Full-Time

Employee Event Program Specialist

Posted on 10/1/2025

Plaid

Plaid

1,001-5,000 employees

Provides APIs to access financial data.

Compensation Overview

$111.6k - $152.4k/yr

Company Historically Provides H1B Sponsorship

San Francisco, CA, USA

Hybrid

Must be in the San Francisco office three days per week (Tuesday through Thursday).

Category
People & HR (1)
Required Skills
Canva
Requirements
  • 4–6 years of experience in internal events, employee experience, or workplace programming
  • Proven ability to independently plan and execute events or culture initiatives from start to finish
  • Strong communication skills and comfort creating internal-facing content (event invites, newsletters, internal promos)
  • High level of organization and attention to detail, with experience managing multiple projects at once
  • A collaborative, people-first mindset and a passion for creating inclusive, engaging employee experiences
  • Experience with tools like Google Workspace, Slack, Canva, and event platforms like Eventbrite or Splash
  • Ability to be scrappy and resourceful, especially when working under tight timelines or limited budgets
  • Comfortable being in the San Francisco office three days per week (Tuesday through Thursday) and being a visible part of the office culture
Responsibilities
  • Lead the planning and execution of internal employee events in the San Francisco office, including seasonal celebrations, team social hours, milestone events, and more
  • Partner with stakeholders to support employee experience initiatives like onboarding, recognition, and company newsletters
  • Support or consult on internal events in other satellite offices, ensuring consistency with company culture and goals
  • Plan and support virtual events that build connection and engagement for remote employees across locations
  • Create and manage event communications, including invites, promotional materials, and event recaps
  • Collaborate cross-functionally with People, Comms, and the Workplace Operations teams to align on programming and execution
  • Manage event logistics including vendors, budgets, timelines, and feedback surveys
  • Serve as a visible culture champion in the San Francisco office, keeping a pulse on what energizes employees and continuously evolving programming to match

Plaid provides APIs that connect users’ financial accounts to apps and services, letting developers securely access financial data for transactions, balances, authentication, identity verification, investments, and more. Its product works by developers integrating Plaid’s API endpoints into their applications, enabling data sharing and features like account linking, real-time balances, and ACH payments across a broad network. Compared with competitors, Plaid emphasizes wide coverage, ease of integration for developers, and a large ecosystem of partners in the US and Europe, with revenue coming from API usage fees. Its goal is to simplify secure access to financial data for consumers, small businesses, and enterprises, helping fintechs build and scale financial services efficiently.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

Late Stage VC

Total Funding

$1.3B

Headquarters

San Francisco, California

Founded

2013

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Perplexity partnership enables AI-powered financial dashboards, expanding Plaid's reach into conversational finance.
  • Alloy integration embeds Plaid Protect fraud intelligence into risk workflows amid 9.2% fraud loss surge.
  • Gr4vy and Finix partnerships tap $4 trillion A2A payments market, reducing card fees by 40%.

What critics are saying

  • CFPB Section 1033 rule enjoined April 2026; compliance timeline uncertain, halting bank API investments.
  • EU PSD3 mandates free open banking APIs by October 2026, eliminating Plaid's European connection revenue.
  • Deepfake fraud surges 300% in 2026, exposing Plaid's network as credential-stuffing attack vector.

What makes Plaid unique

  • Plaid connects 12,000+ financial institutions globally, enabling seamless permissioned data access for developers.
  • Pedro Sanzovo leads fraud prevention using network intelligence as primary AI-driven fraud detection source.
  • Plaid acquired This Week in Fintech, gaining 200k+ subscribers and 75k+ event attendees for ecosystem influence.

Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?

Benefits

We've got you covered: From medical, life, and 401ks, we’re here to support your physical, mental, and financial wellbeing.

Everyone is an owner: We want everyone to feel ownership over their work - literally, which is why we offer equity to full-time Plaids.

Vacation your way: We want to make sure you have time to meet your personal needs with unlimited PTO and two weeks of synchronous, company-wide vacation.

Grow your skills: Every Plaid is in control of their career development with our learning stipends, tools, and trainings.

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

-1%

1 year growth

-1%

2 year growth

0%
GadgetBond
Apr 9th, 2026
Perplexity and Plaid unite to bring all your money data into one smart view.

