Saskatchewan, Canada

Custom business apps across Saskatchewan.

We build custom apps for Saskatchewan businesses - ag operators, trades, mining-services contractors, and the professional firms around them. Two hours east of us, with plenty of overlap to keep work moving every day.

Central Standard Time (CST) year-round - Saskatchewan doesn't observe daylight saving. 2 city pages
Saskatchewan prairie under a wide blue sky with golden wheat fields and a distant grain elevator.

Why Saskatchewan businesses come to us

Saskatchewan's business mix runs heavy on agriculture, ag-tech, mining services, oil and gas in the southeast, and the trades, equipment, and professional services that orbit them. A lot of these businesses are family-run, have been around for decades, and have software that has been bolted together over the years. We come in to replace pieces of that stack with something that actually matches the way the work happens, without forcing a wholesale platform migration.

Saskatchewan stays on the same clock all year. That actually simplifies scheduling and reporting logic for any app you build - no twice-yearly DST bugs.

Industries

The kinds of Saskatchewan businesses we work with

  • Agriculture, grain handling, and ag equipment
  • Mining and resource services
  • Trades, contracting, and equipment rental
  • Logistics and prairie-wide trucking
  • Accountants, law firms, and consulting practices

FAQ

Common questions from Saskatchewan businesses

Will the no-DST quirk cause issues in scheduling tools?

The opposite - it removes a whole class of bugs. Booking systems and reporting dashboards built for Saskatchewan clients are simpler than equivalent tools elsewhere in Canada.

Do you work with ag and grain businesses?

Yes. Seasonal-cycle workflows, contract tracking, equipment scheduling, and logistics tools are some of the common patterns we build for ag-adjacent businesses.

Building something for a Saskatchewan business?

Send a short description of the workflow that's slowing you down. We'll tell you straight whether a custom app makes sense, and roughly what it would take.