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Buying an AR platform with a better dashboard does not reduce your DSO. It gives your team a faster way to do the exact same manual work. Finance leaders evaluating AR automation in 2026 face a crowded market where platforms that look similar in feature checklists may operate on different architectural assumptions.
This guide compares Stuut and Versapay across ERP integration depth, AI autonomy, implementation timelines, and total cost of ownership so you can choose the right architecture for your finance team.
The table below maps both platforms across the dimensions that matter most to a CFO making a vendor decision.
Stuut is an AI-native AR platform built with autonomous agent frameworks that executes your accounts receivable process without requiring your team to build rules, manage workflows, or chase exceptions. Stuut has collected $1.4B to date, and customers reported an average 40% cash flow increase and 37% reduction in past-due AR. Across live customer deployments, Stuut achieves a 95%+ automated cash application rate, which eliminates the payment matching bottleneck that delays month-end close.
Honeywell, ZoomInfo, PerkinElmer, and Bishop Lifting have all deployed Stuut in production environments. In a November 2025 announcement following Stuut's $29.5M Series A, Razvan Bratu, Head of Quote to Cash at Honeywell, stated:
"The platform handles the routine work so our people drive increased real business value."
Versapay addresses the communication gap between AR teams and their customers' AP teams by connecting both sides through a shared cloud-based portal. Customers log in to view invoices, raise disputes, and make payments.
This approach centralizes invoice communication and creates a documented collaboration trail. Value depends on customers adopting the portal and configuring the system to handle exceptions.
Integration architecture is where the two platforms diverge most sharply for enterprise teams running SAP or Oracle on complex multi-entity setups.
Stuut acts as an execution layer for ERP data, reading open invoices, executing collections across all channels, processing payments, matching cash, and writing results back to the AR subledger without modifying any ERP configuration. No chart of accounts changes.
IT provisions API credentials. Stuut connects to SAP, Oracle, NetSuite, or Microsoft Dynamics 365. All cash application entries post to the subledger in real time. For manufacturing and distribution companies where SAP or Oracle is the system of record, this matters because ERP modifications typically require change management and testing.
Versapay's integration approach focuses on syncing invoice and payment data with its portal network. For companies on NetSuite or Sage Intacct, integrations are available. Companies on SAP or Oracle ERP Cloud environments have no native integration available. Connecting either system requires custom API development work, which adds time and IT resource requirements beyond Versapay's standard onboarding for NetSuite and Sage Intacct.
The implementation timeline difference is substantial. Stuut completes average onboarding in 3 to 4 days, with full go-live including configuration and first autonomous outreach typically within 6 to 10 days. Heavily customized environments or complex data quality issues may require additional setup time beyond the standard onboarding period.
Versapay implementations vary by deployment complexity. The collaborative portal works well when customer relationships drive payment behavior and your organization wants structured collaboration with visible control over exception handling, particularly for companies on NetSuite or Sage Intacct with existing AR operations that benefit from portal-based communication.
Stuut's API-first architecture leaves your existing ERP customizations untouched, reading from and writing to standard AR tables with no ERP modifications required.
Versapay's multi-entity configurations may require additional IT resources, and synchronizing multiple ERP instances with a shared portal can introduce complexity depending on your specific deployment architecture.
Stuut uses autonomous AI agents (software that executes complete workflows independently without human review at each step) to handle collections. The agent monitors invoice due dates, contacts customers before invoices go overdue, and chooses the right channel based on customer history and urgency.
Key autonomous actions include:
The system learns from every interaction. If Customer A always pays on the 15th after two reminders, the agent learns that. If Customer B responds faster to SMS than email, the agent adapts without anyone updating a rule configuration. This removes the ongoing maintenance burden that accumulates in rule-based systems as customer behaviors change.
Versapay's automation model uses configurable workflows. This works well for teams that want visibility into every decision and prefer to maintain control over exception handling.
The constraint is that workflow-based systems typically require ongoing configuration as customer behaviors and business requirements change. For companies whose AR volume is growing faster than headcount, this can create a ceiling, and the collections email detective problem is not solved by routing exceptions to the right inbox faster.
Rule-based guided workflows fit best when AR volume is stable, exception types are well-defined, and your team wants visibility into every customer touchpoint. Autonomous AI execution fits best when:
The 3 to 4 day average onboarding follows a consistent pattern:
A Versapay portal deployment requires configuring the customer-facing interface, setting up ERP data sync, and configuring exception handling workflows. Implementation timelines vary by deployment complexity. Enterprise configurations with multiple ERPs and large customer bases take longer, and portal-based AR also benefits from customer adoption: your buyers need to use the portal before the collaboration layer adds full value.
