Today we're announcing Infomaze Sphere — the product division of the Infomaze group, and our new home for focused SaaS products built from fifteen-plus years of software delivery experience.
This isn't a pivot. Infomaze continues to exist and continues to deliver custom software for the kinds of businesses we've always worked with: print operations, field service companies, manufacturers, B2B sellers with complex workflows. What's changed is that we've built enough of the same thing, enough times, that we finally decided to productize it.
The pattern we couldn't stop noticing
When you spend fifteen years building custom software for operations-heavy businesses, you start to see the same problems come up with uncanny regularity. A print shop wants better visibility from estimate to shipping. A field service company wants dispatch that doesn't rely on three people and a whiteboard. A B2B manufacturer wants quoting that doesn't live in a spreadsheet that only one person understands.
Each engagement arrived with its own specifics — the exact MIS integration, the unique pricing rules, the particular workflow quirks — but the underlying shape of the problem kept repeating. And every time we built the solution custom, we were implicitly deciding to throw away everything we'd learned the last time we solved it.
One well-built product, shaped by hundreds of real implementations, beats the twelfth custom build of the same solution.
At some point the math gets obvious. The twelfth custom build isn't just slow — it's the wrong answer. What the industry needed wasn't another custom project. It needed a product.
Why now, and why not sooner
The honest answer is that productization is hard. A services company optimizes for fitting software to the customer. A product company optimizes for fitting customers to the software. These are different businesses with different muscles, different economics, and different people. You can't just slap a "product" label on a services offering and expect it to work.
We've been quietly building toward this for a few years. PrintPLANR started as a pattern we saw in three different print operations. FieldPLANR emerged from two field service engagements where the customer needed exactly the same thing. QuotePLANR came out of a particularly painful month in which we realized we'd written the same quote configuration engine four times. ANSWR is newer, but it's grounded in the same observation: operations-heavy businesses have questions that need answering, constantly, and generic chatbot tools miss the shape of real operational inquiry.
By the time we had four products running in real customer environments, not one, splitting out a product division was less a decision than an acknowledgment of what had already happened.
How Sphere and Infomaze fit together
Sphere builds and sells focused SaaS products. Infomaze continues to deliver custom software services. The two companies are separate entities under a shared Infomaze group, with shared engineering heritage and distinct operating disciplines.
If you need a ready-to-deploy product that solves a specific operational problem, talk to Sphere. If you need custom integrations, bespoke workflows, or software built from scratch for requirements that don't match any product, Infomaze is the team. Sphere customers who need deep customization can access Infomaze through us — no separate procurement conversation required.
For investors, the split is also deliberate. Services businesses and product businesses get valued differently, operate on different economics, and raise capital on different terms. Running them as one blurred the thesis. Running them as two makes each one legible.
What comes next
Between now and our official launch on July 1, 2026, we're opening up pilot programs with a small group of existing Infomaze clients who want early access to Sphere products. We're also finalizing our security posture (ISO 27001 certified, GDPR compliant, with regional hosting support) and closing out our first set of customer case studies.
If you're running a print operation, a field service business, a B2B sales team dealing with complex quoting, or any business that deals with a high volume of customer or employee questions — we'd like to talk to you. Either as a prospective customer, a pilot partner, or just to compare notes on operations software.
Want to follow along? Subscribe to the Sphere blog for product updates, engineering notes, and the occasional lesson learned the hard way. Or reach out to us directly — we'd rather have a real conversation than make you fill out a form.