NGOs and international organisations operate in conditions that most software was never designed for, working across borders and languages, in places with patchy connectivity, handling sensitive information about vulnerable people, and answerable to donors on one side and to communities on the other. We build digital tools that hold up under exactly those conditions, which is to say tools that are secure, accessible and resilient.

We build around the difficulty of coordinating across distance, where teams are spread across countries and time zones and need to work from the same information without tripping over one another. We build around difficult environments, where field workers have limited or no connectivity and still need to collect data reliably and sync it when a connection returns. We build around sensitive data, treating information about beneficiaries and vulnerable people as something to be protected by design rather than as an afterthought, as set out in our approach to data protection and responsible AI. We build around accountability in both directions at once, demonstrating impact and the proper use of funds to donors while genuinely serving the communities you work with. And we build around multiple languages and contexts, for users who may share neither a language, a level of digital literacy, nor a type of device.
We build field data collection that works offline and syncs when a connection returns, coordination platforms that keep distributed teams working from shared and current information, impact measurement and reporting that satisfies donors with credible data drawn from real work, and accessible, multilingual interfaces for users across very different contexts. We bring in AI where it genuinely helps, whether that is translation, making sense of large volumes of field data, or reducing administrative load, and we build all of it to be supported for the long term, because tools that fail in the field are not an inconvenience but a real cost.
If your organisation is working internationally and wrestling with a digital problem, we would like to hear about it.