About
ittybittysoft was founded in 2007. We are a .NET software development and consulting
company that wants to make a difference. Well, there isn't really a "we" at the
moment. ittybittysoft is owned and operated by me, JD Conley. But, I'm going to
say "we" and speak in the third person. It sounds better. Read more about us below.
The Team
JD Conley
JD is an entrepreneur and software developer. He is experienced in full lifecycle
software development and architecture, specializing in shrink-wrapped products,
performance, scalability, and integration. Have a look at his
resume or blog.
Our Mission
Our mission is to provide you with the best .NET consulting money can buy. There
are a million consulting companies out there, but we think we're on to something.
We communicate with you, clearly. We return phone calls. We set expectations that
don’t take a rocket scientist to understand, and meet or exceed them. We have a
development process that’s second to none and constantly evolving—after all,
what worked five years ago may not work today. We make your software project a pleasant
experience.
Our Guarantee
Here it is in plain English. We guarantee our work. Any software we build will work.
If you find bugs we will fix them, free of charge. If we didn't implement something
the way you envisioned, we will fix it, free of charge. We have a proven development
process based on many years of experience, and have never failed to deliver a project.
Look at it this way: if we build a shrink wrapped software product and offer it
to consumers we would obviously fix the bugs for free. The software we build for
you will be shrink wrap quality, because that's what you expect.
Consulting Company Woes
We've had bad experience with other consulting companies that fit the stereotypical
mold and we want to make it clear we are nothing like them:
- Consultants don't care about your business.
- Consultants rarely deliver the end product you actually wanted.
- Consulting/staffing companies do not deliver consultants of the quality you pay
dearly for.
- Consultants build unnecessary products.
- Training doesn't work.
Read more »