Every engagement with Tractionloop starts the same way. A defined scope. A fixed timeline. Something working at the end of it. Not a roadmap. Not a pilot. A real system, running inside your tools, before the two weeks are up.
Long discovery phases produce decks, not infrastructure. Monthly retainers that start with a vague scope drift. And the company that hired the consultant ends up three months in with nothing running and no clear picture of what they paid for.
The Sprint was designed to make all of that impossible. Scope is fixed before work begins. The timeline is fixed. The output is a real system, not a deliverable. And the moment it goes live, you own it outright — regardless of what happens next.
The Sprint is self-contained. It doesn't require you to sign up for an ongoing engagement to get value. By Day 14, you have a live system and a clear picture of what we build and how we work. That's enough information to decide what comes next.
We don't start writing workflows until we've agreed on what we're building and what success looks like. Every Sprint has a defined scope document — what's in, what's out, what the system does on Day 14. No surprises. No scope creep.
We build inside your tools, your accounts, under your control. The documentation is yours. The system is yours. If you never spoke to us again after Day 14, everything would keep running — because we built it to live in your stack, not ours.
Every Sprint moves through the same phases. The specifics change — what we're building, which tools we're working in, what your team needs at handoff. The structure doesn't.
The scope call happens before the Sprint clock starts. We come to it having researched your company and stack — so the 45 minutes goes into your actual problem, not introductions.
We spend 45 minutes together. We've already done the background work — so this call is about understanding the problem precisely, agreeing the scope, and confirming we're the right fit before anything moves forward.
We map the full architecture before we touch anything. Data flows, trigger logic, tool connections, error handling. You review the design and sign off. Nothing gets built until the blueprint is right — because fixing architecture mid-build costs twice the time.
Eight days of building inside your stack — your tools, your accounts. We send a Slack update every day: what was built, what's next, anything we need. If something unexpected comes up, we raise it immediately rather than absorbing the problem silently and delivering late.
We run the system against real data and real conditions before handoff. Not a demo environment. Edge cases that surfaced during build get handled here. The goal is that your team sees something that already feels reliable — not something that needs babysitting in its first week.
The system goes live. We walk your team through it — how it works, what to watch for, what to do if something breaks. Documentation is delivered in whatever format your team will actually use. Then we have an honest conversation about what made sense to build next, and how you want to continue — if at all.
By Day 14, you have three things. A working system inside your stack. Complete documentation your team can maintain. And a clear answer to the question of what to build next — whether that's with us or not.
Running inside your stack on Day 14 — not a prototype, not a proof of concept. A real system, connected to your real tools, processing real data. It doesn't need anything else to work.
How it works, why it's built the way it is, what to do when something breaks, and how to extend it. Written for your team — not for us. Formatted in whatever your team will actually open.
We sit with your team, show them the system end to end, answer every question, and make sure they're confident running it without us. This isn't a recorded Loom. It's a live session with whoever needs to be there.
Every workflow, every integration, every credential lives in your accounts. If you never spoke to us again after Day 14, the system keeps running. That's the whole point — infrastructure you own, not a service you rent.
We don't leave you with a system that fails silently. Error handling, alerting, and monitoring are built into the handoff — so if something breaks, you know about it before your users do.
By Day 14 we know your stack better than most people inside your company. The retrospective conversation gives you a specific, honest view of what to build next — based on what we saw during the Sprint, not what sounds good in a pitch.
The Sprint doesn't lock you into anything. Once it's done, you have full context on the system, full ownership of everything built, and three honest options for what comes next. There's no wrong answer.
The system is yours, documented, and your team is trained. You run it internally going forward. No ongoing relationship needed — this is a completely valid outcome and one we design for from the start.
You have internal capacity to maintain what we've built, and you needed the expertise to build it — not to run it. The documentation is thorough enough that a capable ops person can take it from here.
We stay engaged on a monthly basis — monitoring the system, handling maintenance as tools update and edge cases emerge, and making iterative improvements as your business evolves. The infrastructure keeps getting better without you having to manage it.
The system needs to keep pace with a business that's moving fast. Tool updates break integrations. New data changes what the enrichment logic needs to do. You want an engineer who already knows the system to handle it.
We place a dedicated GTM or Recruitment engineer inside your team. They build continuously — new systems every month, expanding existing ones, adapting to shifting priorities. The Sprint was the start of a longer infrastructure build.
You have a backlog of infrastructure work and no internal team to build it. The Sprint proved the model — now you want that same output applied to every part of your stack that needs it.
We'd rather tell you now than take your time with a scope call that goes nowhere. Here's an honest picture of who gets the most out of the Sprint — and who probably doesn't.
If something isn't answered here, the scope call is the right place to ask it. We'd rather you come in with questions than assumptions.
A 45-minute call. We identify the highest-leverage system to build first, agree a scope, and tell you honestly whether the Sprint is the right way to start.
tractionloophq.com — Engineering arm of Tractionloop