Nominal vs Fieldguide
A detailed side-by-side comparison to help you choose the right AI finance / accounting agent for your needs.
Best for multi-entity financial consolidation
Nominal
Nominal is an AI financial data infrastructure platform built for finance teams managing complexity across multiple legal entities, currencies, and ERP systems. At its core, Nominal provides a univers...
AI Models
Proprietary Nominal AICustom LLMs for financial queries
Key Features
- Universal ERP ingestion normalizing data from any accounting system
- Automated intercompany elimination and multi-currency consolidation
- Plain-English financial queries across all entities
- Full audit trail tracing every consolidated figure to source transactions
- Board-ready report generation with AI narrative summaries
Pricing
Growth — Custom pricing
Enterprise — Custom pricing
Pros
- Eliminates weeks of manual intercompany elimination work
- ERP-agnostic design works with any source system
- Plain-English queries democratize financial data access
Cons
- Pricing is opaque and requires a sales conversation
- Best suited for multi-entity complexity; overkill for single-entity companies
Best for audit, advisory, and tax engagement management
Fieldguide
Fieldguide is an AI platform purpose-built for professional services firms in audit, advisory, and tax, replacing the fragmented mix of spreadsheets, shared drives, and legacy engagement software that...
AI Models
GPT-4oProprietary Fieldguide audit modelsCustom extraction models
Key Features
- AI-drafted work programs and audit procedure steps
- Centralized document request management with automated follow-ups
- AI-assisted findings drafting and evidence summarization
- Immutable audit trails meeting PCAOB and AICPA standards
- Client portal for secure document exchange
Pricing
Professional — Custom pricing
Enterprise — Custom pricing
Pros
- Purpose-built for professional services firms, not a generic tool
- AI drafting of work programs significantly reduces engagement setup time
- Immutable audit trails satisfy regulatory documentation requirements
Cons
- Focused exclusively on audit, advisory, and tax—not general accounting
- Enterprise pricing requires custom negotiation with sales