You run a growing business. Payments should be the easy part. For many owners, it wasn’t even a real choice. A sales rep called the previous owner, a deal got done, and you’ve been running on infrastructure that wasn’t built for you. 

Or maybe you did pick your processor, but you chose speed over fit. You needed to take payments immediately, so you went with the biggest name you knew. It got you live in an afternoon. But ‘easy to get started’ turned out to be the only thing it was good at, and the barriers you hadn’t considered started showing up fast.

You’ve been forced into a bad tradeoff

If you run a salon, restaurant, vet clinic, jewelry store, or other growing business, you know exactly what we’re talking about. You do real volume, and you generate real revenue, but the options have been the same:

Up to now, you’ve had to pick which set of problems you can live with.

The mission was already there

The people who built Aurora understood this. They built the infrastructure, developed the merchant relationships, and kept improving the platform even when the brand didn’t keep pace. 

Everything was already here except the name.

Why we rebranded to Flute

Rebranding to Flute means the platform we spent years building finally has a name that matches it. We built a full-stack payment platform with our own gateway, our own FSP license, sponsored BINs, and multi-processor connectivity. And more features are on the way. 

We own every layer, end-to-end. We’re not cobbling together third-party tools and hoping they hold. We own the infrastructure. We control the economics, the experience, and the outcomes for you. 

That matters more now than ever. 

Look at where the market is. You’re more aware than ever of what you’re giving up under a legacy model. Flat-rate pricing used to feel like simplicity. Now it’s just stifling. When you’re processing high volume, the difference between flexible, transparent pricing and a flat markup is hundreds or thousands of dollars a month. 

At the same time, the bar for software has also risen. You know what good technology looks like. You shouldn’t have to go backward just to get a merchant account. We’re the only option that doesn’t ask you to.

What that means for you

The longer you’re on Flute, the more the platform works for you. Working capital is underwritten by your actual processing volume, so it fits your real cash flow. Instant payouts, analytics, and recurring billing all get more valuable the longer you stay. 

The same goes for SaaS platforms and ISO partners. The technology is easy to build on, and support actually knows your account. 

When you sign up, you get a merchant account in your name. Funds settle on your timeline, disputes get handled by someone who actually knows your business, and you’re never buried in fine print.

Your payments, without compromise

Flute is a new name on a platform we’ve been building for years. We built it for owners who’d run out of patience with what the market had to offer. If that’s you, let’s talk. 

— Derek

Software platforms are transforming how people pay, borrow, and manage money. In the past, customers relied on separate banks, lenders, or insurers to complete financial tasks. Today, more of these services are being built directly into the digital products people already use. This shift is called embedded finance, and it’s one of the most impactful trends in financial technology. 

For SaaS (software-as-a-service) executives, product leaders, and business owners, embedded finance unlocks new ways to grow platform value, generate revenue, and build stronger customer relationships. With the right partner, platforms can add features like payment acceptance, recurring billing, and even banking tools like lines of credit, deposit accounts, and disbursements — without taking on the complexity of becoming a bank. 

Let’s take a closer look at what embedded finance is and how it can help you grow your software company, expand revenue, and build a happier, stickier user base. 

What is embedded finance?

Embedded finance is the process of integrating financial services like payments, lending, insurance, or banking into software that was not originally designed for finance. 

For instance, a pet care company might use its scheduling platform to book appointments and send invoices within the app. Or, an auto repair shop might let customers finance their bill through its business management software. In both cases, the businesses don’t have to go through a separate vendor for payments or lending; the features are built directly into the core platform, offering a more seamless and intuitive user experience.  

The biggest benefit of embedded finance is convenience. Users don’t have to juggle multiple vendors, bounce between platforms, or log into different systems to get things done. Instead, everything happens in one place. That means users have access to more relevant, curated financial solutions that keep them engaged and capture more value from every transaction. 

Beyond payments: lending, insurance, banking as a service

Embedded finance isn’t limited to payment processing. Many solutions also include: 

Each element of embedded finance is designed to work seamlessly within the software company’s native application.  

Two business professionals reviewing an embedded finance integration on a laptop during a meeting

3 key benefits of embedded finance

Software companies are embracing embedded finance not just because it’s more convenient for users, but because it helps platforms grow and open new revenue streams. Here are three benefits to consider: 

Customer retention and platform stickiness

When your users can do more inside your software, they’re more likely to stay long-term. Payments are often the first step. Instead of directing users to an outside payment page, embedded payments allow them to complete transactions through your application, whether it’s in-person with a point of sale (POS) system, with an app on their iPhone, or through an e-commerce marketplace integration.  

The convenience of simplifying daily workflows and accelerating checkout builds loyalty. It also allows you to offer services like recurring billing, stored payment methods, and digital invoicing to keep customers connected to your platform over time. You worked hard to earn your customers, and offering the right financial tools can help you keep them. 

New revenue from payment activity

Another reason SaaS companies invest in embedded finance is that it opens a new revenue stream without having to manage or build payments infrastructure from scratch. Every time a customer makes a payment, you earn a share of the transaction. Over time, this can become a major contributor to your company’s bottom line, especially as you gain more users. 

Remember, not every embedded payment solution offers revenue sharing, so it’s important to ask upfront what your earnings will be. The right partner will also provide the APIs, embeddable components, onboarding tools, and compliance support needed to operate in the background, while you focus on growth. 

Fully branded user experience

Brand matters, especially for companies that have invested in their design and customer experience. With embedded payments, for instance, payment flows remain inside your software platform and reflect your branding. This includes checkout pages, receipts, account management screens, and more. This continuity reinforces your brand at every touch, building recognition and trust with your users. 

Your embedded finance partner should offer full control over the look and feel of your payment experience. There’s no need to redirect users to a third-party processor or use off-brand forms, so be sure to ask providers about flexible APIs and easy-to-use interface components that you can style to match your brand. 

Two small business owners at an outdoor market reviewing their software platform and embedded payment tools on a laptop

Embedded finance in action

Embedded finance is growing in popularity across a variety of industries, and for good reason. Here are a few examples of how embedded solutions can be valuable if you’re a vertical software provider: 

Each of these examples shows how embedded financial solutions not only simplify operations but also open up new revenue opportunities. 

Integrating financial services: how to get started

Embedded finance isn’t just a trend — it’s an expectation. As users expect more from their software tools, platforms that offer integrated financial services will stand out. 

At Flute, we give SaaS companies and software platforms a fast, reliable way to embed payments and capital products into their native solutions. With modern APIs, strong support, and a clear revenue model, we can help you move from payment processing to full financial integration – and in the process, deliver more value to each customer, increase retention, and increase your profitability per customer. 

If you’re ready to embed payments and other financial tools into your software solution, reach out to our team for more information.