Projects.
The operational system your business runs on.
Running a business is two jobs: the work you're paid for, and the pile of paperwork nobody warned you about. Workplace handles the second one. You forward it the documents you've been meaning to file, it sorts them, and the rest of your day goes back to the first job.
Your secrets, your phone, no internet required.
The small secrets that don't belong in a password manager — the WiFi code, the alarm PIN, the lockbox combo, the card number that deserts you at the till. Encrypted on your phone, revealed with a press and hidden when you let go. No account, no cloud, no internet. Free, with nothing held back for a paid tier — I wanted it myself and couldn't find a reason to charge anyone for it.
Replace your login without a migration.
An OAuth 2.0 and OpenID Connect provider you put in front of the login you already have, rather than instead of it. It proxies the old system, lets people sign in the way they always have, and quietly takes over their authentication as it goes — no migration day, no mass password reset, nobody noticing. Take it out again and you're back to exactly what you had before. It's the least invasive way to fix the most important thing.
Domain warmup, kept in-house.
A new sending domain is a stranger to every mailbox provider — push volume too fast and your mail lands in spam, where a password reset is useless. Mailplace ramps a domain up the way providers want to see it, day by day, across as many domains as you run. It's self-hosted, so the transactional mail you send — who it goes to, what it says, when — stays between you and the recipient, not a relay that logs all three.