Founders should approve decisions, not do bookkeeping.
Prosper was built around a simple conviction: messy founder finances need a cleanup layer before they become accounting work.
A note from the founder
I built Prosper because founder finances get messy fast.
I'm a product builder, not a CPA. Like every founder, I still had to answer for my own books. Personal cards, owner transfers, missing receipts, and messy imports all turned into chase work.
I didn't want to become an accountant. I wanted the cleanup organized so a CPA could review it.
That is what Prosper does. It groups the messy activity into decisions, shows the evidence, waits for approval, and packages the result for the person who actually makes accounting and tax calls.
- Endrit Hajno, Founder
The story behind the product
The problem
Most founders end up in one of two bad states: they either clean up finances themselves and lose time every week, or they adopt a broader accounting platform and still spend too much time chasing receipts, transfers, and owner payments.
That gap is where Prosper lives. The goal is not to replace accounting fundamentals. The goal is to remove repetitive cleanup work and make the remaining decisions easier to trust.
The product belief
Prosper is built around explainability before trust. The system should show its reasoning, gather evidence, and make a recommendation before anything changes.
That means conservative automation by default. High-confidence work can move quickly. Anything unclear, risky, or financially meaningful should pause for decision-by-decision approval.
What Prosper is trying to change
- manual finance cleanup every week
- mystery automations you cannot verify
- month-end evidence scrambles
- sending messy records to an accountant
- decision-by-decision approval
- clear evidence linked to recommendations
- a monthly CPA-ready packet
- likely business expenses packaged for CPA review
Who this is for
Prosper is for founders who want relief, and for accountants, bookkeepers, and agencies who want cleaner inputs and more leverage. It is strongest when the business needs disciplined cleanup before the ledger, not a sprawling ERP.
That focus is deliberate. Prosper is not trying to be everything. It is trying to be the most trustworthy way for founders to turn messy records into CPA-ready evidence.
Want to help shape it?
Join the design partner program or create an account and see how the workflow feels in practice.