Toast runs the register. Homebase clocks people in. Neither one can tell a man who owns three shops what he kept last month.
Pyniqa is a Business OS for the places nobody built software for — the corner grocery, the two-chair salon, the dry cleaner with a paper register and a $0 software budget.
Every product in this category sells control — dashboards, alerts, surveillance, a camera app you check at midnight. Pyniqa sells the opposite. It exists so an owner can leave.
Build the week, publish it, and everyone's phone tells them. Move a shift and the person who has to be there finds out — and says they saw it. A schedule nobody acknowledged is a rumour.
Sweep and mop. Count the walk-in. Lock the doors. Write them once and they show up every day, for whoever is working — not for one person who might call out. When the last manager quits, the next one opens Pyniqa and knows what the business does.
Four figures. What came in. What labor cost — Pyniqa computes it from the schedule
you already built. What you spent on goods. What keeps the doors open. Across every
location you own, on one screen.
Every number carries its source. Nothing is invented, and when the month isn't
complete, Pyniqa says so instead of guessing.
Pyniqa is built by Prayash LLC, a California company, and it runs every day in our own restaurant before it runs in yours.
We are not a venture-backed platform company with a sales team. We are an operator who got tired of texting his manager at eleven at night, and built the thing he wanted.
Questions, problems, or you want it in your shop — support@pyniqa.com.
We answer. There is no ticket queue, because there is no support department. There is a person who built it.