Perplexity and Plaid unite to bring all your money data into one smart view. By connecting banking, cards, loans, and brokerage accounts through Plaid, Perplexity turns scattered balances into one live, AI-ready financial snapshot. - Editor-in-Chief Apr 9, 2026, 12:47 PM EDT Perplexity has quietly become one of those tools people lean on when money questions get complicated - the kind you can't solve with a simple spreadsheet or a quick Google search. And now, by teaming up with Plaid, it's turning into something closer to a unified financial command center than just an AI answer engine. At a high level, this partnership means you can securely connect your bank accounts, credit cards, loans, and investment accounts to Perplexity through Plaid, and then actually talk to your money in plain language - "What did I spend on eating out last month?" or "Am I on track for retirement?" - instead of hopping between five different apps. Behind the scenes, Plaid is doing what it already does for thousands of other finance apps: acting as the secure pipe between your financial institutions and the tool you actually use day-to-day. Plaid maintains integrations with 12,000+ financial institutions globally and has been used by more than half of Americans with a bank account, powering connections for apps like Venmo, Robinhood, SoFi, and Chime. That same infrastructure now sits underneath Perplexity's finance experience. What's different here is how that data is used. Once your accounts are connected, Perplexity Computer - the platform's more advanced "build-anything" AI - can analyze your real transactions and balances to generate custom dashboards, trackers, models, and even full financial mini-apps tailored to you. Instead of a one-size-fits-all budgeting app, you effectively get a finance stack that morphs around your own questions and habits. Crucially, the integration is read-only: Plaid shares data you've explicitly permissioned, but Perplexity doesn't move money or initiate transactions, and the user data stays isolated from Perplexity's core servers. That's in line with Plaid's broader permissioned data model, where consumers can see which apps they've connected, what data was shared, and revoke access at any time via Plaid's own Permissions Manager and consumer controls. So what does this actually look like in practice? For many users, it starts with consolidating the mess. The average person is juggling nearly three separate finance apps just to track budgeting and investing, which means different logins, different dashboards, and never quite a complete picture. With Plaid wired into Perplexity, you can pull: * Credit cards, to break down spending by category and merchant with full transaction detail. * Mortgages, auto loans, and student loans, to monitor balances, payment history, and payoff progress. * Checking, savings, and investment accounts, to finally see an up-to-date, combined net worth in one place. From there, the interesting part kicks in: you're not locked into fixed widgets or canned charts. You can ask the AI to build what you wish your bank app would give you, for example: * A net worth calculator and dashboard that pulls in your checking, brokerage, and loan accounts and updates daily without you lifting a finger. * A custom budget tracker that uses your actual transaction history and the categories you care about - rent, groceries, dining, entertainment - instead of generic "shopping" buckets. * A debt payoff planner that models different strategies (snowball vs. avalanche) across your credit cards and loans, using real balances, interest rates, and minimum payments. * A retirement readiness dashboard that looks at your brokerage and 401(k) holdings, age, and monthly contributions to estimate whether you're on pace for your target nest egg. * A cash flow forecast that projects your balance week by week using income, upcoming bills, and spending patterns, flagging when your checking account might dip below a comfort threshold. These aren't just static exports. Tools built with Perplexity Computer can run in the background, refreshing themselves as new data comes in via Plaid, effectively acting as always-on financial monitors. It's the kind of advisor-like intelligence that used to be reserved for people with human wealth managers, but delivered through a conversational interface. On the data quality side, Perplexity layers Plaid's real-time, permissioned account feeds with institutional-grade market data - think FactSet, Nasdaq, S&P Global, Coinbase, SEC filings, and similar sources. That means if you ask about your equity exposure, sector concentration, or how a specific ETF in your portfolio is constructed, the answer is grounded not just in your balances but in professional research datasets. Every figure comes with inline citations you can hover over and click through to the original documents, which is very much in line with Perplexity's broader mission of transparent, sourced answers. From Plaid's perspective, this is almost a case study in what "intelligent finance" is supposed to look like: user-permissioned data feeding an AI that can synthesize holdings, transactions, and securities data into something you can reason about in a single conversation. The company has been pushing this idea of open finance - standardized, API-driven access to financial data across institutions - and the Perplexity integration slots neatly into that vision. Of course, any time personal financial data and AI appear in the same sentence, security and privacy questions follow. Plaid's entire pitch is that it's built around secure, permissioned access: it uses modern authentication, minimizes data sharing to what's actually needed, and offers clear visibility to both consumers and financial institutions about where data is flowing. Users can review and revoke app access via Plaid's consumer portal, while banks can monitor and manage Plaid-powered connections via dashboards and APIs. That framework carries over unchanged into this partnership; Perplexity is essentially plugging into a safety stack that already underpins a significant chunk of the fintech ecosystem. Rollout-wise, the integration is live on desktop for signed-in users in the US and Canada, with mobile and more countries on the roadmap. Standard Perplexity users can connect portfolios, see an overview on the Portfolio page, and ask financial questions, while the more advanced Computer-powered workflows - the heavy-duty dashboards and custom apps - are reserved for Pro and Max subscribers. Looking forward, Perplexity says it plans to add crypto wallets, real estate, and other asset classes to this unified view, which would push it closer to a true full-balance-sheet assistant rather than just an investment overlay. Combined with Plaid's own roadmap around AI, fraud defenses, and broader open finance infrastructure, the trajectory is clear: more data, more context, and more personalization in how people understand their money. For everyday users, the appeal is pretty straightforward. Instead of treating financial data as something that lives in static statements and siloed apps, this partnership turns it into a live context for an AI that can actually reason about your situation. Your accounts become not just numbers on a screen, but the raw material for ongoing, conversational guidance - grounded in trusted data pipes from Plaid and institutional sources, and tailored to whatever question you have about your financial life that day.

