Software Holding

Most software
is built for
everyone.

We build the other kind. Vertical SaaS for markets that generic platforms left behind — each product with its own squad, roadmap, and brand, all running on shared infrastructure.

01 10 Products Across five verticals
02 5 Verticals Industries we build for
03 40K+ Users Across all products
04 99.9% Uptime Platform-wide SLA
01

Locate the gap

We look for markets where software stayed generic when the industry needed depth. Not every sector deserves another platform. Some deserve a product that actually understands them.

02

Build for one

One squad. One product. One market. No split focus. A team that owns every decision — from architecture to go-to-market — without a shared backlog diluting their judgment.

03

Ship independently

Each product launches under its own brand, with its own pricing and customer relationship. Independence isn't an aspiration. It's structural.

04

Connect

Products integrate at the platform layer — shared identity, billing, and observability. Not through third-party connectors. At the infrastructure level.

Most software companies
grow wide. We grow deep.

01

Vertical by design

Every product is built for one market, with opinionated defaults that match how that industry operates. Not configurable templates. Software that already knows its context.

02

Shared infrastructure

Auth, billing, observability — handled at the platform layer. Product teams don't rebuild infrastructure. They build product. That's how depth compounds.

03

Independent teams

Each product has its own squad and its own roadmap. No shared backlog. No divided attention. The team that builds it owns it — end to end.

04

A platform, not a suite

Our products connect natively at the platform level — one identity layer, one billing substrate, one data plane. Built independently. Integrated structurally.

Used by teams at

Vortex Planar Hexnode Cobalt Labs Driftmark Sevenleaf

HalfByte Holding

Depth by design.
Scale by structure.

Software built for the industries it serves — not adapted from a generic platform.