What we build for you
Pick what you need built. Each one ships in a fixed-price 30-day sprint, fast and secure, and you own the code when it goes live.
Websites
Fast, secure marketing sites and portals built only for your business, not a template everyone else is using.
- Loads in under a second and holds up on launch day
- Technical SEO wired in from the first line of code
- You own the code, no monthly lock-in
How a 30-day build works
- Days 1-7
Scope
We sit down with you and figure out exactly what to build. No surprises later.
- Days 8-14
First working build
We show you something real and working. You try it, you tell us what feels off.
- Days 15-21
Refine and connect
We polish it, connect it to the tools you already use, and test every corner.
- Days 22-30
Go live
You go live. We hand over the keys, the code, and a short guide so your team can run it.
A working AI, app, website, or automation. Built for your business, owned by you, ready to run.
What we see in growing businesses
The delivery and operations patterns that create drag, and how to fix them.
Most delays start with unclear ownership
When one owner can make and hold key calls, delivery speed improves across the board.
A live build beats another strategy deck
Shipping a usable version quickly gives teams real feedback and ends circular debates.
SEO needs to be built in, not patched later
When SEO is part of the build plan from day one, launches are safer and cheaper.
Automation works best when it solves one real bottleneck first
We map how work gets done, pick the highest-impact manual process, and automate it end to end.
Our rules for momentum
The guardrails that keep programs from losing momentum.
Decide once
We document who owns the call and why it was made.
Ship proof
We prove direction with a real release, not a slide deck.
Stabilize boundaries
We lock the boundaries before the work expands.
Reduce drag
We remove the blockers that stop teams from working in parallel.
Keep the beat
A predictable cadence beats a series of urgent restarts.
Shipped case studies.
How stalled programs moved from debate to delivery.
The App Nobody Wanted to Touch
An Australian healthcare admin company running on an internal tool built five years ago by a developer who had since left. Nobody fully understood it. Adding any feature took weeks. The team had learned to work around it instead.
The CTO knew it needed to be rebuilt but couldn't get leadership sign-off without proof the new version would actually work. Every previous attempt at a rewrite had collapsed under expanding requirements. The word "rewrite" had started to feel like a threat.
Didn't pitch a full rewrite. Identified the single most-used workflow, patient onboarding, and built a proof module running in parallel with the existing app. Leadership saw it working in four weeks. After that, the business case for the full rebuild wrote itself.
- Onboarding time cut from over 12 minutes to under 3
- Leadership approved the full rebuild within the same quarter
- First new feature shipped without a three-week regression cycle
“I stopped trying to explain why we needed a new system. I just showed them.”
Breaking the "Launch Date" Curse
A U.S. B2B SaaS company, nine months into a website rebuild. Engineering and Marketing were barely speaking. Every week the C-suite asked for a date. Every week nobody could give one.
No single person was willing to say no to a VP's feature request. Every new idea reopened the release boundaries. The team had stopped trusting the roadmap because the roadmap had never held.
Ran a "Keep vs. Kill" session where every open request had to survive a single question: does this need to be in V1.0, or can it wait? The list of things that could wait was longer than anyone wanted to admit. Shifted to V1.0 + V1.1 and enforced a 24-hour decision rule, unresolved trade-offs were called the next morning based on pre-agreed goals, not whoever was loudest.
- Site shipped six weeks after engagement started
- No release-plan changes in the final four weeks of build
- First time Engineering and Marketing agreed on a launch date, and held it
“For the first time in a year, the project actually felt calm.”
42 Vulnerabilities and an Intern's AWS Key
A growing tech company, production servers down, team in panic mode, no one sure what had changed or who had touched what.
The team had been guessing the root cause for hours while the site stayed down. There was no visibility into who had access to what, and no process for finding out fast.
Ran a full tech stack audit starting from IAM roles and access logs. Traced the outage within hours. When I asked who had recently been given AWS access, they told me it was the intern. The audit surfaced 42 critical security vulnerabilities: overprivileged roles, exposed keys, and open configs no one knew existed.
- Root cause found and production restored in the same engagement
- 42 critical vulnerabilities patched, access controls rebuilt from scratch
- Formal access policy introduced, no production access without role-based permissions
“What a load of spaghetti with sauce.”
What changes for you and your team
These are the first things leadership notices when we finish.
- Before
Decisions keep coming back to life
Progress stalls and the team loses faith in the plan.
AfterWe attach ownership and clear "why" to every shipped feature.
The decision stays closed. Updates fit on a single page.
- Before
The goalposts keep moving
The team stops trusting the plan and starts hedging dates.
AfterWe lock and protect the release boundaries up front.
The plan holds. Launch dates stop shifting every week.
- Before
Waiting on other teams blocks you
Delivery turns into a series of escalations and delays.
AfterWe clarify exactly who owns what and how they connect early.
Fewer blockers. Teams ship when they are ready.
From first decision to first release.
Direction locked in the first two weeks. Working code in production by week four. A stable plan for what comes next.
- Identify the stuck points
- Clarify who makes the final call
- Lock the trade-offs permanently
- Define the 30-day proof release
- Build and launch the proof release
- Confirm it meets quality and SEO standards
- Set the sequence for what ships next
A calmer way to build
Communication gets shorter. Delivery gets quieter.
What disappears when delivery stabilizes
Early signs the program is getting healthy:
- Second-guessing decisions
- Plan resets
- Restarted approvals
- Waiting on "alignment"
- Status meetings with no decisions
- Mid-initiative add-on requests
- Last-minute dependency escalations
- Reopened sign-offs after agreement
When the noise drops, shipping speed goes up.
When the noise settles, three things hold.
The plan holds
What we agree in week one is what ships in week four.
- Boundaries protected from day one
- Mid-cycle ideas queued for next release
- No late additions in final initiative
Simple, honest updates
Updates become brief because there is actual progress to report.
- Plan tracked in one place
- Proof anchors weekly updates
- Escalations resolved early
Launch-ready from day one
Performance, SEO, and quality are built in from the start.
- No post-launch fire drills
- Quality gates hold before release
- Impact measured from day one
Is this a fit for you?
This works best when one person can make the final call and 30 days is enough time to prove the direction.
- Leadership sign-off in days, not months
- Clear decision-making authority
- A working release in one month
- Decision authority is unclear or split across too many people
- You prefer months of "discovery" and research
- A 30-day launch isn't a priority right now
We spend the first week locking the direction so the team can spend the next three weeks building without resets.
If ownership is unclear, we have to fix that first before we can accelerate your delivery.
A short call will make it obvious if we can help or what needs to change first.
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Get in touch
Bring the stuck initiative, the competing opinions, and the risk nobody wants to own. We will identify the smallest proof release worth shipping and the decisions needed to make it real.
You leave with
- A locked decision path
- A working proof release
- A roadmap your team can follow











