There's no team, no investors, no pitch deck. Just me, a laptop, and a belief that the internet got weird somewhere along the way — and that a lot of the "standard" tools small businesses are sold don't actually need to work the way they do.
Why this exists
Most Pulse proof tools out there do something I find a bit gross: they track your visitors. They log IPs, set cookies, guess at names and cities, and feed all of it into dashboards full of data nobody really needed in the first place.
It always felt backwards to me. Pulse proof is supposed to build trust — but the tools that deliver it are built on mild surveillance. That tension is the whole reason PulseProof exists.
The whole product is built around one idea: you can have effective Pulse proof notifications without collecting a single piece of personal data from your visitors. No cookies. No IPs. No tracking. Nothing to consent to, because there's nothing being done that would need consent.
What I care about
Making things that actually help
Not features for the sake of features. Not a product that needs a five-hour onboarding video. A small, focused tool that does one thing well, at a price a small business can actually afford.
Being honest about what the product does
The stats on the landing page are real. The testimonials, when I have them, will be from real people. If something's a limitation, I'd rather say so than dress it up.
Respecting your visitors
If you put my widget on your site, I owe your visitors the same privacy I'd want on a site I visit. That's the whole deal.
What you can expect from me
I read every support email personally. I ship improvements when I can. I'll tell you if something's on the roadmap and I'll tell you if it isn't. If the product ever has to shut down, I'll give plenty of notice and export everything you need.
I'm not trying to build a unicorn. I'm trying to build something useful, sustainable, and quietly proud to show friends.
Thanks for stopping by. If you want to chat — about the product, a bug, or just to say hi — my inbox is open.
— The guy behind PulseProof