AI can make the treadmill faster. We help you get off it.

We use AI and automation where they create leverage, not just to make broken workflows move faster.

Before: one-off workflow spaghetti unmaintained
HubSpot ?Website formTypeformCalendlySheets v4Slack DMWhatsAppSupport inboxStripe / billingLocation checklistZapier (broken)Customer spreadsheetAI summary bot?Old Make scenario
automation → added on top of unclear work fragile
handoff → people fill the gaps from memory friction
change → nobody knows what to update spaghetti
After: simpler system, selectively automated improving
Clear ownerCRMBooking toolLocation viewSupport inboxTask rhythmMaintained automationUseful AI step
simplify → remove steps that do not create value clear
automate → only where the workflow is stable owned
improve → review, maintain, and adjust over time live
The problem

You probably do not have a tool problem. You have a system problem.

The tools are usually already there: CRM, inboxes, spreadsheets, booking tools, forms, docs, Slack or WhatsApp, maybe a few automations. The system is how people, habits, handoffs, tools, data, and incentives work together. When that system has friction, value slows down or leaks out.

01

New enquiries go everywhere

A lead comes through the website. Another through email. Another through WhatsApp. Someone books a tour. Someone asks for a quote. Follow-up depends on who noticed it.

↓ Inconsistent follow-up
02

Handoffs start with missing context

A deal, booking, or customer request moves to operations, but the details live in emails, notes, calls, or someone's head. The team starts by reconstructing the work.

↓ Rework and slower delivery
03

The real system is spreadsheets and chat

Tasks, issues, checklists, and updates live across Sheets, Slack, WhatsApp, inboxes, and side conversations. It works until volume grows or someone is away.

↓ Less visibility and more chasing
04

Follow-up depends on memory

Renewals, check-ins, upsells, and support issues happen when someone remembers, not because the system prompts the right action at the right time.

↓ Missed customer moments
05

Useful context is buried

Calls, emails, forms, notes, proposals, and documents contain useful signal, but it does not become structured enough for follow-up, reporting, or better decisions.

↓ Low leverage from existing work
06

Nobody owns the automations

There are Zaps, scripts, AI summaries, and old Make scenarios. Some matter. Some do not. Nobody is fully sure what breaks when they fail.

↓ Fragile systems and hidden risk
How we work

First we find the real workflow. Then we build around it. Then we keep improving it.

We do not start by asking what to automate. We start by understanding how work actually happens, across people, tools, handoffs, customer moments, and workarounds.

01 / 03

Diagnose

We find where work slows down, context gets lost, or people are compensating for the system.

02 / 03

Build

We build the smallest useful system around the workflows that matter: enquiries, handoffs, operations, follow-up, reporting, and customer data.

03 / 03

Maintain & Improve

We keep the system working as tools, people, and workflows change, then keep finding small improvements that create leverage.

What we do

Systems that turn scattered work into repeatable workflows.

We work on the practical systems that sit between sales, operations, customer experience, and reporting.

Enquiries

Enquiry and follow-up systems

Capture enquiries from forms, email, referrals, booking tools, or phone, then route, track, and follow up consistently.

Handoffs

Sales to operations handoffs

Turn a won deal, booking, tour, or new customer into the right tasks, context, owners, and next steps.

Customers

Customer and renewal workflows

Keep check-ins, renewals, upsells, support issues, and relationship history visible before they depend on memory.

Operations

Operations visibility

Replace scattered spreadsheets and chat threads with clear ownership, recurring task rhythms, dashboards, exceptions, and inventory visibility where it matters.

AI-assisted

AI-assisted workflow steps

Use AI where it helps: turning notes into structured fields, summarizing customer context, drafting handoffs, routing requests, and prompting next actions.

Ongoing

Maintenance and improvement

Monitor automations, clean up workflows, update documentation, and keep improving the system as the business changes.

Fit

Built for service businesses where operations cannot live in someone's head anymore.

We work with businesses where revenue and customer experience depend on consistent execution across people, tools, teams, and locations.

Good fit

  • Multi-location service businesses
  • B2B consultancies and professional service firms
  • Founder-led or operator-led teams
  • Teams using existing tools but lacking a reliable system
  • Businesses where sales, operations, and customer management overlap

Usually not a fit

  • Solo freelancers
  • Very early-stage businesses without repeatable workflows
  • Companies looking for heavy custom software
  • Teams wanting a full platform migration before fixing workflows
Operator experience

Built by operators, not just automation people.

PracticalStack is led by [Name], who previously worked with 91springboard, one of India's early coworking and flexible workspace operators. That experience shapes how we work: we do not treat systems as a software problem first.

We look at the handoffs, exceptions, workarounds, customer moments, and team habits that decide whether operations actually run well. Then we design systems, automations, and AI-assisted workflows around the way the business really works.

Positioning

Clear about what we are and what we're not.

The value is not just building. The value is building the right thing, keeping it working, and improving it as the business changes.

What we are

  • Practical systems partner
  • Workflow-first
  • Operations-aware
  • Revenue-aligned
  • Tool-agnostic
  • Builders who maintain and improve what we build
  • Accountable for workflow fit, not just task completion

What we're not

  • Generic automation agency
  • Custom software shop
  • AI-first consultancy
  • Tool reseller
  • One-off Zapier freelancer
  • A body shop
  • A team that disappears after launch
  • Platform migration project by default
Common situations

Common situations we help with.

These are the patterns that show up when sales, operations, and customer follow-up are spread across too many tools and too much memory.

The founder is still the API between sales, ops, and customers.

Each location has its own spreadsheet, checklist, or workaround.

There are twelve automations. Nobody knows which three matter.

A customer issue gets discussed in chat, but never tracked to resolution.

The CRM exists, but the real context is still in email.

Follow-ups happen when Sarah remembers. Sarah is on holiday.

The team wants to use AI, but the underlying workflow is still messy.

Reporting takes too long because the data lives in five places.

FAQ

The questions operators usually ask.

Still unsure? Book a Systems Review. It is a conversation, not a pitch.

How is this different from hiring an automation agency? +
Most automation agencies start with tools. We start with the workflow. Sometimes the fix is automation. Sometimes it is a clearer process, better data structure, a simpler CRM setup, or better ownership.
Do you replace our existing tools? +
Usually no. We prefer to make the tools you already use work better together. Replacing tools only makes sense after the workflow is clear.
What kinds of businesses are a fit? +
Ops-heavy service businesses where sales, operations, customer, and location data are starting to become hard to manage manually. This includes multi-location service businesses and B2B consultancies.
What does the Systems Review include? +
A review where we diagnose how work currently moves through the business, identify the biggest sources of friction, and recommend what to improve first.
Do you do all implementation yourself? +
For higher-leverage diagnosis, system design, and architecture, PracticalStack stays directly involved. For simpler build tasks, we may use vetted offshore subcontractors to keep implementation affordable. We remain responsible for quality, workflow fit, and the final outcome.
Why do you include maintenance and improvement? +
Because systems decay. Automations break, teams change, tools get updated, and people create workarounds. Maintenance keeps the system reliable; continuous improvement makes it more useful over time.
How AI-heavy is this? +
AI is used selectively, mostly to structure unstructured data such as notes, emails, calls, documents, and forms. AI is not the main product.
How long does an engagement take? +
Start with a short Systems Review. From there, most builds can be scoped into a focused implementation sprint. Ongoing maintenance and improvement can continue monthly if useful.
Systems Review

Find the first system improvement worth making.

Show us how enquiries, handoffs, tasks, and customer follow-up work today. We'll identify the first system improvement worth making and what to ignore for now.