Mesh Payments pursues $50M in debt financing to support growth


The corporate spend management startup, which has raised $63 million in capital, is trying to balance “growing too fast and making sure we are not under-servicing our clients,” said CEO Oded Zehavi

The company wouldn’t share its current revenue, but Zehavi said Mesh is targeting $100 million in revenue by the end of 2023. Zehavi was formerly an executive at Payoneer and PayPal who founded Mesh with Eran Katoni.

Mesh has doubled its headcount since January, rising from 75 employees to about 150. Its sales, marketing and finance teams are in New York, while product and research and development are based in Tel Aviv, Zehavi said.

Given the economic shift, however, hiring is now a lesser focus for Mesh. Zehavi wouldn't identify a target headcount by the end of the year. The startup is “trying to be lean,” and trying to balance “growing too fast and making sure we are not under-servicing our clients,” he said.

Mesh, which processes about $1 billion in total payment volume annually, has close to 1,000 customers, including buy now-pay later provider Sezzle and software company Riskified. The startup serves mid-market businesses in the U.S. with 50 to 2,000 employees that are largely concerned about cash flow and incentives like cashback, Zehavi said. Mesh, which currently isn’t profitable, generates revenue from interchange fees on clients’ spending made through its platform.

As companies grapple with high inflation and less plentiful venture capital, “clients are spending less, especially on high-value categories like media and IT,” Zehavi said. 

But as spend management tools have become crucial to companies, Mesh is onboarding new clients at a faster pace and seeing more customers shift all of their payments over to Mesh’s platform, Zehavi said. That’s happening when finance teams “are really under pressure,” he added.

In March, competitor Ramp raised $200 million in equity and $550 million in debt financing to fuel its growth. Despite the investments pumped into fintechs by venture capital firms, big banks still dominate the corporate card market. Zehavi estimated newer fintech players’ market share is less than 1.5%. “It’s still totally untapped,” he said.


By Caitlin Mullen on July 12, 2022
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