We Built the Systems. Then We Saw What They Couldn't Do.
The founding team spent their careers inside the companies that built modern Sales, Billing and Revenue systems. They saw the gap not from the outside, but from the inside.
The founders of Continuous spent their careers building the revenue infrastructure that powers the modern enterprise. John Banks led CPQ, billing, and revenue management product strategy at Salesforce, Conga, and Zuora. Sean Joyce drove partner strategy and cloud billing programs at Salesforce Revenue Cloud, Navint, Apttus, and Zuora. John He architected engineering foundations at Zuora, 6sense, and Yahoo. Ramin Yavari spent a decade at Salesforce and Conga designing the complex integrations that connect commercial and financial systems.
Between them, they had seen every version of the same problem. Salesforce was getting better at selling. NetSuite was getting better at accounting. But the space between a closed deal in Salesforce and a recognized revenue line in NetSuite — where orders become invoices, invoices become revenue, and revenue becomes the auditable financial truth — remained stubbornly manual, fragile, and expensive.
Every company that implemented Salesforce CPQ or ARM eventually had to answer the same question: how does this connect to NetSuite? The answer was always some combination of custom code, middleware, spreadsheets, and a reconciliation team that spent close week cleaning up what the systems couldn't figure out on their own.
And then usage-based pricing arrived. AI tokens, consumption tiers, prepaid credits, and commitment models generated raw data at a volume and complexity that billing systems were never designed to handle. The gap didn't just persist — it got dramatically worse.
In 2021, the four co-founders decided to close it for good. Not with another middleware layer. Not with a standalone billing tool that creates its own silo. But with embedded infrastructure — native applications that live inside Salesforce and NetSuite, govern the revenue lifecycle between them, and extend both platforms without replacing either.