AI native procurement platform. Employees can use Saldor directly from Slack or Claude code, requesting goods or services for purchase. Admins can configure workflows to encode their specific business processes. Run sourcing events, collect security and tax information from potential vendors, and automatically have your bills matched to purchase orders.
Hey folks, Jacob here. Thrilled to launch Saldor to the world today.
Buying something at a company is rarely as simple as placing an order. An employee submits a request. Procurement checks vendors, pricing, security, and lead times. Finance reviews the budget. Legal may review a contract. Someone creates a purchase order, follows up with the vendor, tracks delivery, and eventually matches the invoice against what was ordered and received. Many companies still manage much of this through email, spreadsheets, or they use procurement systems that are really expensive and still cumbersome to operate.
Jack and I experienced this firsthand at Crusoe, where we helped build GPU data centers. Existing procurement systems cost hundreds of thousands of dollars just to implement, required large teams to operate, and still slowed the business down. Now with backing from YC, we're trying to change that.
So if you work in procurement or finance—or you’re building a company with complex purchasing needs in industries like robotics or data centers– email us at [email protected]. We’d love to talk.
The Slack and Claude Code entry points are the interesting part to me. Once a purchase request can come from an agent acting on an employee's behalf instead of a person filling out a form, does the policy check treat that the same way, or is there a separate layer of scrutiny for agent-originated requests? Seems like the failure mode to design for is an agent requesting something technically within someone's budget but clearly not what a human reviewer would have approved if they'd seen the full context.
How does Saldor handle approvals when multiple people need to sign off on a purchase, and is that workflow customizable per department?
Curious how Saldor handles approvals and spend limits for larger teams, and whether it plugs into existing ERPs like NetSuite without a heavy lift on the finance side?
How does Saldor actually handle the procurement side, like vendor management and approvals, or is it mostly focused on the bookkeeping and invoice matching part of closing the books?
How does Saldor actually connect to a company's existing accounting stack, and does it push reconciled entries back into QuickBooks or NetSuite automatically?
Honestly the invoicing flow is snappy, closed out two months of vendor bills in under an hour which never happens for me.
How does Saldor actually handle the approval workflows and integration with our existing ERP, and is pricing based on transaction volume or a flat monthly fee?
Finally tried Saldor and the receipt matching was way smoother than I expected, almost no fiddling. Could see this saving my team a real chunk of time each month.
The bookkeeping side feels surprisingly smooth, especially how quickly it categorizes purchases. Honestly the speed of closing the books is what stood out to me during a quick test.
Spent a few minutes poking around and really liked how clean the purchase-to-close flow feels, almost no clicks wasted. Surprised me that setup was just a short form rather than a long onboarding call.
The invoice matching actually worked on the first try, which never happens for me. Closing out month-end usually eats a whole afternoon but this shaved hours off.
Curious how Saldor actually compares to something like Ramp or Brex on the procurement side. Does it focus on approvals and policy enforcement, or more on automating the bookkeeping after the spend happens?
Matching invoices to purchase orders automatically sounds great on paper. How well does it handle messy real world exceptions that never follow the expected process?
About Saldor on Product Hunt
“Speed up procurement and AP.”
Saldor launched on Product Hunt on July 1st, 2026 and earned 79 upvotes and 14 comments, placing #29 on the daily leaderboard. AI native procurement platform. Employees can use Saldor directly from Slack or Claude code, requesting goods or services for purchase. Admins can configure workflows to encode their specific business processes. Run sourcing events, collect security and tax information from potential vendors, and automatically have your bills matched to purchase orders.
Saldor was featured in SaaS (43k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 48.9k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Saldor?
Saldor was hunted by Jacob Bland. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
Want to see how Saldor stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.