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Why Finance Teams Are Quietly Automating the Admin Out of Their Working Week

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Rumoured increases to employer pension contributions in next month’s Budget are sparking panic among UK businesses, with nearly one in five firms warning they could face insolvency if contribution rates rise.

Ask anyone who runs a finance function in a small or medium-sized business how much of the week is genuinely strategic, and you tend to get a wry answer.

The forecasting, the cash-flow planning, the conversations with the board: that is the work that matters. But it sits behind a wall of admin. There are invoices to raise, statements to reconcile, supplier bills to key in, and month-end reports to assemble by hand.

For years that admin was simply the cost of doing business, and someone usually typed the numbers in. What has changed is not the work itself but the tools available to absorb it. A finance team in 2026 has practical, affordable ways to take the most repetitive tasks off the desk entirely, and a growing number are doing exactly that.

 The admin tax that finance teams have stopped accepting

Every finance function pays what you might call an admin tax. It is the slice of each week that goes on tasks that are necessary but add no insight. Re-keying a supplier invoice does not make the business better informed, and matching bank-feed lines against the ledger does not change the cash position. The work has to happen, but it generates no advantage.

The reason teams have started to push back is partly cost and partly risk. Manual processes are slow, but they are also where errors creep in. A transposed figure, a missed invoice or a duplicate payment each costs time to find and credibility to explain. So automating the routine layer is as much about accuracy and control as it is about speed. There is also a quieter motivation, which is retention. Finance staff who spend their days on data entry tend not to stay, but give them genuinely analytical work and the role becomes one people want to keep.

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Invoicing and accounts payable: the obvious place to begin

If you are choosing one process to automate first, start where the volume is highest and the rules are clearest. For most SMEs that means invoicing on the way out and accounts payable on the way in. On the sales side, the well-trodden ground includes raising and sending invoices straight from your accounting system, chasing overdue payments with automatic reminders, and reconciling receipts against the bank feed. The software is mature and the payback is immediate.

Accounts payable is the higher-value target. Supplier bills arrive as PDFs and email attachments in no consistent format, so keying them in by hand is slow and error-prone. Modern tools can read an incoming invoice, extract the supplier, amount, date and line items, and post it to the ledger for a human to approve rather than to type. The person stays in the loop where judgement is needed and is removed from the part that is pure transcription.

Reconciliation, the task nobody volunteers for

Bank reconciliation is the work finance teams most want to hand over, and with good reason. It is repetitive, it is unforgiving of small errors, and it expands to fill whatever time month-end allows. Reconciliation is also unusually well suited to automation, because most of it follows consistent patterns. A large share of transactions match cleanly against the ledger and can be cleared automatically, so only the genuine exceptions need a human eye.

A sensible setup does precisely that. It surfaces the handful of items that do not reconcile so the team spends its attention on the discrepancies that actually matter. Done well, the value is twofold. Month-end gets faster, and the numbers become more current. When reconciliation is continuous rather than a monthly scramble, the business is always working from a near-live picture of its cash position.

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 Reporting that assembles itself

The monthly reporting pack is where a great deal of skilled time quietly disappears. Someone exports figures, pastes them into a spreadsheet, formats the tables, builds the commentary and circulates the result. By the time the board reads it, the data is weeks old.

Automating the assembly of routine reports changes the rhythm. Management accounts, cash-flow summaries and the standard board pack can be generated on a schedule, pulling from live data so the figures are current the moment they land. The finance team’s role shifts from building the report to interpreting it, explaining what the numbers mean and what should happen next.

This is where automation pays its most strategic dividend. The bottleneck in most finance functions is not the analysis; it is getting to the point where analysis can begin. For organisations weighing up where to start, a clear-eyed assessment of AI finance automation and how it fits an existing accounting system is a more useful first step than chasing the longest feature list.

What good automation actually looks like

What separates a sound finance-automation project from an expensive one is worth being precise about, because the difference is not the technology.

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It works with your accounting platform, not around it. If you run Xero or a comparable system, automation should connect to it directly rather than bolting on a parallel process people have to remember to maintain.

  • It keeps a human at every decision point. Software should handle transcription and matching; people should approve payments. Approval is a control, not a delay to engineer away.
  • It leaves a clear audit trail. Every automated action should be logged and reviewable. Your auditors, and your own peace of mind, depend on seeing what happened and why.
  • It starts narrow. The most successful projects automate one well-understood process, prove it, then expand. Trying to transform everything at once is how budgets and patience both run out.
  • It is honest about exceptions. No process is fully predictable. Good automation handles routine cases confidently and routes the unusual ones to a person, rather than forcing every case through the same template.

A project that meets these tests tends to deliver. One that ignores them tends to become the thing the team works around.

