Malaysian small and medium enterprises (SMEs) continue to grapple with manual invoicing, scattered financial records and disconnected business tools, even as regulatory timelines around e-invoicing evolve.

These ongoing operational gaps have led to the introduction of solutions like QuickIn, designed to centralise invoicing, sales tracking and financial management for SMEs.
Built by a team with accounting and finance backgrounds, the platform is designed for immediate usability without the need for additional hardware or complex setup.
According to its developers, SMEs often rely on tools that do not integrate well, resulting in duplicated work and inconsistent records. By consolidating invoices, payments and transaction histories, the system aims to streamline workflows and reduce administrative errors.
“Many Malaysian SMEs are resilient and hardworking, but they’re often held back by manual processes and disconnected tools that were never designed for how they actually operate,” said Leon Wong, Co-founder and Financial Systems Architect of QuickIn. He said the platform was developed to provide a unified system to simplify invoicing and financial management while reducing daily operational friction.
With QuickIn, businesses can issue invoices, enable self-billed invoicing, consolidate multiple transactions and manage everything through a single dashboard. Automatic updates keep financial records accurate, while paperless workflows help reduce administrative workload. The all-in-one e-invoicing solution platform also integrates seamlessly with existing systems, enabling SMEs to improve efficiency without operational disruption.
By simplifying core financial processes, the system helps SMEs reduce reliance on manual work and adopt more structured operations, improve cash flow visibility, and support faster decision-making.
QuickIn is among platforms entering the SME digital management space as businesses review internal systems amid evolving regulatory and operational demands. It offers an easy entry point.


