She taps .
But today, her finance ops lead, Marcus, walks her through a pilot: .
Sarah scoffs. She’s heard that before. She opens the SAP Concur mobile app. She taps ExpenseIt .
Everyone loses. Let’s run the demo as Sarah experiences it for the first time. Scene 1: The Friction Point Sarah lands in Denver after a red-eye. She grabs coffee, an Uber, and a quick breakfast sandwich. Three transactions, three receipts. Normally, she’d stuff them into the envelope and pray she remembers what was for “Client Entertainment” vs. “Meals – Solo.”
Everyone claps. For the receipts. ExpenseIt doesn’t just automate receipt capture. It transforms expense reports from a weekly tax on productivity into a real-time source of business intelligence—while giving people their Sunday nights back. That’s the deep story. Not features. Freedom, foresight, and frictionless compliance.
Not a digital envelope. A physical, dog-eared, coffee-stained manila envelope that lives in her work bag. Inside: gas station receipts from Tulsa, an Uber receipt from Chicago, a blurry photo of a hotel folio from Dallas, a handwritten dinner note from a client in Atlanta, and three receipts that are so faded they look like ancient scrolls.
Sarah travels 40 weeks a year. She closes million-dollar deals, but her true daily battle isn’t with competitors—it’s with the envelope .
She taps .
But today, her finance ops lead, Marcus, walks her through a pilot: . concur expenseit demo
Sarah scoffs. She’s heard that before. She opens the SAP Concur mobile app. She taps ExpenseIt . She taps
Everyone loses. Let’s run the demo as Sarah experiences it for the first time. Scene 1: The Friction Point Sarah lands in Denver after a red-eye. She grabs coffee, an Uber, and a quick breakfast sandwich. Three transactions, three receipts. Normally, she’d stuff them into the envelope and pray she remembers what was for “Client Entertainment” vs. “Meals – Solo.” She’s heard that before
Everyone claps. For the receipts. ExpenseIt doesn’t just automate receipt capture. It transforms expense reports from a weekly tax on productivity into a real-time source of business intelligence—while giving people their Sunday nights back. That’s the deep story. Not features. Freedom, foresight, and frictionless compliance.
Not a digital envelope. A physical, dog-eared, coffee-stained manila envelope that lives in her work bag. Inside: gas station receipts from Tulsa, an Uber receipt from Chicago, a blurry photo of a hotel folio from Dallas, a handwritten dinner note from a client in Atlanta, and three receipts that are so faded they look like ancient scrolls.
Sarah travels 40 weeks a year. She closes million-dollar deals, but her true daily battle isn’t with competitors—it’s with the envelope .