"40 ideas, one budget, a board asking when."
Walk away with: a prioritized opportunity map, an ROI model, and a buildable roadmap your CFO can sign off on.
Every engagement runs through the same delivery system — the same gates, the same cadence, the same standards. What changes is where you start. Pick the door that fits your moment.
The hub is our delivery system — the same gates, the same cadence, the same standards on every engagement. The spokes are the paths you take through it: which service, in which order, against your specific moment.
Regulated, board-accountable, procurement-heavy.
"40 ideas, one budget, a board asking when."
Walk away with: a prioritized opportunity map, an ROI model, and a buildable roadmap your CFO can sign off on.
"Costs creeping, margins shrinking. We know where AI moves the number."
Walk away with: a leak map, prioritized initiatives, and a ROI model — before we touch AI.
"We know the use case. Ship production-grade AI with governance baked in."
Walk away with: a shipped production system, compliance posture, and a retained team for the next quarter.
Thesis to validate, or build to ship — fast.
"Raised on a thesis. Before I burn the round on a build, I need go/no-go evidence."
Walk away with: a clickable prototype, an architecture brief, competitive analysis, and a real go/no-go — inside 3 weeks.
"Validated the thesis. No six-month discovery phase."
Walk away with: a shipped product, the code in your repo, and a team through launch and into growth.
"Shipped something fast. Works. Not ready for real traffic, compliance, or scale."
Walk away with: an honest teardown, a prioritized list, and a team that refactors without tearing down.
Margin-focused. Automation-capable. Data-heavy.
"I feel the inefficiency but can't point to it. Diagnose before we automate."
Walk away with: a leak map, prioritized initiatives, 30-day quick wins, and a 90-day roadmap.
"We've localized the pain. Skip the diagnostic. Ship the automation."
Walk away with: a production automation with guardrails, audit logs, and a retained optimization engine.
"Too complex for RPA. It's judgment work — research, routing, escalation."
Walk away with: a production agent system with a 4-layer architecture, evals, and a structured operational handoff.
Cursor / Replit / Claude builds hitting real-world load.
"What's actually shippable, and what do I rebuild — before I sink another six months?"
Walk away with: an architecture teardown, security review, scalability assessment, and a sequenced plan to make it production-ready.
"Triage is done. I need a team that takes the code as-is and ships it for real."
Walk away with: a production-ready codebase in your repo, an eval harness, observability wired in, and a retained team through the next quarter.
The path flexes. The standard doesn't. Every engagement runs through the same three gates — a formal go / no-go checkpoint where you see the deliverables, sign off, and decide whether the next phase is worth funding.
Opens every phase. Scope, success definition, and access are written down and signed off before the work starts. No moving targets.
Findings, prototype, or PoC reviewed in the middle of the phase. Course-correct now, not at the end. This is where surprises die.
Final deliverable in your hands. Quality bar met. You decide whether to proceed to the next phase, change vendors, or hold. Your call.
Which door to pick, what happens between gates, and what changes if your situation doesn't fit cleanly into one of the paths above.
That's most of them. The paths listed are the most common entry points — not the only ones. Bring us where you actually are (mid-pilot, half-built, fundraising while shipping, post-acquisition cleanup) and we'll plug in at the right gate instead of restarting you at Path A of someone's template.
One 30-minute call, plus a short async exchange. You don't need to know the path before we talk — that's what the call is for. We listen to the situation, propose the path, and put the gates and scope on paper before anyone signs anything.
Yes — that's what the gates are for. At each gate review, the decision is yours: continue, change scope, pivot to a different path, change vendors, or pause. The gate exists so the next phase is a deliberate choice, not a momentum decision.
Weekly demos, shared Slack channel, async standups, and a written status report every Friday. No surprises on either side — and the next gate review is on the calendar from day one, so there's no last-minute scramble for a decision.
No. Phases are independently funded and scoped. The SOW covers the next gate — not the whole journey. You can stop after any phase with no penalty and the artifacts already in your accounts.
Inside two business days. Dan or Daniel reads the message — not a BDR. If we're a fit, we book the 30-minute call. If we're not, we'll tell you and point you to someone who is.
Field notes from the studio — what we’re learning about AI products, agent UX, and the messy reality of shipping software in 2026.