Payment Released When the Work Is Done. Not When the Invoice Arrives.
In most commercial maintenance operations, the payment process works like this: the vendor completes the work, submits an invoice, someone approves it, and payment goes out. The assumption built into that sequence is that the work was actually done — done to scope, done by someone with the right credentials, done with the documentation that compliance requires, and billed at the rate the contract specifies.
That assumption is wrong often enough to matter. Not because vendors are dishonest — but because the default payment model has no mechanism for verifying any of those conditions before the money leaves. The invoice arrives. Someone approves it. The questions nobody asked cost more than the invoice itself when they eventually surface.
Sweven's Payment Automation changes the sequence. Payment is held until completion is verified — then released automatically, without anyone having to process it manually. The verification is built into the work order workflow. By the time payment is released, every required condition has been confirmed.
What the Default Payment Model Actually Costs
The direct cost of a maintenance invoice is what appears on the vendor bill. The total cost of the payment process is something different — and it's almost never calculated.
Consider a standard corrective maintenance event: HVAC repair, $3,400 invoice, approved and paid in the same week. What the invoice doesn't capture: the FM time spent following up to confirm the vendor was coming. The building manager's time fielding tenant complaints during the unannounced delay. The work order that closed without a service report because nobody required the documentation at close. The invoice that billed for materials at a rate 12% above the contracted price — caught when someone eventually did a contract audit, not when the invoice was approved.
Multiply that pattern across a portfolio of 20 or 50 properties, across hundreds of work orders per year, and the gap between what the invoices say and what the maintenance program actually cost becomes material. One commercial operation identified $90,000 in annual billing variance from a single vendor — not fraud, but systematic billing drift that accumulated because invoice review was cursory and nobody was comparing the invoice to the contracted rate on each work order.
The payment process that doesn't verify before releasing is not just an administrative gap. It's a financial control gap that compounds silently across the life of every vendor relationship in the portfolio.
The Payment Flow — Every Gate, In Order
Sweven's payment automation is a sequential verification process. Payment doesn't release until every gate in the sequence passes. The gates are not bureaucratic checkpoints — they're the conditions that confirm the work was done correctly, documented properly, and billed accurately before any money moves.
If any gate requires client input, the work order moves to the client's exception queue with the specific issue flagged and the information needed to resolve it. The rest of the payment queue continues moving while the exception is reviewed.
What Disappears From Your Operation
The payment model that runs on verification removes a specific set of operational costs that the previous model carried invisibly.
Real-Time Spend Visibility Across Your Portfolio
The payment automation layer is also the financial visibility layer. Every dollar that moves through the system is tracked against the work order that authorized it — by site, by trade, by vendor, by period — in real time, without requiring end-of-month reconciliation.
What becomes visible that wasn't before:
The Financial Close of a Verified Operation
Payment automation is the final step of Sweven FM's end-to-end maintenance workflow. The work order was created by the engine. The vendor was dispatched through the marketplace with verified credentials. The work was executed and documented at close. The invoice was matched against the contract. The compliance record was confirmed. The payment released automatically.
Each step in that sequence is a gate. The payment is the confirmation that every gate passed — not an assumption that the work was done because someone submitted a bill.
See What Your Current Payment Process Is Missing
The gap between what your maintenance invoices say and what your maintenance program actually cost is almost always larger than it appears until someone measures it.