Folio digitized hotel purchasing – letting departments buy directly instead of routing through central procurement – and signed Sheraton and Hilton fast.
ENTRY ANGLES
Build specialized procurement platforms for verticals with high-volume miscellaneous goods purchasing · Create platforms that enable structured delegation with auditability across business processes · Develop B2B platforms that measure and showcase client savings or revenue growth
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
B2B SaaS platform development, Financial analytics and ROI measurement/attribution, Audit trail and governance infrastructure
PERIOD. PROCUREMENT IS ACTUALLY A RICH AND UNDERAPPRECIATED CATEGORY FOR THIS KIND OF PLATFORM. ...
“will determine B2B success. What matters is measurable cost savings or measurable revenue growth”
It's remarkable how many good startup ideas are hiding in plain sight – in processes so routine that everyone has stopped questioning them.
Here's a fresh example. A startup that made its public debut at a trade show a year ago has since raised $14M in investment – because in the meantime, more than 300 hotels started using its platform, including brands like Sheraton and Hilton.
All Folio did was digitize how hotels buy things – from bed linens, soap, and shampoos to ingredients for the in-house restaurant.
The platform has three modules: Folio Buy (a procurement marketplace), Folio Bills (an AI tool that automatically processes invoices for purchases made on the marketplace), and Folio Pay (a payment system for settling those purchases).
On the marketplace, buyers can compare prices across equivalent products to find the best deal. They also get access to group purchasing discounts – when the marketplace bundles several small orders into one larger order sent to a supplier. The result: hotels can typically save up to 6% compared to buying the same goods elsewhere.
But the real play is operational. Procurement can now be delegated almost entirely to individual departments. Restaurants can order their own food; housekeeping can handle soap, shampoos, and linen replacements independently. Each department operates within pre-approved product categories and pre-set budgets. Anything outside those parameters requires separate approval – but that approval process is automated and lightweight.
Hotel managers retain full visibility across all purchases on a unified dashboard. Full control without micromanagement.
All invoices from marketplace orders are automatically pushed into the hotel's accounting software, with the AI categorizing each purchase to the correct expense line. This saves 70% of the time finance staff previously spent on manual invoice processing.
Folio can also automatically trigger payments on those invoices, respecting both supplier terms and the finance team's payment rules.
As an added benefit, every payment processed through the platform earns cashback – the rate depending on purchase history, product category, and supplier. The group discounts may be bundled into this cashback mechanism.
Hotels can also add their existing suppliers to the platform by saving the login credentials for each supplier's ordering portal. After that, managers assign departments their access rights and configure auto-approval rules. Getting a hotel fully set up on Folio takes no more than 10 days.
The most important thing Folio delivers isn't convenience – it's measurable savings. As one client put it: "Every new technology needs to show a clear and measurable return on investment, and Folio delivers that." Worth noting: this particular client runs a hotel network generating $2B in annual revenue across 39,000 rooms.
Folio's own post about the new funding round states the mission plainly: "our goal is to improve profitability in the hospitality industry." The platform does that through better pricing, group purchase discounts, and hours saved in procurement and accounting.
The broader takeaway: no amount of sophisticated technology, polished UI, or incantations like "digital transformation" or "AI adoption" will determine B2B success. What matters is measurable cost savings or measurable revenue growth – period.
Procurement is actually a rich and underappreciated category for this kind of platform. The most obvious focus is usually "direct" costs – raw materials and components that go into the product being sold – because those flow through to cost of goods sold. But "indirect" costs – packaging, office supplies, consumables, and other miscellaneous purchases – tend to get far less attention despite often representing 10–15% of a company's revenue.
Response ([covered here](/review/neseksualno-no-zato-denezhno)) built a similar centralized procurement platform – but for retail stores, distributors, and logistics companies rather than hotels. It raised $4.2M in February.
Ply ([covered here](/review/otlichnaja-mehanika-dlja-novyh-marketplejsov)) built the same concept for construction, repair, and equipment installation and maintenance services companies. It raised $5.7M.
For anyone thinking this is a niche market – consider Zip ([covered here](/review/rynok-gde-za-2-goda-mozhno-stat-milliardnoj-kompaniej)). Zip graduated from Y Combinator in 2020 with a platform for managing software and cloud service procurement. Within two years it was valued at $1.2B. After that review, it raised another $190M at a $2.2B valuation and expanded into general corporate procurement.
The clearest opportunity here: build specialized procurement platforms for verticals where companies buy large volumes of miscellaneous goods.
That's essentially every industry. The verticals are many, the opportunities are plentiful.
Worth noting for anyone building or marketing any B2B platform: start measuring client savings or revenue growth from day one. This data is the engine of both retention and new sales – without it, you're pitching buzzwords, which rarely works. And the common thread across all the platforms discussed here is the elimination of micromanagement. Specific decisions get pushed to the people doing the work, within defined limits and responsibilities. That reduces overhead while preserving governance and transparency at the leadership level – which isn't possible without the right digital infrastructure.
Is this kind of decentralization only relevant for procurement? Almost certainly not. What other business processes could benefit from a platform that enables structured delegation while keeping everything auditable? That's the question worth sitting with.