
Founder · Engineering Lead
Usama Nadeem
Ex-Canonical. Architects production systems that survive launch day and the next six years.
If you run a distribution or multi-location business, you know the drill — stock counts that don't match, reports that eat half a day, numbers living in ten different spreadsheets. The software that fixes that has always been priced for enterprises. We build it for you: custom-fit to how you actually operate, at a number that makes sense.

For three years I built and ran EasyAccounts — a custom ERP for a wholesale business that was tracking inventory on spreadsheets and backing up to USB sticks. Today it runs live across 50+ branches. You learn operational software the only way that sticks: by living with the consequences of every decision.
Before that, two years at Canonical — the company behind Ubuntu — on a platform that's run over 10,000 professional certifications. I also built core infrastructure for Xenia as it grew from $1M to a $12M Series A. The engineering is enterprise-grade. The difference is who it's for.
I started TechTrinity because the same story kept repeating — a business owner with a real operational problem, a real budget, and real urgency, handed software built to win a proposal, not to survive a Monday-morning stock count.
What's different here happens before any code gets written. We sit with your operation first — how stock moves, where the numbers break, what your team will actually open every day. That's the only way to build something that gets used instead of abandoned.
We keep the team small on purpose. Every client gets the senior people who actually build your system — not a project manager relaying messages to a team you'll never meet.

Founder · Engineering Lead
Ex-Canonical. Architects production systems that survive launch day and the next six years.

Design Direction
A decade across editorial, product, and identity. Believes screens should feel as considered as print.

Systems Engineering
Distributed systems and the unglamorous infra that holds them up. Writes in graphs, ships in receipts.
The person you speak to in the discovery call is the person mapping and building your system.
Hard lines we've drawn from watching too many owners get burned by agencies and freelancers.
We tell you what's realistic before you pay a deposit — not after. If your budget and your scope don't line up, you'll hear it on the first call, not three weeks into the build.
The senior engineer who scopes your project is the one writing the code. No bait-and-switch to a junior the moment the contract is signed.
Scope, timeline, and price go in writing before anything starts. "We'll figure it out as we go" is how projects blow past budget — so we don't work that way.
We don't vanish at delivery. Every build includes post-launch support, and a founder you can actually reach when something needs attention.
TechTrinity isn't a freelancer who picked up a few projects last quarter. It's built on production engineering — the kind where downtime and bad data have real consequences.
Two of those years were inside Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, on systems used by engineers worldwide.
That's the standard we hold every project to — whether it's a global platform or a stock system for three warehouses. Same discipline. Same care about the details.
Book a free workflow review. We'll go deep on how your operation runs and tell you honestly whether we're the right fit — even if the answer is no.
Or reach us at info@techtrinity.ai