Turning a cost centre into a thinking function

The finance teams getting the most from automation are not the ones with the biggest software budgets. They are the ones who looked honestly at their week, identified the tasks that consumed time without producing insight, and removed those tasks deliberately, one at a time, starting with the highest-volume work. The destination is worth being clear about. It is not a finance function with fewer people, but one where the people spend their hours on the work only they can do: understanding the numbers, spotting the risks, and helping the business decide where to go next. The admin tax was always optional, and more and more finance teams have simply decided to stop paying it.

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Caribou Coffee selects new CFO

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Caribou Coffee selects new CFO

Gene Komsky steps into Scott Kennedy’s previous role.

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AZZ Is Doing Well, But Not Well Enough To Be Excited About

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Footasylum opens its fourth store in Wales

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Its new store in Merthyr has created 25 jobs.

Footasylum.

Leading footwear and sportswear retailer Footasylum has opened a new store Merthyr as part of its expansion plans. The retailer, whose key demographic are youngsters aged 16-24, has leased a 4,000 sq ft unit at Cyfarthfa Shopping Park.

The shop, which has created 25 jobs, is the Rochdale headquartered retailer’s fourth in Wales, alongside existing outlets in Wrexham, Newport and Cardiff.

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The opening forms part of Footasylum’s ongoing expansion strategy, which focuses on prominent, high-footfall retail destinations. The Merthyr store is the latest in a series of recent openings, including Manchester’s Arndale Shopping Centre, Glasgow’s Silverburn Shopping Centre and Darlington’s Cornmill Centre.

Its store rollout programme is being supported with a new funding deal with HSBC, which will also increase its warehousing capacity. It has also entered into a strategic partnership with Trapstar, the British streetwear brand.

Hannah Mercer was recently appointed the retailer’s chief executive as it also focuses on international expansion in Central Europe and the Gulf states.

Shannon Osman, retail director at Footasylum said: “We’re incredibly excited to bring Footasylum to Merthyr Tydfil for the first time, expanding our reach and creating 25 local jobs. Cyfarthfa Shopping Park provides a great platform for us to connect with both new and existing customers while showcasing the mix of exclusive and third-party brands we are known for. We look forward to becoming part of the local retail community and welcoming customers through the doors of this fantastic new store.”

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The retailer sells a mix of footwear, apparel and accessories through stores, websites, and a wholesale channel. Footasylum , which employs around 2,500 staff across the UK, was acquired by private equity firm Aurelius in 2022.

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Energy giant Valero commits to Cardiff long-term

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Business Live

It has struck a new long-term lease at its Port of Cardiff terminal operation with Associated British Ports

From left to right: David McLoughlin, director pipelines and terminals, Valero; Haydn Dawson, lead estates Manager, ABP; Richard Butler, lead commercial director, ABP and Sam Marsh, director of product supply, Valero.

One of the world’s biggest independent petroleum refiners, Valero, has committed to its Port of Cardiff operation for the long-term.

The company has agreed a new long-term lease with the port’s owner Association British Port’s for its 12-acre liquid fuels terminal at Roath Dock, the largest such facility at the Port of Cardiff.

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The deal safeguards skilled jobs on site and supports the supply of fuel for households, businesses, airports and commercial fleets across South Wales, the south west of England and the M4 and M5 corridors. It also takes thousands of HGV’s off the road network by linking Valero’s Pembroke refinery with Cardiff by vessels accessing coastal shipping routes.

Valero, as operated at Cardiff since 1996 and continues to invest in the terminal to support significant annual throughput by sea. The new agreement provides certainty for long-term operations, while enabling further investment to extend the life and resilience of critical energy infrastructure.

As part of the long-term lease ABP will invest in port infrastructure to further support Valero’s forward investment programme. The agreement is expected to generate long-term economic value for the port while strengthening Cardiff’s role as a strategically important energy gateway

Richard Butler, lead commercial manager at ABP, said: We are delighted to extend our partnership with Valero at the Port of Cardiff, supporting vital fuel supplies and critical jobs across South Wales for decades to come.

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“This new agreement with demonstrates our shared commitment to support regional economic activity and ensuring the Cardiff City Region continues to benefit from reliable access to essential energy supplies.

“This investment also reflects ABP’s long-term confidence in Cardiff and our role in supporting the UK’s energy security.”

The Port of Cardiff is one of ABP’s key ports in South Wales as a hub for energy, bulk and general cargoes.

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Nestle USA unveils cookie dough innovation

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The reimagined cookie dough is available in three varieties. 

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13 mutual funds collect Rs 471 crore in May, Motilal Oswal Contra Fund contributes Rs 267 crore – New funds delivered

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13 mutual funds collect Rs 471 crore in May, Motilal Oswal Contra Fund contributes Rs 267 crore - New funds delivered

The NFO market remained subdued. Of the 13 funds launched in May, 12 of them were from the passive space (Index as well as ETF). Together, they garnered net assets worth 471 cores highlighting investors cautious stance by not going overboard, said Himanshu Srivastava, Principal, Manager Research, Morningstar Investment Research India.

