I build the things that should already exist.
New categories, not new features.
Felt by a human. Shipped with AI.
"Your realtor has a quota. You have a mortgage. Nobody built something that was actually on your side."
"Dating apps judge your face. LinkedIn judges your title. Nobody asked what you're actually about."
"They spent years building their employer brand. You get 72 hours to decide if you want to work there."
"The CRA knows exactly how much RRSP room you have. Nobody built a tool that actually helps you use it."
"Your investments are spread across four accounts. You have no idea what your actual portfolio looks like."
"GO Train group passes are cheaper for everyone. Nobody ever built a way to actually fill them."
"Your realtor has a quota.
You have a mortgage.
Nobody built something that was
actually on your side."
The home buying intelligence layer that first-time buyers in Ontario never had.
Buying your first home is the single most consequential financial decision most people will ever make. The stakes are enormous — hundreds of thousands of dollars, decades of commitment, the shape of your entire life.
And yet the tools available to first-time buyers haven't changed. You get a listings portal, a realtor whose commission depends on you closing fast, and a mortgage broker who needs you to qualify. Every incentive in the system points away from you.
The information you need — what's this neighbourhood actually like in 10 years? Is this price fair? What are the hidden risks? — is scattered, expensive, or buried in a report nobody explains to you.
Hausee Navigator puts AI to work entirely on behalf of the buyer. Property analysis, neighbourhood scoring, school quality, long-term investment risk, comparable pricing — all synthesised before you ever book a viewing.
It's not trying to be Realtor.ca. It's the thing you consult before you trust Realtor.ca. The difference between walking into a negotiation informed and walking in hoping for the best.
First-time buyers in Ontario are making $800,000 decisions with worse information than they'd use to buy a used car. That asymmetry was always wrong. Now it's fixable.
Intelligence before you commit.
Your side of the table, finally covered.
"Dating apps judge your face.
LinkedIn judges your title.
Nobody asked what you're actually about."
Vibe-first social connection. Find your people — not just the nearest ones.
We've built an entire ecosystem of connection tools — and none of them start by asking who you actually are. Dating apps sort you by appearance and age. Professional networks sort you by employer and title. Friend-finding apps just show you who's nearby.
The thing that actually determines whether two people connect — shared interests, shared energy, shared way of spending time — isn't in any of them.
The result is a generation of people who feel more connected than ever, and somehow still can't find their people.
Duogo matches on interest and energy. Not your photo. Not your job. What you actually do with your time, what genuinely excites you, the texture of how you move through the world.
It surfaces people nearby who share that — not as a dating prospect, not as a professional contact, but as a human worth knowing. The missing middle that no app had bothered to build.
Loneliness is a design problem. The apps people use to connect are systematically filtering out the signal that actually creates connection. Duogo is built to fix that.
Done settling for whoever the algorithm served you.
Find the people who actually get it.
"They spent years building
their employer brand.
You get 72 hours to decide."
The truth about where you're about to spend 40 hours a week.
Companies invest millions in employer branding. Polished careers pages, curated Glassdoor reviews, scripted interview processes designed to sell you on the company before you can ask the right questions.
Job seekers get a 45-minute interview loop, a stale rating on a platform the company actively manages, and a offer letter to sign by Friday. The asymmetry isn't accidental. It's structural.
And the cost of getting it wrong falls entirely on the employee — months or years of their life in a culture that was never what it appeared.
Truplace gives candidates access to what actually happens inside a company — the culture, the management, the reality of the day-to-day — from people who've lived it and have nothing to gain from lying.
Anonymity is the foundation. Verification is what makes it trustworthy. The result is the kind of honest conversation that happens in private, finally available before you accept the offer.
Where you work shapes who you become. That decision has always deserved better information than a careers page and a gut feeling.
Know before you go.
Because where you work shapes who you become.
"The CRA knows exactly how much
RRSP room you have.
Nobody built a tool that actually helps you use it."
Master your Canadian savings. RRSP, TFSA, FHSA, RESP — all in one place, 100% private.
RRSP. TFSA. FHSA. RESP. HBP. Pension. Each with its own rules, limits, deadlines, and interactions with the others. The government designed a system that rewards people who navigate it well — and most Canadians are leaving money on the table simply because the complexity is overwhelming.
No existing tool was built specifically for this. Generic budgeting apps don't understand Canadian registered accounts. Spreadsheets don't calculate contribution room. Bank portals only show you one account at a time.
Bloom Money tracks all your registered accounts in one place — RRSP contribution room, TFSA limits, FHSA lifetime caps, RESP grant calculations, HBP repayment schedules, pension adjustments. Every calculation, automated.
And critically: 100% private. No cloud. No tracking. Your data never leaves your device. In an era where every finance app monetises your data, that's not a feature — it's a position.
The Canadian savings system rewards those who understand it. Bloom Money is the tool that levels that playing field — free, private, and built specifically for how Canadians actually save.
Your savings system, finally making sense.
Free, private, built for Canadians.
"Your investments are spread
across four accounts.
You have no idea what your actual portfolio looks like."
One view across all your Canadian investment accounts. Asset allocation, performance, dividends — unified.
The average Canadian investor holds assets across an RRSP, a TFSA, an FHSA, and a non-registered account — each at potentially different institutions, each with its own portal, each showing you only its piece of the puzzle.
Nobody is showing you the whole picture. What's your real asset allocation when you add it all up? Are you overweight tech across accounts? What's your total return since inception? These questions go unanswered because the tools only show you one account at a time.
Bloom Portfolio aggregates your holdings across all accounts — RRSP, TFSA, FHSA, non-registered — and gives you a single, clear view of your total portfolio. Asset allocation by class and sector, performance tracking, dividend monitoring, rebalancing tools.
19 positions across 8 asset classes, seen as one. Finally, a portfolio view built for how Canadians actually invest.
You can't manage what you can't see. Bloom Portfolio gives Canadian investors the unified view they've always needed but never had.
All your accounts. One portfolio.
Finally see what you actually own.
"GO Train group passes are
cheaper for everyone.
Nobody ever built a way to actually fill them."
Share GO Train group passes with commuters heading the same way. Save money. Every ride.
GO Train group passes offer significant savings — but they require a group. Most commuters travel alone. The discount exists, the demand exists, but there was never a way to connect strangers heading to the same destination at the same time.
The saving was always there. The coordination layer was missing. So commuters kept paying full fare, ride after ride, while a cheaper option sat unused on the GO Transit website.
Junto matches GO Train commuters heading the same direction at the same time — so they can share a group pass, split the cost, and all save money on every ride.
No new infrastructure. No complex tech. Just a simple coordination tool that makes an existing discount finally accessible to the people who need it most: daily commuters.
Transit is expensive. The savings were already built into the system. Junto just makes them available to everyone, not just those who already know a group.
The group pass was always cheaper.
Now you don't need to know the group.