- Digital‑native workers are accelerating the shift away from paper checks and manual workflows, pushing businesses to modernize long‑standing B2B payment practices
- Legacy systems and process inertia slowed previous modernization, but rising fraud risks and limited visibility in paper‑based payments are driving renewed urgency
- Embedded finance and tools like virtual cards are enabling faster, more secure, data‑rich transactions, aligning commercial payments with the seamless digital experiences common in consumer finance
- Mastercard stock (NYSE:MA) opened trading at US$489.85
A new commentary from Mastercard (NYSE:MA) executive Mike Kresse is drawing renewed attention to how rapidly changing workforce demographics are influencing the modernization of business‑to‑business (B2B) payments.
Kresse, who serves as executive vice president for commercial and new payment flows in North America, published a letter describing how digital‑native generations are accelerating the shift away from paper checks, manual approvals and other long‑standing commercial payment habits.
In his letter, Kresse highlights the widening gap between consumer and commercial payment behaviours. While online and mobile payments have become standard in consumers’ daily lives, many businesses continue to operate with paper‑based processes that have changed little in decades. His observations echo a broader industry trend: younger employees are increasingly questioning why business payments remain dependent on workflows their generation seldom encounters outside the workplace.
Complexity and legacy systems slowed modernization
Analysts note that the slow pace of change in B2B payments has been shaped by structural factors. Commercial transactions often involve multiple approval layers, long‑standing supplier relationships and legacy enterprise software, making process redesign more challenging than in consumer finance. Many organizations digitized only portions of their workflows, automating tasks while leaving physical checks and manual reconciliations largely intact.
These entrenched systems have created reliability concerns. Paper checks remain one of the payment methods most frequently targeted for fraud, and manual invoice handling can lead to delays, limited visibility and inconsistent data across finance teams. Kresse’s letter points to these risks, describing a system that still functions but no longer aligns with the speed and transparency companies now expect.
Embedded finance and virtual cards reshape B2B transactions
A growing set of digital tools is beginning to address these vulnerabilities. Businesses are adopting embedded payments integrated directly into procurement and expense tools, reducing handoffs and enabling real‑time tracking of transactions. Virtual cards, a key area of growth, give organizations granular control through customizable limits and detailed transaction data.
Industry observers say these capabilities mirror the qualities that transformed consumer payments: simplicity, speed and stronger security. As these technologies mature, companies are increasingly expecting similar benefits in commercial environments, especially as payment credentials and security features continue to evolve.
Younger workers play a central role in pushing change
Kresse’s commentary underscores that modernization is being driven not only by technology but also by shifting expectations within the workforce. Employees in their 20s and 30s—many of whom have never relied on paper checks, faxed invoices or multipart approval chains—are challenging long‑standing practices and advocating for fully digital solutions.
Unlike previous generations, today’s workforce has access to software that can be deployed quickly and scaled without major infrastructure investments, strengthening the case for change. Companies report that younger staff often help demonstrate how digital tools can improve compliance, accelerate payments and reduce fraud exposure, making modernization an operational necessity rather than a convenience.
A turning point for commercial payments
With trillions of dollars still flowing through paper‑based processes each year, experts caution that the transition will not happen overnight. But the combination of new technology, workforce turnover and rising fraud concerns is creating strong momentum. Kresse’s letter reflects a growing consensus in the industry: B2B payments appear poised for a significant and sustained shift toward fully digital, integrated systems.
As retirements reshape finance departments and digital‑native employees assume leadership roles, businesses may see long‑standing payment routines replaced by systems that better align with today’s digital economy.
About Mastercard
Mastercard Inc. provides transaction processing and other payment-related products and services in the United States and internationally.
Mastercard stock (NYSE:MA) opened trading at US$489.85 and has lost 8.50 per cent since this time last year.
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