After 12 years writing software for other people's companies, I started one of my own.
The thing that pushed me to do it wasn't a moonshot idea or a product I had to build. It was a pattern I kept seeing on every project: companies stuck with off-the-shelf software that almost fit, paper-clipping spreadsheets and Zapier flows together to make their tools talk to each other, paying a tax in friction every single day.
Most of those companies didn't need a unicorn solution. They needed software that actually fit their business. Not the other way around.
That's why I built Novemind.
I'm not interested in shipping enterprise-grade buzzwords. I'm interested in building software that quietly makes a business run better, and sticking around long enough to keep it that way.
Starting Novemind isn't a milestone for me. It's a return to building things I actually want to build, with the people I want to build them with, for businesses I genuinely want to help.
If you've been frustrated with software that almost fits but doesn't, that's the conversation I want to have. You can find me at novemind.com.
