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RC 9181824

Capabilities

Four practices. One standard.

We are organised as four practices because the work asks us to be — not because four sounds tidy on a slide. Each is run as if it were the firm: lead engineers, internal review, written standards. The list below is the whole list.

Practice I

Justice & Regulatory Technology

Procedural systems for the practice of law in a federal jurisdiction.

We build the software that the resolution of disputes actually runs on. Procedural rules treated as a system specification, not as a marketing brochure. Hearing-room infrastructure that survives a public proceeding and a power cut in the same week. Multi-role case management with the role definitions written by people who have sat in chambers; not invented in a sprint planning meeting.

Our work in this practice begins from the assumption that a serious legal system in Nigeria deserves serious software, and that the gap between those two facts is closed by sitting with arbitrators, counsel, and case managers until you understand what they are actually doing. Then you write the platform that does it.

Representative outputs

  1. End-to-end arbitration platforms (party, neutral, counsel, case manager, financial administrator).
  2. Real-time hearing infrastructure with transcription, role gating, and submission-grade exhibit management.
  3. Procedural-rule engines: machine-readable expression of articles, parts, schedules.

Clients — Arbitral institutions, dispute-resolution centres, regulators, and the chambers and firms that work with them.

Practice II

Commerce & Trade Platforms

Marketplaces and B2B trade rails built for Nigerian commercial reality.

We build trade software that respects two facts at once: the way Nigerian commerce actually moves, and the standards foreign customs actually require. KYC and counterparty verification that hold up to scrutiny. Request-for-quote and payment rails that work when the bank rails do not. Export documentation that customs in two jurisdictions are willing to stamp.

Inventory is reconciled at SKU level. Margins are visible from origin to wharf. Operators can do their job without leaving the platform; auditors can read the trail without asking for a spreadsheet. The discipline here is the same as in the justice practice — documentation as infrastructure.

Representative outputs

  1. Multi-party B2B marketplaces with KYC, RFQ, and reconciled payment flows.
  2. Export operations consoles: documentation pipelines, customs interfaces, route management.
  3. Inventory and merchandising platforms with SKU-grade financial reporting.

Clients — Trading houses, agricultural exporters, holding companies, and the banks and clearing partners that finance them.

Practice III

Institutional Software & Workflow Systems

Internal platforms for institutions that have outgrown their spreadsheets.

Most Nigerian institutions of any consequence still run on spreadsheets and goodwill. Our institutional practice exists for the moment when that is no longer enough — when an organisation has the work to justify a system, the appetite to commission one, and a leadership team patient enough to let it be built properly.

These engagements are slower and quieter than the others. They produce internal tools, regulatory consoles, board-level dashboards, and the unglamorous workflow systems that, once installed, simply work — and continue to work for a decade. We treat them as the infrastructure they are.

Representative outputs

  1. Operational consoles for ministries, regulators, and statutory bodies.
  2. Holding-company portfolio dashboards with subsidiary-level operational depth.
  3. Bespoke workflow systems: case intake, approvals, reporting, audit trails.

Clients — Federal and state institutions, holding companies, regulated financial entities, and large family enterprises.

Practice IV

Applied AI & Data Infrastructure

Retrieval, transcription, and the data plumbing AI silently depends on.

We use AI where it earns its keep: real-time transcription of multi-speaker hearings, retrieval against the Nigerian Weekly Law Reports, document review at the volume contemporary commercial cases now demand, and intake summarisation that does not lose the substance of the matter. We do not use it to write our own copy.

Underneath every applied AI feature in our portfolio is a data infrastructure we built ourselves: ingest, normalisation, storage, embeddings, evaluation harnesses, observability. The model is the visible part. The pipeline is the work.

Representative outputs

  1. Retrieval-augmented systems for legal research, regulatory compliance, and submission drafting.
  2. Real-time speech infrastructure (transcription, role attribution, transcript governance).
  3. Document-understanding pipelines: ingest, classification, extraction, evaluation.

Clients — Law firms and chambers, financial institutions, regulators, and the technology teams inside larger enterprises.

If your institution has work in any of these registers — write.