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Industry Expertise

Custom Software for
Every Industry

Every industry has unique software challenges. Off-the-shelf tools try to serve everyone and end up serving no one perfectly. We build software that's purpose-fit for your sector.

fintech

Fintech companies operate under a unique set of pressures that most generic software simply cannot accommodate. Between PCI DSS compliance, KYC/AML requirements, real-time transaction processing, and the constant evolution of financial regulations across US states and international jurisdictions, the technology stack powering a fintech operation needs to be precise, auditable, and built for the specific workflows your team relies on every day.

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healthcare

Healthcare organizations face a paradox: they rely on software for virtually every aspect of patient care, billing, and operations, yet the tools available to them are among the most rigid and frustrating in any industry. Electronic health records like Epic, Cerner, and eClinicalWorks are designed as platforms of record, not platforms of productivity. They capture data reliably but force clinical teams into workflows that were designed by software engineers, not by the people actually delivering care.

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real-estate

Real estate is a relationship-driven business running on transaction-driven software. The industry has no shortage of tools: Salesforce for CRM, Yardi or Buildium for property management, CoStar for market data, DocuSign for contracts. But none of these tools understand how your specific brokerage, property management company, or development firm actually operates. The result is a fragmented tech stack where critical deal information lives across a dozen systems and someone's memory.

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construction

Construction is one of the least digitized industries in the world, and it is not because construction companies do not want better software. It is because the software available to them does not fit how construction projects actually work. Procore, PlanGrid, and Buildertrend are better than paper and spreadsheets, but they are designed for an idealized version of construction that rarely matches the reality of a complex commercial build or a multi-trade renovation.

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logistics

Logistics and supply chain operations run on a patchwork of systems that were never designed to work together. Your TMS handles transportation planning, your WMS manages warehouse operations, your ERP tracks inventory and financials, and your carrier partners each have their own portals and EDI requirements. Between these systems, your team maintains spreadsheets, sends manual emails, and makes phone calls to bridge the gaps that software was supposed to eliminate.

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legal

Law firms have a complicated relationship with technology. The legal profession depends on precise document management, accurate time tracking, and meticulous matter organization, yet the software available to most firms was designed for a generic "average firm" that does not exist. A boutique litigation firm, a mid-market corporate practice, and a high-volume immigration shop each have fundamentally different workflows, yet they are all expected to use the same practice management platforms.

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education

Education technology has exploded in availability but not in quality. Schools, training providers, and edtech companies can choose from hundreds of learning management systems, student information systems, and assessment platforms, yet most educational organizations still struggle with software that does not fit their pedagogical approach, administrative workflows, or the specific needs of their learner populations.

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manufacturing

Manufacturing operations generate more data than almost any other industry, yet most manufacturers make critical production decisions based on spreadsheets, whiteboards, and tribal knowledge. The gap between what ERP systems track at the financial level and what actually happens on the shop floor is filled by manual processes, paper travelers, and institutional knowledge that walks out the door when experienced operators retire.

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ecommerce

E-commerce has a graduation problem. Most brands start on Shopify, and Shopify is excellent for getting to market quickly. But somewhere between $2M and $20M in annual revenue, the cracks start showing. Complex product configurations that Shopify variants cannot handle. Multi-warehouse inventory allocation that requires manual spreadsheet management. Wholesale and B2B channels that need different pricing, catalogs, and ordering workflows than your DTC storefront. International expansion that demands multi-currency, multi-language, and duty-aware checkout experiences.

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energy

Energy and utility companies operate some of the most complex and heavily regulated infrastructure in any industry. Generation facilities, transmission networks, distribution systems, and customer-facing operations each have distinct technology requirements, yet they all need to work together seamlessly. The software managing these operations must handle real-time data from thousands of sensors, comply with state and federal energy regulations, and support field crews working in remote locations across vast service territories.

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Insurance

The insurance industry runs on data, documents, and decisions -- yet most carriers and brokerages still stitch together legacy policy administration systems, spreadsheet-based rating engines, and email-driven claims workflows. Platforms like Guidewire, Duck Creek, and Applied Epic solve parts of the puzzle, but they were designed for the largest carriers and come with six-figure licensing fees, rigid configuration limits, and upgrade cycles that move slower than the market.