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Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards launch with backing from last year’s big winner

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The annual celebration of the best businesses in the Humber area will take place on November 19

Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards - FEO chair and current Entrepreneur of the Year, David Hall, second right, and Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards organisers Simon Jones and Jane Smallwood, left, with Jan Brumby, CEO of FEO, right.

Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards – FEO chair and current Entrepreneur of the Year, David Hall, second right, and Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards organisers Simon Jones and Jane Smallwood, left, with Jan Brumby, CEO of FEO, right.(Image: Fred PR/Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards)

Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards are back for 2026, with a double award winner from last year’s silver anniversary spectacular now helping shape its future success.

Since an emphatic evening at the gala celebration in November, Beverley Leisure Homes managing director David Hall has been elected as chair of headline partner For Entrepreneurs Only, the Hull-based leadership support organisation.

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The royally-recognised group joined forces with talent entrepreneur Simon Jones and events specialist Jane Smallwood in 2025, with Mr Hall now committing the past Queen’s Award winner for the long term.

He said “FEO should be associated with the biggest events as we are one of the biggest business organisations out there. Simon has really given it a different feel, injecting his youthful enthusiasm, so it is good for FEO to ensure that support is there. I see it as a long-term relationship between FEO and Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards, and as a partnership we’re learning together. There’s a drive from both organisations to make what they do better each year.”

Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards

Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards(Image: Fred PR/Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards)

Mr Jones, who is behind the acclaimed Top 30 Under 30 programme, is preparing for the third edition of the awards under his watch, and the 26th since it was launched by the Hull Daily Mail. Last year saw a 45% increase in entries across the 12 categories.

And the winning experience has fired up Mr Hall when it comes to the Hull and East Yorkshire Business Awards, having been named Entrepreneur of the Year while his Beverley Leisure Homes company was recognised as Small Business of the Year. He said: “I didn’t realise quite how important these events were, for the business and for the team. We spend so much time in an industry bubble, where we’re quite well known, but we were all inspired by what we saw from the local business community.

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“To win was fantastic for the business too. The awards sit next to our signing-in book in our reception, so whether it is a couple coming to look at a new lodge or someone selling insurance, they know we have won. They are great talking points, and with the industry having been in quite a negative place over the past few years, to have such a positive story is a refreshing change for us. It was a focal point for the business year.”

Three major new partners are also on board for 2026, with BAE Systems, H&H Comms and Siemens Gamesa joining the existing backers.

Businesses across Hull and East Yorkshire are now being invited to elevate themselves in such a manner, with entries for 2026 now open.

Mr Jones said: “It was a big step forward last year. We are building confidence in the awards, and we need to celebrate and provide that platform.

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“It is more important than ever, that we celebrate success as a business community. We are all facing challenges, we all know it is not easy out there, that’s why good news, making a difference and growing and trying things against the tide is really something to shout about. We need to showcase what is possible in difficult times. It is easy to say ‘not now’ when things are tough, it gives us excuses for not doing things and not being bold. We need more people to be bold and brave, not less.”

The entry window closes on September 18, with the gala celebration on November 19 at DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel in Hull. Full details of how to enter and the criteria for each category can be found on the website – www.heybusinessawards.co.uk

This year’s award categories are:

Lifetime Achievement Award

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Start-Up Business of the Year (Less than two years old)

Small Business of the Year (Less than 50 employees)

Best Place to Work

Environmental & Sustainability Award

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Charity of the Year

Innovation Award

Entrepreneur of the Year

Team of the Year

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Large Business of the Year

Growth Award

Rising Star

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HubSpot: Deeply Undervalued – Enterprise Value Below Total Customer Acquisition Cost (NYSE:HUBS)

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HubSpot

This article was written by

The author is presently an entrepreneur and an investor focused on investing in public companies. The author has over ten years of financial services experience, which includes long and short bottoms up fundamental buy-side research, private equity, M and A Advisory, and accounting. See SA policy on anonymous authors: http://seekingalpha.com/page/policy_anonymous_contributors Disclaimer: In no event will the author writing under the pen name Research and Value (hereafter referred to as R&V) or any affiliated party be liable for any direct or indirect trading losses caused by any information published by R&V. Use of the author’s articles is at your own risk. You should do your own research and due diligence and consult with your own advisers before making any investment decision with respect to securities discussed in articles published by the author. No publication made by R&V is an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security, nor shall any security be offered or sold to any person, in any jurisdiction in which such offer would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction. R&V is not registered as an investment advisor in the United States or has similar registration in any other jurisdiction. R&V strives to provide accurate and reliable information contained in its articles, however no-one is error free and R&V is not responsible for any errors, omissions, or accuracy of any and all information presented in its articles. All information is presented “as is,” without warranty of any kind, whether express or implied. R&V makes no representation, express or implied, as to the accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any information or with regard to the results to be obtained from its use. All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice, and R&V does not undertake to update or supplement its articles or any of the information contained therein.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of HUBS either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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