Before our first sales call, we build a working prototype of your custom platform. If we don't end up working together — for any reason — it's yours. Code, database, login, all of it.
Built in ~72 hours · You keep it either way · No obligation
No fine print. If we part ways, here's exactly what transfers to your team.
By the time we meet, you're not evaluating a pitch — you're clicking through a working version of your own platform. The prototype is the conversation.
No proposal-graveyard. No "thanks for your time." You walk away with code, a database, and a real artifact you can show your team, your board, or your next vendor.
The prototype is rudimentary on purpose. It's a seed, not a finished product. Every time you log in, you'll feel the gap between "this toy" and "what our operation actually needs." That gap is the point.
Tell us how your operation runs today. Within ~72 hours, we hand you a login to a working prototype modeled on your business.
Click through it. Share it with your team. See how the workflows feel when they're not spread across 14 spreadsheets.
If it's a fit, we scope and build the production version. If not — or if you just want time to think — we transfer everything to you and stay in touch.
We host the prototype free for 12 months and check in quarterly. When the pain gets loud enough, the prototype is already there waiting.
There isn't one. We're betting that a real prototype outperforms any sales deck — and that some prospects who say "not now" today come back six months later when the pain has compounded.
No, deliberately. It's a 72-hour build designed to communicate the vision, not run your business. To use it for real work you'd need the full build — but the prototype is a perfectly valid artifact to share internally, demo to your board, or use as a spec for another vendor.
Nothing for the prototype itself. We cover the build cost. The only paid step is if you decide to go forward with the full production build — and that's quoted transparently up front.
Go for it. The code is yours, the GitHub repo transfers to your account, and the database schema is documented. We'd rather you ship something — anywhere — than have the idea die on a shelf.
Best case, we replace the spreadsheets running your operation. Either way, you leave with something real.