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As you look to integrate your product with customers’ financial software, you may end up evaluating Rutter and Codat.
While both unified API solutions largely focus on financial software integrations, they differ in significant ways—which can make one better suited for your business than the other.
We’ll help you decide on the better solution for your organization by breaking down how each works and their respective pros and cons.
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Rutter
It’s a unified API solution that lets you integrate your product with customers’ accounting, commerce, payments, and ads solutions.
Rutter offers 50+ integrations across 4 categories of financial software
Pros
Provides sandbox access to several endpoints for both NetSuite and QuickBooks, allowing you to test many, if not all, of your integrations with these applications
Offers more categories and integrations than Codat, giving the solution a higher chance of meeting your integration needs
Has SDKs in more programming languages than Codat (7 languages vs 5)
Allows you to submit integration requests relatively easily (via their integration library landing page)
Cons
Fails to provide automated issue detection capabilities, forcing your engineers to discover and diagnose issues themselves
Doesn’t support file-based integrations, which can prove problematic when the 3rd-party solutions you want to connect to don’t offer APIs or the specific endpoints you need
Works with a small number of customers (“100+ fintech companies"). As a result, their integrations have yet to experience—and address—a wide range of edge cases
Shares minimal information on their pricing model—you'd have to schedule time with one of their sales reps to get any meaningful insights
Codat supports nearly 30 integrations across banking, commerce, and accounting
Strengths
Supports file-based integrations in a variety of formats, such as PDF, JPG, and CSV
Partners with a relatively high number of customers (“over 300 clients globally”), making their integrations more battle-tested and, in turn, reliable
Works with enterprise companies, which has helped them refine and improve their integrations faster than Rutter
Weaknesses
Doesn’t provide sandbox access to any applications. This can force you to form business partnerships with several API providers, each of which can be time intensive to form and come at a high, recurring cost
They gate certain integrations (i.e., force you to request access to them), including QuickBooks and NetSuite, which adds an additional layer of friction for adopting them
Fails to support POST invoice use cases, while Rutter does
The better choice naturally depends on the types of financial integrations you’re looking to build. However, since both solutions don’t offer a diverse set of categories or provide comprehensive integration observability capabilities, neither is likely to meet your integration needs over time.
Why you should try Merge instead
Merge offers all the benefits of Rutter and Codat while also addressing their drawbacks by providing:
Powerful integration observability features; this includes automated issue detection and suggested resolution functionality, fully-searchable logs, and a dashboard to review integration health holistically
Flexible and robust data syncs; Merge offers comprehensive Common Models and advanced features,like Field Mapping and Authenticated Passthrough Request, to help you sync a wide range of standard and custom data
Using Field Mapping, you can hypothetically map the field “custom_score” in Greenhouse to a new Common Model field in Merge’s ATS Unified API, “technical_assessment_score”
A wide array of integrations beyond accounting; Merge supports more than a dozen accounting integrations (and counting!), along with hundreds of CRM, HRIS, ATS, ticketing, and file storage integrations
Battle-tested integrations; Merge works with numerous enterprise companies, which has led the company to develop resilient and reliable integrations
Jon Gitlin is the Managing Editor of Merge's blog. He has several years of experience in the integration and automation space; before Merge, he worked at Workato, an integration platform as a service (iPaaS) solution, where he also managed the company's blog. In his free time he loves to watch soccer matches, go on long runs in parks, and explore local restaurants.
Merge offers more flexible, reliable, and robust accounting integrations—along with hundreds of other integrations across CRM, HRIS, ATS, file storage, and ticketing.