What actually matters about how we build

No process diagrams. Just the four things that shape your risk, your cost, and what you walk away with.

Staying in control

You decide whether each sprint continues

We work in short sprints with no long-term contract. After each one you see what was built and decide whether to keep going, so you are never locked into a plan that stopped fitting. We would rather earn the next sprint than hold you to a signature, since the work we care about comes from long relationships.

A team planning a sprint at a whiteboard covered in sticky notes

How we use AI

AI supplements our engineers; the critical work stays with them

AI does two jobs for us. First, it spins up a working prototype quickly, so you can approve the design before we commit to building it. We have our own proven tools for that. Second, during the build it supplements our developers and takes on the time-intensive work, which lowers your cost. Our architects and engineers handle the critical work and validate what we release. We do not vibe code.

Source code on a screen, reviewed by an engineer

Built under regulation

We have delivered systems under regulatory oversight

Our work runs under strict compliance requirements, with complete audit trails, and we build that structure in from the start. We have done it for clients where a regulator or an auditor is in the room.

  • Clinical-lab accreditation
  • Health-data privacy
  • Electronic records and signatures
  • Government public-records standards
An engineer working inside a regulated industrial environment

Ownership

Everything is yours at handover

You get the full source, the documentation that matches it, and a complete change history, all of it yours to keep if you ever move on.

No lock-in. No forced hosting contract, no dependency on us to keep the lights on.

Close-up of a circuit board, representing the systems you own outright

Tell us what you are trying to build, fix, or prove

Send the problem, the systems involved, and the first decision you need to make. We will give you an honest read on the smallest useful next step, and how a first sprint would work.