For concrete questions or a brainstorming session, you are always welcome. Our team is ready to answer your questions so you can make the right decisions.

Advice
A consultation is useful when you want to avoid making the wrong choice before investing in development. That sounds logical, but in practice many projects begin without the fundamental questions being answered.
We give advice based on your situation, not based on what we would prefer to build. If the conclusion is that you are better off going elsewhere, we will say so.
Schedule a no-obligation call →Technical audit
We regularly conduct technical audits of systems built by other agencies. This is useful when you are considering taking over a system, when you have doubts about the quality of existing code, or when you want to know whether the architecture is scalable.
In an audit we assess the quality of the code, the chosen technologies, security risks and long-term maintainability. You receive an honest report with concrete findings, without us having a stake in any particular outcome.
For systems we build or manage ourselves, we issue a quarterly advisory report with recommended maintenance work: OS updates, dependency upgrades, security patches and bug fixes. You decide which work to commission. There is no fixed contract and no obligation. Keep in mind that deferring maintenance builds technical debt that requires a larger catch-up effort later.
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Objective advice, without a commercial interest.
We give advice based on your situation, not based on what we would prefer to build. Whether you want to test an idea, need to make a technical choice or want to know the best approach: we are happy to talk it through with you.
Let's grab a coffee. Tell us about your idea and we'll give you our honest take on what's possible.
Schedule a call →FAQ
A consultation is useful when you need to make a decision where the consequences are significant and you are not sure what the right approach is. Think about the choice between an MVP and a full product, the right technology for your situation, or whether an existing system is worth taking over.
Many projects begin without those fundamental questions being answered, which later leads to rework or extra costs. An hour-long conversation can prevent that. The first conversation is always free and without obligation.
The first conversation is always free. After that it depends on the question. Short questions we sometimes answer simply by email. More extensive engagements, such as a technical audit or architecture advice, are charged by agreement.
We work on an hourly basis, without mandatory packages or fixed contracts. We always discuss in advance what you can expect and what it will cost. That way you are never faced with surprises.
Yes. We regularly conduct technical audits of systems developed by other parties. This is relevant when you want to take over a system, when you have doubts about the quality of the code, or when you want to know whether the system is scalable.
We assess code quality, the chosen technologies, security risks and maintainability. You receive an honest report with concrete findings — we have no interest in a particular outcome.
Maintenance is not a fixed package with us. Each quarter we issue an advisory report with recommended work: OS updates, dependency upgrades, security patches and bug fixes. You decide which work to commission and when.
Keep in mind that deferring maintenance builds technical debt, which requires a larger catch-up effort later. Costs therefore depend on the system and what you defer. We budget the work upfront so you always have a clear picture.
With advice we explore the question together, without building anything immediately. The result is insight: a recommendation, an architecture sketch, or an honest assessment of an existing system.
With a development project, we actually start building. Sometimes a collaboration begins with a consultation and a project follows. But that is not an obligation — advice stands on its own. If we advise that you are better off going elsewhere, we will say so.