WebKnowHow Thursday, November 23, 2006; 03:55 AM
WebExpenses, a leading UK provider of web-based expenses software solutions, has launched a version of its award-winning software that links directly to Sage MMS.
With the new version, users simply go online and click on an icon
within the reports functionality of WebExpenses to post their
consolidated expenses data directly to Sage MMS. The need to rekey data
is removed from the process completely.
“Sage MMS users will now find the processing of expenses far easier,” said James Brewis, Managing Director of WebExpenses.
“We’ve addressed our customers’ requirements for advanced features,
software integration, ease-of-deployment, ease-of-use and cost.”
WebExpenses launched a new and highly customisable version of its
software earlier this year, and this latest version, launched today,
builds on and further develops the new functionality.
Sage users already using the new version include Aprilia Motorcycles,
Bishop Cavanagh, Blackjack Promotions, Capex Health, Financial Risk
Management, Gap Consulting, Li-Cor Biosciences, Maleon Engineering,
Otsuka Pharmaceuticals and Real Networks.
WebExpenses partners include payroll suppliers, accounting software providers and credit card issuers.
UK-based WebExpenses (www.webexpenses.com)is a leading provider of web-based expenses software solutions to small, mid-sized and multinational organisations.
Features include an interface to corporate credit cards, an offline version and capture of expense items by SMS text message.
Implementations can range from companies with only a few users to those
with several thousand users across the globe in industries as diverse
as consultancy, consumer goods, financial services,
healthcare/pharmaceuticals, IT, recruitment, and telecommunications.
WebExpenses was shortlisted for the Accountancy Age Software Awards in
the Mid-market Software Solutions category (2004) and the Small
Business Software Package category (2005 and 2006) and was a finalist
for the Sage Developer of the Year Award (2005 and 2006).
http://www.webexpenses.com/
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