in-product nudges that move a card-only customer to a 3-product customer. Connected → F07 (Activation) & F22 (RevOps).
Moving a company's cards + spend controls means migrating data, policies and habits. The faster a new account reaches "first reconciled month," the stickier it gets — and the sooner the attach motion can start.
What we'd test: the activation milestone definition and where finance teams stall in the first 30 days. Connected → F13 (Retention).
If any slice of your revenue is downstream of a metric your customer controls (usage, spend, seats they can cut), your "churn number" is hiding risk — and your real growth lever is attach + activation speed, not logo acquisition. Ramp wins because secondary-product adoption is engineered, not hoped for. Our diagnostic maps exactly where your expansion engine leaks and what to instrument first.
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