This might be common knowledge or maybe not, I don't know. I've not been in "traditional employment" for many years, but recently started earning fiat from a W2 employer. The payroll service they use, ADP, lets me add multiple direct deposit methods.
So I can, in my ADP (payroll) app, specify that I want a certain amount of funds from each paycheck pushed to Strike. This saves me 2% (as Strike now charges 2% for deposits via debit card).
This will be useful for those who dollar-cost average with each paycheck.
I always thought there was one single bank account number that my pay would be sent when I wanted "direct deposit". But this discovery makes it so I can send part of my pay to Strike, maybe even some to Cash App, etc.
This is different from the DCA (dollar cost averaging) methods that an exchange offers. In those instances, that's a "pull"-based ACH transaction. Direct Deposit is a push-based ACH transaction, where ADP pushes the funds to whatever bank account I specify (with certain restrictions, of course).
Just thought I would share, should I not be the only person on earth who didn't know this was possible.