Every month your DSO stays elevated while an AR platform is being implemented represents real cash your operations cannot use. Implementation delays directly affect how quickly you can access improved cash flow.
Stuut operates on a per-agent pricing model with no implementation fees and no professional services charges. Pricing is custom based on transaction volume, entity count, and ERP complexity. The DSO improvement framework on Stuut's site provides a step-by-step approach for calculating the cash impact of reducing collection time against subscription cost.
Versapay uses subscription-based pricing with implementation costs billed separately.
Ask every vendor these questions before signing:
A practical TCO framework for a two-year window covers five categories:
For Stuut, implementation costs are zero and autonomous outreach begins during the go-live window.
The architectural choices that make Stuut fast to deploy are the same ones that reduce implementation risk.
PerkinElmer reduced overdue invoices from 50% to 15% in one year and improved cash flow to support growth initiatives including acquisitions.
Bishop Lifting's results are equally concrete: a 35% reduction in overdue receivables, a $3M working capital improvement, and 50% more accounts managed per employee.
Revenue growth does not automatically require AR headcount growth when operational work runs autonomously. Stuut scales with transaction volume without adding people. Smaller customers who previously got ignored because the team lacked time now receive consistent proactive outreach, and that long tail is where DSO drag most often hides.
The absence of ERP modification means there is no complex rollback scenario. If you connect Stuut to NetSuite today and decide to disconnect it in 90 days, your NetSuite configuration remains as it was before. This makes a pilot a genuine proof-of-concept with a defined exit clause, not a commitment disguised as a trial.
An honest comparison requires naming where Versapay's approach is the right choice for specific buyer profiles.
Versapay has an established track record in enterprise AR deployments. For CFOs who weight vendor stability heavily, that documented history matters.
Versapay's portal approach allows both your AR team and your customers' AP teams to operate within a shared environment for dispute resolution and payment confirmation. For companies selling to a concentrated set of large buyers who want a premium payment experience, that portal creates a service layer that differs from autonomous outreach models.
Versapay states SOC 2 Type II compliance, which matters for regulated industries and enterprise security reviews. Stuut holds SOC 2 certification and is GDPR compliant, with ISO 27001 and HIPAA compliance currently in progress. For buyers where established compliance posture is the deciding factor, Versapay's longer certification track record clears procurement hurdles faster.
Stuut's API-first approach means your ERP stays the system of record and Stuut acts as the execution layer. Updates post back to the ERP in real time. For SAP environments specifically, this matters because ERP modifications at enterprise scale typically require change management, testing, and operational sign-off.
Versapay fits best when your company wants to offer customers a portal-based payment experience, your team prefers visible control over workflows, and you have capacity for implementation and customer onboarding.
A Stuut pilot runs on a defined subset of accounts while your current process continues elsewhere. Because go-live completes in 6 to 10 days, you can begin evaluating results quickly. If results do not meet expectations, disconnection is straightforward because no ERP modification was made.
Book a demo to see how Stuut's AI agents execute collections autonomously with your specific ERP configuration, or ask for the CFO guide to evaluating AR automation.
Stuut averages 3 to 4 day onboarding and 6 to 10 day full go-live for standard ERP environments. Versapay implementation timelines vary by deployment complexity and customer onboarding scope.
Yes. Stuut connects to SAP, Oracle, NetSuite, and Microsoft Dynamics 365 via API without requiring ERP modification, with all payment and collections data writing back to the AR subledger in real time.
Stuut's per-agent pricing includes no implementation or professional services fees. Versapay's pricing includes separate implementation costs.
Yes. A Stuut pilot can run on a defined subset of accounts while your current AR process continues elsewhere, and the API connection can be disconnected if results do not meet your criteria.
Autonomous AI agents: Software that executes complete workflows independently, without requiring a human to review and approve each step, learning from outcomes rather than following pre-built rules.
Collaborative AR: A model in which accounts receivable and accounts payable teams communicate through a shared cloud-based portal to resolve disputes, confirm invoices, and process payments.
Cash application: The process of matching incoming customer payments to the correct open invoices in the AR subledger, which can be manual (matching by hand) or automated (using algorithms to match by amount, reference number, and remittance data).
Days Sales Outstanding (DSO): A measure of how long, on average, it takes a company to collect payment after a sale, calculated as (accounts receivable / total credit sales) x number of days. Lower DSO means faster cash conversion and more working capital available for operations.
