We do not have a process. We have a living, breathing ecosystem of interlocking processes, each one optimised, each one proprietary, and each one slightly inconsistent with the others in ways our methodology team describes as "intentional."









Our work is governed by the SDM™ framework — the result of six years of research into why digital transformation initiatives succeed, fail, or produce results that are technically impressive but organizationally irrelevant. SDM ensures every initiative is grounded in real business value: loosely defined, broadly interpreted, and just measurable enough to survive a board presentation.

Unlike rigid methodologies that prescribe fixed ceremonies, SDM™ adapts to the client. We begin every engagement by asking three questions, listening carefully to the answers, and then proceeding largely as we had already intended. This is not cynicism. It is experience.

SDM™ is built on three pillars, which we rotate quarterly so that no single pillar bears the weight of accountability for too long:

Every engagement passes through seven phases. Phases may overlap, recurse, or in rare cases occur in reverse, which we call "agile."

Not all work is the same. We classify each engagement along a proprietary spectrum to ensure the correct rituals are applied:

Across all engagement types, our defect rate remains a consistent 0.03%, a figure we are confident in because the definition of "defect" is maintained internally and reviewed by us.

Our engineering culture is pragmatic. We use the best tool for the job, where "best" is determined by a committee, and "the job" is reclassified quarterly. The stack below is real, current, and includes at least one technology that will surprise our international colleagues.

Yes, 1C:Enterprise is in production. No, we will not be elaborating. It works. It has always worked. It will outlive us all.

Our servers are up. Every request is served at the highest level. The dashboards are green. See the operational evidence.

Hundreds of ounces of gold-pressed latinum already committed. There is room for slightly more.

From a vision quest to 47 countries: the history, the classification, the taxonomy of our values.









