Technical advisory

A senior read from someone who has shipped it

Architecture, scope, and what to build next, reviewed by the person who would have to build it. No deck, no junior analyst, no hourly meter running on a status call.

Senior only

the architect reviews it, not a proxy

Build or buy

an honest answer, including "buy"

3 verticals

healthcare, SaaS, expert-led

Before you commit a budget, it helps to have someone senior read the plan and tell you where it breaks. That is the advisory engagement: architecture review, scope sanity check, and a clear recommendation on what to build, what to buy, and what to leave alone.

The founder runs the architecture and the client conversation in the same room here. You are not talking to a salesperson who relays your questions to an engineer in another timezone.

What an advisory engagement covers

  • Architecture and data-model review with the trade-offs named out loud.
  • Scope triage: the part worth building now, and the part that can wait.
  • Build-or-buy calls, including the times the answer is buy.
  • A second opinion on a quote you already have from someone else.

When not to hire us

If you already have a senior architect you trust, you do not need us for this. Advisory is for when the most technical person in the decision is not technical enough to feel sure, and wants someone who has shipped it to check the math.

What buyers ask before they start

Who actually does the advisory review?

The senior engineer who would have to build it, not a junior analyst relaying questions to someone in another timezone. You get architecture and scope reviewed by the person who ships, in the same conversation.

Can you sanity-check a quote I already have?

Yes. A second opinion on someone else's quote or architecture is a common advisory engagement. We name the trade-offs out loud and tell you what is worth building now, what can wait, and what to buy instead.

What if the honest answer is to buy, not build?

Then that is the answer you get. Advisory is for when the most technical person in the decision wants someone who has shipped it to check the math. Sometimes that means we talk you out of a build.