Industries
Custom apps, written for your kind of business.
We work across a handful of industries where the same patterns come up again and again. Pick the one closest to yours for a page written for that vertical — workflows, the tools you tend to outgrow, and the apps we'd build.

Law firms & professional services
Most small and mid-size law firms run on a mix of shared inboxes, spreadsheets, and individual lawyer notebooks. It works until intake volume grows, until a partner asks for pipeli…
See the law page
Clinics & wellness practices
Generic booking tools assume one practitioner, one duration, one intake form. Real clinics have multiple practitioners with different services, durations that depend on what's book…
See the clinics page
Trades & home services
Most trades businesses run on three or four tools that almost talk to each other: a job-tracking SaaS, QuickBooks, a payments processor, a scheduling tool. Per-seat pricing punishe…
See the trades page
Accounting & bookkeeping firms
Every engagement spawns dozens of emails about documents — requests, follow-ups, 'did you get this?', last-minute uploads. Documents arrive in five different places. Staff start th…
See the accounting page
Agencies & consultants
Most small agencies run on a stack of Notion, Slack, Asana, a shared drive, and email. It works until you have 10 clients in flight. Then per-client info is scattered, status is in…
See the agencies page
Real estate & property management
Most brokerages and property managers run on a stack that almost works: a CRM nobody trusts, a spreadsheet for transactions, an email folder for tenant requests, and a separate too…
See the real page
Not in one of these industries?
We still might be a fit. The patterns we solve — scattered customer info, repetitive admin, generic SaaS that almost fits — show up in almost every kind of business. Tell us what you're trying to fix.