The initial idea wasn't a "big bang" but a slow, iterative realization. After completing that first assignment on April 30, 2015, the founder sat with a single thought: "What if this costing support could be systematized online?" That humble beginning, a name conceived in one night, a domain search, and rough drafts, is the essence of "small starts."
Big ideas often emerge from routine work. The value was in recognizing a systemic gap, not just delivering data once, but making it continuously accessible.
Starting small means verifying uniqueness. No cost, just curiosity and initiative.
Small starts require courage to share half-baked concepts. The first external conversation (at Kabila country club) introduced the founder to "Cost Benefit Analysis" a fundamental business tool.
Legal small steps matter. Registration cost little but created a formal container for the idea to grow into.
The founder didn't wait for a perfect business plan, a team, or funding. They simply did the next small, actionable thing—name registration, a conversation, a sketch. This is often where most aspiring entrepreneurs stall (waiting for "readiness").