Alloy
Apr 2nd, 2026
Alloy partners with Plaid to expand access to risk solutions as AI threats increase.

Alloy partners with Plaid to expand access to risk solutions as AI threats increase. NEW YORK (April 2, 2026) - Alloy, a leading identity and fraud prevention platform provider, today announced a partnership with Plaid, a global data network powering the digital financial ecosystem, to provide more financial institutions with improved digital tools to fight back against AI-driven fraud. In the past two years, the amount of money stolen by scammers and fraudsters rose 9.2%, largely driven by use of artificial intelligence. As financial institutions combat this increasing threat, the partnership enables Alloy clients to more easily build a holistic picture of customer identities from the start, lowering fraud losses and automating more of their KYC/KYB/AML workflows to reduce manual reviews. "AI is rapidly reshaping the risk landscape for financial institutions, and the best way to keep up is to embrace AI to fight it," said Adam Yoxtheimer, head of partnerships at Plaid. "Companies like Alloy make it easy for banks to adapt and embed AI-powered tools and signals to see outside the walls of their institution. Together, we'll help more institutions test and deploy the solutions needed to better understand risk and defend against fraud." According to Alloy's 2026 State of Fraud Report, only 24% of financial institutions and fintechs detect fraud at the time of onboarding. That leaves most organizations detecting fraud only after bad actors are in the system and money has already been stolen. To reduce these losses, companies need to build a robust, data-rich view of customer identities at onboarding and continue to monitor those identities on an ongoing basis. Rather than relying on a single data provider, Alloy's data orchestration enables institutions to layer and test hundreds of identity, fraud, and compliance solutions in parallel and adapt strategies as threats evolve. Plaid Protect combines machine learning models with cross-institutional insights to help detect fraud throughout a user's lifecycle. Through the partnership, mutual customers can securely access Plaid Protect's network-level fraud intelligence directly in their Alloy workflows. In addition, the Alloy platform will now also include access to Plaid's tools for verifying identities and assets and streamlining onboarding to build safer, more resilient experiences at scale. Clients can add these Plaid products directly from the Alloy platform, experiment with how they interact with other data sources, and roll out the combinations that best fit their risk appetite and growth goals. Plaid expands its presence in Alloy's industry-leading network of over 250 partner solutions, all easily discoverable, configurable, and testable in Alloy's Partner Center. Clients can test different configurations and utilize Plaid alongside other best-in-class solutions without building or maintaining separate point-to-point integrations. "Alloy was built on the idea that there is no single silver bullet for fraud or compliance," said Brian Bender, General Manager, Partner Solutions at Alloy. "Our clients need the freedom to layer, test, and evolve their data strategies as threats change. Deepening our partnership with Plaid is a natural extension of that vision." About Alloy Alloy provides an identity and fraud prevention platform that enables global financial institutions and fintechs to manage identity risk so they can grow with confidence. Over 800 of the world's largest financial institutions and fintechs turn to Alloy's end-to-end platform to access actionable intelligence and the broadest network of data sources across the industry, as well as stay ahead of fraud, credit, and compliance risks. Founded in 2015, Alloy is powering the delivery of great financial products to more customers around the world.

Financial IT
Mar 31st, 2026
Gr4vy and Plaid partner to enable Pay-by-Bank payments for global merchants.

