Simple ops software in Santee.
The internal software a Santee business runs on — job tracking, scheduling, invoicing, an owner dashboard — built single-tenant and handed over with the source. No monthly platform fee.
The internal software a Santee business runs on — job tracking, scheduling, invoicing, an owner dashboard — built single-tenant and handed over with the source. No monthly platform fee.
Santee sits at the edge of East County where the suburbs meet the backcountry — 60,000 people, Town Center, the river, the kind of town where a lot of the business happens out of a work truck. The economy here leans on the trades, field services, outdoor recreation outfits, auto, and light manufacturing. These are mobile, schedule-driven operations: a crew, a route, a set of jobs that move around the county all day. The software almost never matches that reality. It's a dispatch board in someone's head and a stack of paper invoices on the dash.
The friction is real money. A trades business forgets to bill a completed job for two weeks because the invoice never made it off the truck. A field tech drives back across town for a part because nobody tracked inventory. Two jobs get scheduled for the same crew on the same morning. Each miss is small; over a month they add up to a lost week and a few unbilled jobs.
A Santee operator doesn't need a fleet platform with a per-seat fee. The fix is a small single-tenant app that handles the three to five things this business runs on — scheduling, job tracking, invoicing from the field, a clear daily view — built once and owned outright. No rent next year.
A plumbing or HVAC trades business working across East County. A crew, a daily route, and jobs scheduled the night before by hand. Invoices get written on paper and sometimes never get sent. We build a scheduling and job app: the day's jobs per crew with addresses, job status the tech updates from a phone, and invoicing that drafts on completion through Stripe. The unbilled jobs stop slipping through.
An outdoor recreation outfitter near the river. Rentals and guided trips fill by phone and walk-up, deposits land on a clipboard, and gear availability is checked by looking at the rack. We build a booking app: trips and rentals tied to live gear availability, deposit invoicing, and a daily roster the guide pulls up on a phone. No more double-booked kayaks.
A small manufacturer or fabrication shop near Carlton Hills. Build-to-order work scheduled on a whiteboard, 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.
This is right for you if you run a real Santee business, you know the three to five workflows eating your week, and you'd rather own software than rent it forever. It's not right if you want a multi-tenant SaaS product to sell to other operators — that's a bigger, different build, and I refer it out.
East County SD — in-person inside 40 minutes. I'll ride along, walk the shop, see the route. An hour watching the work actually move beats a six-page requirements doc.
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