Simple ops software in Corona.
The internal software your Corona business runs on — orders, job tracking, invoicing, a dashboard you read on Monday morning. Single-tenant, built for how you operate, no monthly platform fee.
The internal software your Corona business runs on — orders, job tracking, invoicing, a dashboard you read on Monday morning. Single-tenant, built for how you operate, no monthly platform fee.
Corona is built on movement and making — distribution and warehousing along the freeway corridor, manufacturing, the family businesses and trades that grew up around them in Sierra Del Oro and Eagle Glen. These are operations where a unit of work has a clear lifecycle: an order or a job comes in, it gets fulfilled or built, it ships, it gets invoiced. That lifecycle is exactly the kind of thing a spreadsheet models badly and a whiteboard models worse.
The recurring reality is a business running real throughput on disconnected tools. Orders by email, fulfillment on a clipboard, QuickBooks for the money, and a person reconciling the gaps at month-end. When something is late or short, the customer is the alert system, not the software. The information all exists — it just lives in people and surfaces that don't talk to each other.
The fix isn't a warehouse-management suite priced for an enterprise. It's a small single-tenant app that models exactly how work moves through this operation — order in, fulfill, ship, invoice — and stops there. Built once, on a stack you own, with no annual license compounding in the background.
A distribution operation near the freeway corridor. Inbound and outbound orders tracked across email, a clipboard, and a billing sheet. We build an internal app: an order record with status and customer, a daily dock and fulfillment view, and Stripe-backed invoicing that drafts from shipped orders. The dock and the office stop dropping line items between them.
A small manufacturer in the Sierra Del Oro area. POs by email, production on a whiteboard, invoicing from a spreadsheet after delivery. We build a job-tracking app: a PO intake that opens the job, a board through production and ship with due dates, and invoicing that drafts from the completed job through Stripe. The owner sees the whole floor on one screen and knows what's at risk before it's late.
A family trades business serving Eagle Glen. Estimates on paper, schedule in a phone calendar, payments collected on site. We build a job app: an estimate-to-invoice flow, a crew schedule with conflict detection, and a customer record holding the full history. The crew stops rebuilding the same estimate from scratch every time.
This is right if you run a real Corona operation, you can name the three to five workflows costing you hours every week, and you want software you own instead of an annual SaaS contract. It is not right if you want a multi-tenant platform to resell — that is a bigger build, and we refer it out.
We're a San Diego studio; Corona is reachable in person inside about two hours, and the build runs remote regardless. When it matters, we'll come walk the floor for an hour — that beats a six-page spec every time.
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