Mobile apps your users actually use.
iOS and Android, native or cross-platform, connected to your systems and fast to open.
The problem
A slow, unreliable app that's disconnected from the rest of your operation gets deleted on day one. On mobile, people don't give second chances: if it's slow to open or fails once, they leave and don't come back.
And there's a technical decision that sets the cost for years: native (one app for iOS and one for Android) or cross-platform (a single base for both). Choosing wrong is expensive, and there's no single answer that fits everyone.
In the end, a good app shows in the usual things: it does one thing very well, opens fast, and is genuinely connected to your data. What it's built with matters zero to the user.
Who's already doing this
Public examples, not our clients. The eternal question (native or cross-platform) told by those who've lived it at scale.
What we actually do
Three things that keep an app on the phone instead of deleted on day one.
Native or cross-platform
We pick the tech for your specific case, not the trend: performance where it matters, shared code where it helps.
Connected to your business
The app talks to your systems and your data so it's genuinely useful, not a pretty brochure that does nothing.
Publishing and maintenance
We get you onto the App Store and Google Play, and stay for the updates when iOS or Android change the rules (they do).
How we do it
Define the essentials
We scope the version that delivers value first, instead of cramming in twenty features nobody asked for.
Build and test
We iterate with real builds on your device, not demos that only work on one screen.
Publish and improve
We launch and keep improving with real usage, because day one is only the start.
Problems we solve
Customer-facing app
Connected to your product or service and built to make them come back.
Internal app
Mobile tools for your team in the field, on the road or in the warehouse, where a laptop won't do.
Modernize an app
Rescue or refresh an app that fell behind and costs more to maintain every year.
Questions about mobile apps
It depends on the case, and anyone who gives you a flat answer without listening first is lying. For most business apps, cross-platform (React Native, Flutter) gives the best balance of cost and performance, and sharing code between iOS and Android saves a lot. If your app lives on heavy graphics, camera or top performance, native wins. Airbnb and Shopify, two giants, made opposite calls and both were right for their case.
Related work
Got an app idea?
Tell us on a call and we'll say how we'd approach it, and whether you really need an app.



