I pulled your last 113 LinkedIn posts. You're averaging 0.9 posts per month in 2026. Parker Conrad is at 8.4. Christian Lanng is at 7.9. When you post, it lands: 3,500 likes on milestones, 1,466 on the builders post in March. The signal is there. The system around it isn't.
Below are four posts written from data you already have. Not drafts to clean up. Posts ready to run.
Money now has intelligence.
Before a dollar leaves a company on Ramp, it checks for fraud. It verifies the policy. It logs the context. If idle, it finds yield. If suspicious, it stops.
26.1 million of those decisions happened last month. $290.98M saved. Zero required a human.
The companies that understand this earliest aren't just saving money. They're building a different kind of finance team. One that spends its time on decisions software can't make yet.
Agent Cards weren't on our roadmap in January.
The Visa Trusted Agent Protocol. The Procurement Fleet. The MCP server. None of them were.
Every one of them shipped.
The best builders I know don't wait for the category to tell them what to build. They watch where friction is, make something, and find out. The spec comes after.
Two years ago, cloud infrastructure was the #1 spend category on Ramp.
Then SaaS subscriptions. Then headcount-adjacent services.
Today, across 50,000 companies, AI tools and infrastructure is #1. It passed SaaS in Q1 and hasn't looked back. In January 2023, it wasn't in the top 10.
The companies that saw this shift earliest renegotiated vendor contracts, changed hiring plans, and rebuilt their finance assumptions before the market caught up.
For decades, finance teams have operated in arrears.
Expenses coded after the fact. Books closed at month-end. Decisions made on data that's already 30 days old.
Ramp's Accounting Agent captures context as transactions happen. Codes in real time. Flags anomalies before close, not after.
Finance teams that run it close 40% faster. Not because they work harder. Because the work moves to where it belongs.