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Hospitality

Hospitality businesses -- hotels, resorts, restaurant groups, and event venues -- operate in one of the most operationally complex industries. A single property might rely on a PMS for reservations, a POS for food and beverage, a separate system for housekeeping, another for maintenance, a channel manager for OTA distribution, and a CRM that barely talks to any of them. Multiply that across multiple properties or brands and you have an integration nightmare that costs real money in lost revenue and poor guest experiences.

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Non-Profits

Non-profit organizations face a paradox: they need sophisticated technology to operate efficiently and demonstrate impact, but the software market treats them as an afterthought. Salesforce NPSP is free (sort of), but implementation costs $50-150K and requires ongoing admin expertise most non-profits cannot afford. Bloomerang and Little Green Light are affordable but limited to basic donor management. None of these tools connect fundraising data to program outcomes in a meaningful way.

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Government

Government agencies at every level -- municipal, state, and federal -- face mounting pressure to deliver digital services that citizens now expect, while operating within procurement frameworks, security requirements, and accessibility mandates that commercial SaaS vendors rarely accommodate. The result is a familiar pattern: aging legacy systems held together by manual workarounds, citizen-facing processes that still require paper forms and in-person visits, and IT departments stretched thin trying to maintain systems built on technologies that vendors no longer support.

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Agriculture

Agriculture is one of the most data-intensive industries on the planet, yet most farms and agricultural businesses still manage critical operations with a combination of spreadsheets, paper records, and generic software that was not designed for the realities of growing, processing, and distributing food. Farm management platforms like Granular, FarmLogs, and AgriWebb handle basic crop or livestock tracking, but they fall apart when you need to connect field operations to processing facilities, manage complex supply chain relationships, or maintain the traceability records that regulatory bodies and retail buyers increasingly demand.

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Media & Entertainment

Media and entertainment companies -- publishers, production studios, broadcasters, music labels, gaming companies, and digital media businesses -- operate in a content lifecycle that is fundamentally different from other industries. A single piece of content might involve dozens of contributors, multiple rights holders, complex licensing terms, format-specific distribution requirements, and revenue tracking across platforms and territories. Generic content management systems were not built for this level of complexity.

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Transportation

Transportation and logistics companies operate in a razor-thin-margin business where efficiency is survival. Every empty mile, every missed delivery window, every hour a driver spends on paperwork instead of driving directly impacts profitability. Yet most transportation companies manage operations with a patchwork of tools: a TMS that handles some of the workflow, a separate fleet tracking system, ELD compliance through a third vendor, dispatch via phone and whiteboard, and customer communication through email and manual phone calls.

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Professional Services

Professional services firms -- consulting companies, agencies, engineering firms, accounting practices, and IT services providers -- sell expertise and time. Their core business challenge is deceptively simple: match the right people to the right projects at the right utilization rates while keeping clients happy and margins healthy. Yet the software landscape treats this as a project management problem, a CRM problem, a time tracking problem, and a financial management problem separately -- forcing firms to stitch together tools that never quite fit.

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Food & Beverage

Food and beverage companies operate under a unique combination of pressures: razor-thin margins that demand operational efficiency, regulatory requirements that demand rigorous traceability and documentation, consumer expectations that demand quality and consistency, and supply chain dynamics that demand flexibility. Managing all of this with generic ERP systems, spreadsheet-based production schedules, and disconnected food safety documentation creates risk and costs money.

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Fitness & Wellness

The fitness and wellness industry has exploded in complexity. A modern fitness business might offer group classes, personal training, nutrition coaching, recovery services, retail products, and virtual content -- each with different pricing models, scheduling requirements, and client experiences. Platforms like Mindbody, Vagaro, and Club OS were built for the gym-and-group-class model, and they struggle to accommodate the hybrid, multi-service business models that successful fitness and wellness companies now operate.

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Don't See Your Industry?

We've built custom software for dozens of industries. Book a free consultation and tell us about your sector's unique challenges.

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