How do I control employee spending on global SaaS subscriptions with DogPay?
The problem: global software spend is hard to control When teams buy SaaS tools across countries and websites, spend management breaks down quickly: Employees use personal cards and then expense reimbursements pile up. Subscriptions renew automatically (often monthly) and keep charging even when a tool is no longer used. Tools bill in different currencies and merchants, making it difficult to forecast or reconcile. Payment failures disrupt work when a card expires, a bank flags a charge, or a vendor’s checkout doesn’t like the billing setup. No clear ownership: the person who “set it up” leaves, but the subscription keeps billing.
For finance teams, the result is predictable: surprise invoices, inconsistent approvals, and time wasted chasing receipts and access.
Why card and subscription issues happen (especially internationally) Global SaaS and subscription payments commonly fail or create confusion for a few reasons:
1. Merchant risk checks: Some SaaS vendors use strict fraud rules. Charges can be declined if the transaction looks unusual (new merchant, new country, higher amount than normal). 2. Card lifecycle problems: A card expires, gets replaced, or is locked—then critical tools stop working. 3. Recurring billing complexity: A subscription might start as a trial, then convert at a different price point, or add seats mid-cycle. 4. Decentralized purchasing: Multiple people buy similar tools, creating duplicate subscriptions and fragmented spend.
How DogPay helps: manage team spend with dedicated cards and clear ownership DogPay is designed to make software and subscription spend easier to control—without blocking teams from getting the tools they need.