The old model rents you hours and mails back a codebase. We run outsourced product development the way an internal team would, and we’re judged on whether the product works.










Code sits in your repositories, documented and tested. Hire in-house later and your team starts from a working product. Weighing that path? See outsourcing vs hiring in-house.
We push back on features that won’t matter and argue for ones that will, because our reputation rides on the product, not the invoice.
Senior engineers direct AI agents through the repetitive 80% of a build. That, not corner-cutting, is why products ship in weeks.
A free scoping call, then a written plan: what we’re building, what we’re deliberately not building yet, a timeline in weeks and a fixed price.
Working software every week, not status decks. You steer at each demo while changing course is still cheap.
Deployment, documentation, two weeks of free post-launch support, and a codebase your future team will thank you for.
After years of trying to get their patient app built, Grupo RIO outsourced it to Fuselio. Appointments, payments and test results shipped in one app, delivered across time zones on weekly demos.
“The best thing about the service was the response time, the disposition and the help when developing the APIs.”Innovations Director, Grupo RioRead the case study →
Get a fixed number for your product.
It means handing the design, engineering and delivery of your software product to an external team that owns the outcome, not just rented hours. A good partner runs discovery, architecture, development, testing and launch while you keep ownership of the code, the IP and the product direction.
An outsourced project delivers a spec. Outsourced product development delivers a product: the partner shares responsibility for whether the thing works for users, contributing product thinking and iteration after launch instead of just closing tickets.
You do, fully. Code lives in your repositories, documented and tested, with no lock-in. Several clients later hired in-house teams that started from our codebase. We consider that a good outcome.
Weekly demo calls, written decision logs, and working software as the only progress metric. Our client in Mexico put it simply: time zones were a challenge, but response time and communication made it work.
Fixed-scope builds start at $2,999 and typical MVPs land between $3k and $15k. The number is on our pricing page, not hidden behind a third call.