Industries

Every industry has workflows that should be automated.

We work with established businesses across eight industries. Each has its own highest-value automation opportunities — and its own constraints. Select your industry to see what we build.

Manufacturing

Order intake, ERP data entry, supplier communication, production reporting — these are the highest-volume manual workflows in your business, and they are all automatable without replacing your existing systems.

Legal

Document review, client intake, contract analysis, monthly billing reports — the highest-volume repetitive tasks in your firm are automatable without changing how your attorneys practice.

Distribution

Your TMS, WMS, ERP, and spreadsheets each hold part of the picture. Assembling them monthly is consuming days of your best people's time — and the output is already stale by the time it arrives.

Finance

The bottleneck is not a shortage of client demand or advisor skill. It is the administrative work surrounding client service — onboarding, reporting, portfolio updates, and compliance documentation — that consumes a growing share of advisor time as the firm grows.

Professional Services

Proposal generation, time tracking reconciliation, project reporting, client onboarding paperwork — every hour spent on these is an hour not billed. AI automation eliminates the overhead without adding headcount.

Construction

Subcontractor coordination, lien waiver tracking, job cost reporting, RFI management — the administrative burden of running a construction business grows with every project. AI automation reduces the overhead without touching your field operations.

Logistics

Carrier communication, load tendering, invoice reconciliation, and operational reporting are high-volume, rule-driven processes. The manual overhead grows with volume. The automation doesn't.

Property Management

Lease processing, maintenance coordination, tenant communication, and owner reporting are all high-volume, repetitive workflows. As your portfolio grows, the administrative burden grows with it — unless the automation does too.