Ten years delivering enterprise software for global organisations taught me one thing — the tools that last are the ones built to solve a real problem, not to chase a trend. Vvault is that tool.
After a decade working inside global technology organisations — delivering projects for companies like PubMatic and BNY Mellon — I had built systems that automated SDLC workflows, integrated legacy platforms into modern tech stacks, and helped engineering teams move faster without losing control.
The work I was most drawn to was always the same: finding the manual, painful, time-consuming process that everyone accepted as inevitable — and eliminating it.
The moment that led to Vvault came when I was watching a compliance team spend three weeks filling out a SOC2 questionnaire manually. The same questions they had answered six months before. Copying from old documents, rephrasing, double-checking. Hours of senior analyst time on work that added no value beyond the checkbox it filled.
Vvault runs entirely on your own machine. The AI model runs locally. Your policies never leave your network. That's not a feature — it's the foundation everything else is built on.
I have spent my career at the intersection of automation, system integration, and engineering efficiency. Not building demos — building systems that production teams depend on every day.
These aren't values written for a website. They're the decisions that shaped every line of Vvault.
Vvault is an independent product. There is no support team, no ticket queue, no chatbot. When you email or book a call, you speak directly with me — the person who designed the architecture, wrote the code, and understands exactly how it works.
If you have a security question your IT team needs answered, I'll get on a call and walk through it. If the installation hits a problem, I'll screen share and fix it. If Vvault doesn't solve your specific problem, I'll tell you honestly before you buy.
Book a 20-minute demo. We'll run it on a real questionnaire — live, on your machine.