Product design team collaborating on wireframes and prototypes

Builds.

Enterprise-grade software for small businesses and the doers inside corporations who deserve better tools.

Products Cal6ix owns. Built for the people enterprise software forgot.

Studio is Cal6ix's original-product arm. It conceives, designs, and ships products that Cal6ix owns — the kind of software that obsesses over user experience, particularly for the people who have been underserved by tools built for executives and procurement committees rather than for the people doing the work.

Every product Studio ships is enterprise-grade in its engineering and consumer-grade in its experience. The small business owner managing invoices at midnight. The project manager buried in a tool bought by someone who never has to use it. The contractor toggling between four apps that don't talk to each other. These are Studio's users. They deserve the same caliber of product that a Fortune 500 company gets — and Studio builds it for them.

Scope
Products originated by Cal6ix. Client work and external products live in Ventures. The line is drawn by origin.
Audience
Small business owners, independent operators, and the people inside large organizations who do the actual work.
Team
Seasoned builders. Senior product managers, principal engineers, design leads — people who have shipped real things and have the judgment that comes from the build-ship-iterate cycle.

What Studio ships.

Product Design
Research, UX, interface design, and prototyping — grounded in the real workflows of the people who will use the product, not the people who will buy it.
Engineering
Full-stack product engineering with the same infrastructure rigor you'd find at a company shipping to hundreds of millions of users. Because that's where our team came from.
Data & AI
Production-grade data architecture and AI infrastructure — not bolted on as a feature, but built into the product's foundation from day one.
Launch & Iterate
Ship, measure, learn, ship again. Studio products are not projects with end dates — they are living products with users who depend on them.

The tools should be as serious as the people using them.

Contractor multitasking on a job site
Business owner working late at night
Project manager overwhelmed by tools
Solo operator working alone at night

The software industry builds for the buyer, not the user. Enterprise tools are sold to executives who never log in. Small business tools are stripped down and patronizing. The person doing the actual work — the contractor, the owner, the operator — gets whatever's left over.

Studio exists to close that gap. Every product we build starts with the same question: who is the person doing the work, and what do they actually need? Not what can we sell. Not what looks good in a demo. What works at 11pm when the person using it has no IT department, no training budget, and no patience for software that makes their job harder.

Studio builds what the person doing the work at 11pm actually needs — and builds it at a standard they were never supposed to have access to.

Building something that should exist? So are we.

Talk to Studio