Gr4vy and Plaid partner to enable Pay-by-Bank payments for global merchants. * Banking * 31.03.2026 03:15 pm Gr4vy, the cloud-based payment orchestration platform, today announced a strategic partnership with Plaid, the global data network powering open-banking connections for fintechs and financial institutions. The collaboration enables merchants using Gr4vy to offer Pay-by-Bank, also known as account-to-account (A2A) payments, as part of their core checkout experience, providing a lower-cost alternative to card transactions without additional integration complexity. Account-to-account payments are becoming an increasingly important part of the global payments mix as merchants seek to reduce fees and improve payment reliability. Industry estimates project the global A2A payments opportunity to reach approximately $4 trillion (£3 trillion) by 2030, driven by the expansion of open banking and real-time payment infrastructure across major markets. Through the integration, Gr4vy merchants gain direct access to Plaid's bank connectivity, allowing customers to authenticate and pay directly from their bank accounts during checkout. Plaid's network supports millions of financial interactions each day and connects users to more than 12,000 financial institutions across the U.S., Canada, the U.K., and Europe. Its technology is used by leading fintech platforms, Fortune 500 companies and global banks. John Lunn, Founder and CEO of Gr4vy, said the partnership reflects a shift in how merchants approach payment strategy. "By integrating Plaid into our orchestration layer, we're enabling merchants to introduce Pay by Bank globally through a single connection, helping them reduce costs, improve conversion, and offer a trusted alternative to card payments." The integration also enables merchants to apply real-time ACH risk insights via Plaid Signal, approving more good payments and reducing failed payments due to insufficient funds or fraud. This allows payment routing and risk decisions to be managed within the same orchestration layer, rather than through separate systems. "Our partnership with Gr4vy makes it easier for merchants to adopt Pay by Bank within a modern payment architecture," said Adam Yoxtheimer, Head of Partnerships at Plaid. "As open banking continues to shape how payments are initiated and authorised, this integration gives businesses a straightforward way to offer bank-based payments alongside cards." The partnership combines Plaid's open-banking connectivity with Gr4vy's flexible orchestration layer, enabling merchants to add Pay by Bank with minimal development effort, benefit from lower processing costs through ACH, and improve conversion by routing bank transfers using real-time, risk-aware decisioning. The Gr4vy-Plaid integration is now available to enterprise merchants and platforms looking to modernise their payment infrastructure and support bank-based payments through a unified orchestration layer.

Yahoo Finance
Mar 27th, 2026
Finix partners with Plaid to speed up merchant onboarding and cut payment costs by 40%

Finix, a full-stack payment processor, has partnered with Plaid to integrate bank verification directly into its platform. The integration embeds Plaid's authentication and identity APIs into Finix to support fast, secure bank account verification across merchant onboarding, payouts and payment management. The partnership enables businesses to instantly connect, verify and update bank accounts, helping reduce onboarding delays and mitigate fraud risk. Finix customers can access Plaid's authentication flow through no-code onboarding forms or embed it using APIs. The integration also enhances payouts by verifying account ownership before funds are sent, reducing payment returns and strengthening control over funds flow. According to Plaid, the seamless bank payment flow can reduce processing costs by up to 40% compared to card payments.

Boland Hill Media, LLC
Mar 27th, 2026
Square signs Steak Escape and other digital transactions news briefs from 3/27/26.

Square signs Steak Escape and other digital transactions news briefs from 3/27/26. * Block Inc.'s Square point-of-sale payments unit will provide terminals, kiosks, and kitchen-display systems and process payments for Steak Escape, a 23-location fast-food chain. * Visa Inc. said it has worked with Pinwheel, a platform for in-app bill management, to launch its Enhanced Subscription Manager service, aimed at helping consumers track and manage recurring charges. The number of subscriptions globally is expected to reach 12 billion by 2030, Visa says. * Finix Payments Inc. said it has integrated authentication and identity APIs from open-banking platform Plaid Inc. to enable fast bank-account verification throughout merchant onboarding, payouts, and routine payment management. * AccelPay, a payments platform specializing in the alcohol industry, has merged with ReserveBar, a technology marketplace serving the same business. Terms of the merger were not announced. * Collectly Inc., a billing and payments platform for health-care providers, has closed on its acquisition of Pledge Health, a provider of AI technology for the same market. Terms were not announced. * Christine Katziff is joining the board of directors at payments-sofware provider Flywire Corp. following a nearly four-decade career at Bank of America Corp. * Cents Technologies Inc., a payments-technology provider for the laundry industry, said it has closed on a $140-million Series C funding round led by Sumeru Equity Partners.

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