Sound familiar?
What we take on
Scenarios, not stack diagrams. If your week is in this list, waiting is not making it cheaper.
What you need on the page
- Workflows that run on a schedule
- Integrations between tools you already pay for
- Reporting that arrives without chasing people
- Automated decision paths where rules are clear—and human steps where they are not
- Sensible AI inside workflows, with ownership and checks—not novelty
- Alerts, approvals, and data movement you can treat like a utility
Places this fits well
- Ecommerce — shop, warehouse, and accounting kept in sync; clearer inventory outlook; marketing clarity; reports without manual assembly.
- Hospitality & venues — reservations, covers, and ops reporting without the spreadsheet circus; clearer handoffs between floor and finance.
- Finance — reconciliation-style flows; compliance-ready reporting packs; recurring model runs on a calendar.
- Logistics — route and planning support; shipment status in one view; warehouse performance reporting.
- SaaS — customer insight pipelines; billing-related automation; early signals on retention (honest scope—no magic promises).
- Agencies — recurring client reports; ad spend rolled up from many places; lead lists enriched on a schedule.
- Manufacturing — sensor and machine data brought together; monitoring and maintenance-style signals. Scope is discussed up front so expectations stay realistic.
How engagement is framed
Built as a monthly partnership: ongoing automation and maintenance—monitored and documented. Same anchor you will see on Contact:
Reporting, syncs, sensible AI inside workflows, recurring jobs—monitored and documented so the glue does not rot between launches.
Also in the mix
Extra web, KPI reporting, or print-adjacent help (menus, light branding) can ride alongside—usually as a smaller lane once core automation is clear.