A small Delhi tech agency working on AI and automation for the Indian businesses that the textbook software forgets — saree houses in Chandni Chowk, furniture giants with 65+ showrooms, traders running on Tally since 1992.
The Indian SMB market doesn't run on Salesforce or QuickBooks. It runs on Tally, WhatsApp, paper invoices forwarded over voice notes, and a hundred small workarounds.
We don't fight that. We build software that fits it — and quietly takes the busywork off the table. AI invoice extraction that knows when a vendor says "Cheeni" they mean sugar. Tender intelligence systems that filter 13,000 government tenders down to the eight you should actually bid on. ERPNext rebuilds for traders who don't trust new tools until they see them save real time.
One small team. Real ownership of every project. End-to-end — design, build, ship, talk to the client at 11pm if that's what shipping requires.
AI invoice automation for Tally. Forward an invoice over WhatsApp — it's extracted, validated, and synced into Tally vouchers automatically. Learns your products and your corrections.
An internal OS for Durian's sales operation. Aggregates 13,000+ government tenders across GEM, CPPP, IREPS, CWPD and GePNIC, routes them to a five-person sales team, tracks the bid lifecycle through technical and financial evaluation.
Full ERP rebuild for a Chandni Chowk saree house. Tally migration, custom dashboards designed for traders who don't use computers daily — big tap targets, plain Hindi labels, sections that collapse to stay out of the way.
A few projects we're not ready to talk about yet — including the next thing we're building with Durian, and the v1 of Miracle going public. If you're a builder who wants to own one of these, see careers.
"We don't build software for the deck. We build software that the trader in the shop, the accountant at the back, and the sales rep in the field actually use on Monday morning." — Vaibhav Holani, founder
We're looking for the first senior engineer on the team. Someone who can take a vague client problem, turn it into a shipping plan, build it, and talk to the client themselves.
Not just "your piece" of a project — the whole arc, from "we need a dashboard" through to the version that gets used every day. The kind of role that's hard to find on the open market — direct ownership, real variety, no politics.