Improving usability from customer feedback

In June, we spent time going back through what we'd already built and making it better: sharpening features, simplifying the automations and integrations behind your finances, and acting on a lot of the product feedback we’ve gotten from our users. Less new construction, more renovation.

Here's what we shipped in June:

Global USD³

Transfers now carry the attached memos all the way to the receiving bank, and that memo shows up on receipts. That makes payments easier to identify once they leave Slash, whether you're the one getting paid or the one reconciling it later.

Custom statement generation is back for Global USD accounts, so you can create the statements you need inside Slash without contacting support. Bank letters are easier to access too, which makes pulling account documentation faster when you need it.

You can still fund Global USD accounts through non-U.S. rails including SEPA, Faster Payments, Pix, and SPEI. In June, we kept improving the experience of using local rails with clearer rate and status information.

Accounting automation

We improved how accounting line items get matched, reviewed, and pre-filled. Imported line items match back to their original entries more reliably, mappings can pre-fill fields on pending transactions, and accounting sync now supports more document types.

Bill pay

Bills can now sync into connected ERPs, so vendor payments stay organized without re-entering the same data in your accounting system. Bill accounting entries also got their own review page – a highly requested feature. Now you have a dedicated place to look over and reconcile your bills in bulk before anything syncs.

Along with the revamped UI, we added some smaller new features, too. If you pay a bill through Slash and that payment creates a bank transfer, Slash now makes that underlying transfer easier to find from the bill/payment record.¹ Additionally, payment request tables can now be sorted by amount and due date, so finance teams can quickly find the bills that need attention first.

Expense management

You can now choose which extra email addresses or company domains are allowed to send receipts into Slash. That means receipts can come from places like a shared finance inbox, a purchasing alias, or a contractor who buys on the company’s behalf — and Slash can still accept them instead of requiring everything to come from the cardholder’s own email.

We also reworked the Action Center and the expense review experience. Task approvals, card requests, physical card activations, and reimbursement reviews now have cleaner panels and simplified bulk actions, so your employees can finish finance tasks faster.

Team bonding in Hawaii

At the start of June, the entire Slash team flew to Maui. The week was part working session, part celebration. The executive team walked everyone through where Slash has been and where it's headed, engineering hosted hackathons, and new hires got hands-on sessions to learn the product, the culture, and the tools behind our business. There were also fabulous dinners, night swims in the Pacific, and at least a couple of wine-catalyzed speeches.

The point of the trip was to recognize the people who got us here. Slash runs on a lean team spread across the country; a week together in one place was a chance for everyone, whether they work in San Francisco or South Dakota, to show what they've been building, get to know each other, and do the kind of cross-team collaboration that's harder to pull off over Slack.

If you'd like to be on the next flight, check out our Careers page. For a closer look at what we're working on and who we're hiring, follow our Head of People, Barbara Cardenas, or members of our engineering team on social media. We hope to see you in Hawaii next year.

Amplifying our user’s voices

We sat down with more of our users to see how Slash is powering their businesses and published four new case studies from those conversations. Our customers span a wide range of industries: fintech, investing, healthcare, media and advertising. If you want to see how some of them are getting the most out of Slash, the stories are below.

  • DEUNA: A global payments provider that uses Slash to spin up virtual cards for payment testing across international markets, giving its team a faster way to validate local payment integrations and manage global spend from one dashboard.
  • Dune Ventures: A venture firm that recommends Slash to its portfolio companies because of how well our tools serve startups at any stage, whether they're a team of 5 or 150.
  • Codes Health: Uses Slash to manage complex invoicing across more than 100 law firm clients, matching different invoice templates and payment preferences while keeping treasury, payments, and banking in one place.⁶
  • Shown Media: A media company that uses Slash to invoice clients directly into dedicated virtual accounts for each creator campaign, keeping project budgets separate from the main account and letting team members pay creators with scoped permissions.

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