Simple ops software in Fullerton.
Single-tenant software for Fullerton businesses — scheduling, job tracking, invoicing, an owner dashboard — built around how you actually work and handed over with the source. No SaaS rent forever.
Single-tenant software for Fullerton businesses — scheduling, job tracking, invoicing, an owner dashboard — built around how you actually work and handed over with the source. No SaaS rent forever.
Fullerton is North Orange County's old-line town — 143,000 people, the downtown, the universities and Fullerton College, a manufacturing base that predates the master plans, and a deep bench of family businesses and food-service operators. It's a working, multi-generational economy rather than a boutique one. The owners tend to be practical, cost-conscious, and skeptical of software that promises more than it delivers. So they run on the cheapest tools that work, and over the years those tools have multiplied into a stack that no longer fits together.
The cost is the usual quiet tax. A small manufacturer schedules production on a whiteboard and tracks orders in a sheet. A food-service business runs supplier orders off a running tally and reconciles at month-end. A family retail shop reorders by eye. Each gap is survivable on its own; together they're an unbilled afternoon and the occasional missed date, every single week.
The answer is not an ERP that assumes a back office the business doesn't staff. It's a small single-tenant app that handles the three to five workflows this business runs on — scheduling, job and order tracking, invoicing that drafts itself — built around the real process and owned outright. No subscription waiting next year.
A small manufacturer near the downtown industrial corridor. Build-to-order work scheduled on a whiteboard, orders in a spreadsheet, inventory checked by walking the racks. We build an order and production view: incoming orders, a build schedule, and low-stock flags on the parts that matter. Fewer mid-build surprises, fewer slipped dates.
A food-service or commissary business. Standing supplier orders and wholesale accounts run off a tally and get reconciled at month-end. We build an internal app: standing orders per account and supplier, a daily count the staff updates, and a weekly cost summary the owner reads. The month-end scramble eases.
A family retail shop near the campuses. Inventory is reordered by eye and online orders are tracked by hand. We build a lightweight inventory and order view: what's selling, what's low on the items that matter, and which online orders still need to ship. Not a full POS — just the back office that keeps the floor stocked.
This fits if you run a real Fullerton business, you know the three to five workflows eating your week, and you want software you own instead of software you rent. It's not the right call if you want a multi-tenant product to sell to other businesses — that's a much bigger build, and I refer it out.
OC — in-person reachable in about two hours from the San Diego studio, and I make the drive when the build warrants it. Otherwise discovery runs over video and we meet for the milestones. An hour watching the real work beats a long spec.
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