01  /  Sector

Manufacturing

Software the factory floor actually trusts — production, stock, picking, dispatch.


02  /  What we know

What we know about manufacturing

Manufacturing and warehousing usually come together, and we've built systems that span both. Production tracking, stock and inventory, picking and dispatch, integration with ERP and machinery. The kind of software a factory floor actually trusts.

Software for the floor lives or dies on how it behaves at 4am when the picker's glove won't trigger the scanner. We design with that shift in mind — large hit targets, clear errors, offline tolerance, and a workflow that matches how people actually move stock, not how a system architect thinks they should.

Integration is half the job. Modern WMS and ERP, legacy machinery on OPC UA, message buses on MQTT, ETL into the warehouse reporting database. We've wired those together for manufacturers without taking the line down to do it.


03  /  Technologies

Technologies we work with.

SQL Server  ·  VB.NET  ·  React  ·  barcode scanning APIs  ·  OPC UA  ·  MQTT  ·  ERP integration  ·  WMS  ·  ETL pipelines


04  /  What we've built

What we've built in this sector.

Anonymised, because we have to be. The kind of system, for the kind of business, and what it had to do.


05  /  Questions

Common questions, answered plainly.

01 Do you build systems that run on the factory floor?
Yes. We have built picking, dispatch, production tracking and stock systems that run on scanners and shop-floor terminals, designed for shift conditions, not desk conditions.
02 What integration standards do you work with?
OPC UA, MQTT, REST, SOAP and direct database integration. We work alongside SAP, Sage and other ERP platforms, and we know how to bring legacy PLCs onto a modern message bus.
03 Can you modernise an old warehouse management system?
Yes. We have moved older VB.NET and SQL warehouse systems forward incrementally — adding modern web interfaces, mobile scanning and real-time stock visibility without halting the operation.
04 How do you handle offline scanning?
We design for intermittent network connectivity. Scans queue locally on the device, sync when the network returns, and conflicts are flagged for human review rather than silently overwritten.
05 Are you UK-based?
Yes, we operate from Scotland and work with UK manufacturers and warehouse operators.