Your engineering team opens the codebase and sees a monolith that takes 45 minutes to deploy. Enterprise software development means building platforms that don't collapse under real load or fail security reviews — role-based dashboards, SSO/SAML flows, Postgres row-level security, CI/CD pipelines on AWS, audit trails that pass SOC 2 Type II without last-minute retrofits. We center your stack on Next.js for the application layer — server components, API routes, edge middleware — deployed on Vercel or self-hosted AWS depending on your compliance posture. Supabase handles auth, Postgres, real-time subscriptions, storage. AWS fills gaps: S3, SQS, Lambda for background jobs, CloudFront, VPCs when you need network isolation. We've shipped platforms for manufacturing analytics companies, construction tech startups, civil engineering firms managing thousands of concurrent field users. The pattern: teams of 4-8, 8-16 week delivery windows, Lighthouse scores above 90 at launch. If your current vendor quotes a 6-month timeline and a Java monolith, that's probably two quarters and $200K more than your business needs to burn.
Waar projecten falen
Wat we bouwen
Stop burning $20K–$50K per quarter on full regression cycles because your monolith can't deploy individual services
Kill the custom JWT duct tape that blocks SSO, SAML, and MFA before your largest customer's security team shuts you down
End the 8-second mobile load times that strand field teams in low-connectivity zones and stall adoption below 40%
Escape the offshore codebase that doesn't pass basic security review and puts your enterprise deals at risk
Replace the framework nobody maintains that drives senior devs to quit and doubles your hiring costs
Eliminate manual Friday-night rollbacks because there's no CI/CD, no staging, no automated tests
Ons proces
Architecture & Threat Modeling
Foundation Sprint
Feature Build Cycles
Security Hardening & Load Testing
Launch & Handoff
Veelgestelde vragen
What does enterprise software development actually cost?
Most of our enterprise engagements land between $75K and $500K. A focused internal tool with auth, dashboards, and a few integrations runs $75K-$150K over 8-10 weeks. A full customer-facing platform with SSO/SAML, SOC 2 compliance, real-time data, and multi-tenant architecture pushes $200K-$500K over 12-16 weeks. The variable isn't our rate — it's your scope. We'll give you a fixed-price proposal after a paid discovery sprint so there aren't surprises.
Why Next.js and Supabase instead of a traditional enterprise stack?
Traditional enterprise stacks — Spring Boot, .NET, Angular — come with massive overhead: slow builds, heavy infrastructure, and teams of 15+ just to keep the lights on. Next.js gives us server-side rendering, API routes, and edge middleware in one framework. Supabase gives us Postgres, auth, real-time, and storage without managing a separate backend. The result is a 4-8 person team shipping in 8-16 weeks what a traditional stack takes 6-12 months and twice the budget. Your maintenance cost drops too — fewer moving parts means fewer things break.
How do you handle SOC 2 compliance requirements?
We bake compliance into the architecture from day one. That means audit logging on every mutation, encryption at rest via AWS KMS, encryption in transit via TLS 1.3, Supabase RLS policies for data isolation, and SSO/SAML with MFA for access control. We generate the evidence artifacts — access logs, change management records, incident response procedures — that your auditor needs. We've supported teams through SOC 2 Type I and Type II audits. We don't do the audit ourselves, but we build the platform so it passes.
What size team works on an enterprise engagement?
Typically 4-8 people: a technical lead, 2-4 engineers, a DevOps/infrastructure specialist, and a project manager. For SOC 2 engagements we'll add a security engineer. Every person on the team has shipped production Next.js and Supabase code before — we don't staff juniors on enterprise work. You'll have a single point of contact and async Slack access to the full team during business hours.
Can you integrate with our existing systems and APIs?
Yes. Most enterprise projects involve integrating with 3-10 external systems — ERPs, CRMs, SCADA platforms, legacy REST APIs, SFTP file drops. We build integration layers using Next.js API routes and AWS Lambda, with SQS for async processing and dead-letter queues for failure handling. We've integrated with SAP, Salesforce, Procore, Autodesk, and dozens of proprietary internal APIs. If it has an API or exports a file, we can connect to it.
How does your approach compare to an offshore team?
An offshore team typically quotes 30-50% less upfront but delivers in 2-3x the timeline with 2-3x the rework. We've rebuilt platforms that offshore teams started — it's a pattern we see quarterly. Our stack advantage is real: Next.js + Supabase + AWS lets a team of 6 outpace a team of 20 on a heavier stack. You'll spend less total, ship faster, and get code that your in-house engineers can actually maintain after handoff.
What happens after launch — do you offer ongoing support?
Every enterprise engagement includes a 30-day post-launch support window with a defined SLA — typically 4-hour response for critical issues, 24-hour for non-critical. After that, we offer monthly retainers starting at $5K/month for ongoing feature development, infrastructure management, and on-call support. About 60% of our enterprise clients move to a retainer. The rest take the codebase, documentation, and runbooks and run it themselves — the stack is designed for that.
What guarantees do you provide on performance and uptime?
We guarantee 90+ Lighthouse scores on mobile at launch — it's in the contract. For uptime, we architect for 99.9% availability using Vercel's edge network or multi-AZ AWS deployments depending on your hosting requirements. Load testing happens before launch at 3x your projected peak traffic. If performance degrades below agreed thresholds within 90 days of launch, we fix it at no additional cost. You get a production system that performs under pressure, not a demo that looks good on a projector.
Let's build
something together.
Whether it's a migration, a new build, or an SEO challenge — the Social Animal team would love to hear from you.