Yes, a tool company is building apps. Here's why that's the point.
It's a fair question. Hardware companies don't usually make software, and software companies don't usually understand the trades. That gap is exactly the opportunity.
Most contractor software is built by people who've never priced a tile job, never argued over a vague scope, never sat in a truck waiting on a payment. It shows. The apps are bloated, generic, and built for “small businesses” in the abstract — not for a flooring crew on a Tuesday.
We come at it from the other side. We've spent years on jobsites, watching how pros work, shipping tools that have to earn their place in a truck or get thrown out. We know that a tool you have to think about is a tool you stop using. That standard — it has to be obvious, or it's useless — is what most software for the trades is missing.
So we're not pretending to be a tech company. We're a toolmaker that happens to be making a new kind of tool. The promise is the same one stamped on every GRABO: heavy lifting, made easy. We just moved it off the wall and onto your phone.
Some tools you hold.
Some you tap.
We didn't hire a software company and slap our name on it. We built the Job Kit the way we build everything: simple enough to use one-handed on a real site, reliable enough to trust with your business, and designed around how trades actually work.
See what we built