Every case study here is a real project, a real problem, and an outcome we can stand behind. Serious buyers read this page before they fill out a form. Read it carefully and you will understand exactly how we work and what you can expect.
Residents in most cities have no structured way to report civic issues. Complaints go into WhatsApp groups, email threads, or verbal requests to local officials, and then disappear with no accountability or visibility. We built trioncam to change that. It is our own flagship product and the reason this company exists.
The client needed a next-generation e-commerce platform and companion mobile app that could handle a growing product catalog, complex discount logic, and seamless mobile checkout without depending on generic SaaS tools that limited what they could build.
Restaurant operators were managing orders on paper, tracking inventory through WhatsApp messages, and reconciling billing manually at the end of every shift. Staff errors were costing real money, and there was no way to see how the business was actually performing.
A well-established medical center was losing patients to newer competitors with better digital presence. Their outdated website made it difficult for patients to find doctors, book appointments, or trust that the clinic was modern and professional.
A luxury interior design studio was operating with a dated website that did not reflect the quality of their work. High-value clients were visiting the site, not seeing a brand that matched the premium positioning they expected, and moving on without making contact.
A well-run NGO with genuine impact was losing potential donors because their digital presence did not communicate trust, transparency, or the emotional reality of their work. Their donation process was clunky and abandoned frequently before completion.
A travel company with strong offline bookings had virtually no functional online presence. They were losing customers who preferred to browse, compare, and book digitally without having to call an agent or visit an office.
A premium tailoring studio with a devoted local clientele had zero digital presence. Their work was extraordinary but invisible online. They needed a brand identity and website that translated the richness of their craft into a digital experience that could reach customers far beyond their city.
A serious gym with excellent trainers and equipment was getting no walk-ins from online searches. Their digital presence did not reflect the energy and community that made them worth joining.
A real estate developer with a premium residential project was relying entirely on site visits and print advertising to generate leads. The target buyers had moved online, and there was no digital way to showcase the project, build trust, or capture enquiries.
A local grocery chain wanted to launch a hyperlocal delivery app to compete with national platforms, without paying platform commission or losing control of their customer relationship. They needed the full stack: customer app, delivery partner app, and operations dashboard.
The outcomes you have read above are not luck. They come from a disciplined way of working that we apply to every single project, regardless of size or industry. Here is what that actually looks like.
Before any code is written, we spend time understanding what is actually broken and why. Most failed software projects start with the wrong problem statement.
A clear technical plan, with defined modules, data flows, and integrations, is agreed on before development begins. This prevents expensive rebuilds mid-project.
Every sprint ends with a live demo you can actually use, not a progress update. This keeps alignment tight and catches mismatches early when they are cheap to fix.
Every case study you read here was measured after it went live. We track what changes for the client, not just whether the features we promised were delivered.
Each industry on this list represents projects where we learned something different about users, constraints, and what it actually takes for software to succeed in that world.
Government and community platforms
Storefronts and delivery apps
Clinics, portals, and patient tools
Property platforms and CRM tools
Non-profits and donation platforms
Restaurants, travel, and fitness