
What I appreciate most is that Briq brings our financial and project data into one place instead of relying on multiple disconnected spreadsheets, which makes it much easier for me in a product management and sales role to understand margins and cost performance without constantly going back to finance, and the forecasting and scenario planning features are particularly useful when preparing or adjusting deals because they give a more structured way to test assumptions, while the dashboards provide a clearer and more up-to-date view of project health than what we had before, ultimately reducing the constant back-and-forth across teams just to get basic numbers. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.
What I find less ideal is that the initial setup takes a fair amount of time and coordination since the data needs to be properly structured for the platform to deliver meaningful insights, and some of the dashboards are not immediately intuitive and require manual tweaking before they become truly useful, while there is also a noticeable learning curve for non-finance users at the beginning, and performance can occasionally slow down when dealing with larger or more complex datasets. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

