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Workforge
GotConvertWorkforge's answer
Most "free" web tools online aren't really free. You get three uses a day, or a watermark, or a signup wall, or your file gets uploaded to somebody's server so they can train a model on it, not to mention every part of the screen covered in ads. Workforge is the opposite. Every tool runs in your browser, doesn't ask for an email, doesn't stamp a logo on your output, and doesn't send your files anywhere. If a tool can be built to run locally, we build it that way.
Workforge's answer
Small business owners, freelancers, developers, and anyone who has a job to do and doesn't want a subscription for it. A lot of our early usage is people converting images in bulk, generating one-off invoices, or wrangling data between formats (JSON, CSV, Excel, Markdown). The common thread isn't industry - it's that they need a utility, not a SaaS relationship. If we can build and run it for little/no cost, we don't charge for it, and if we have to charge for it, we charge a fair price that is typically a lot better than the larger companies.
Workforge's answer
Next.js and TypeScript for the apps, Tailwind for styling, Supabase (where we legitimately do need backend), and Vercel for hosting. The whole platform is a Turborepo monorepo so each tool ships as its own app on its own subdomain. Wherever possible, the actual work (image processing, file conversion, etc.) happens client-side in the browser so files never touch a server.
Workforge's answer
No enterprise logos to drop here... yet! We're hoping to change that, but more importantly we're hoping to provide real value to the SMB, Indie & freelancer community. We know what it's like to be a small business, just starting out, when every dollar spent is a tradeoff and we want to help solve that problem.
Workforge's answer
I've been running businesses for a long time. Every time I needed a simple utility; resize a batch of photos, spit out an invoice, convert a file, the internet handed me the same three options. 1) a "free" site so buried in ads and popups you can barely see the button you came for, and half the time the download is a redirect to something you didn't ask for. 2) Adobe, where reading a PDF is free but anything past that wants a subscription. 3) Canva, charging like it's a premium product for what's honestly a commodity, templates and a drag-and-drop editor dressed up as a platform.
At some point it clicked that none of this stuff is hard. The reason it costs money (or costs you your attention to fifty ads) isn't that the tools are expensive to build. It's that somebody figured out they could charge for it, or monetize your eyeballs while you use it. That's it. That's the whole business model.
So I started building the versions I actually wanted to use. Clean pages, no ads, no signup, no watermark, no "upgrade for full quality." Just the tool. The first few were for me. Then a friend asked if I could do one for something they needed. Then somebody else. After enough of those, it made more sense to just put them online than to keep rebuilding them one-off.
That's Workforge. It's the set of tools I wanted to exist when I was staring at another ad-choked converter or another paywall.
Workforge's answer
No ads. You land on a Workforge tool and it looks like a tool, not a billboard. No popups, no "download" buttons that redirect you somewhere else, no banner ads shifting the layout while you're trying to click. People notice this immediately โ it's usually the first thing they compliment.
It's fast. Because the tools run in your browser instead of uploading your files to a server, there's no wait, no queue, no "processingโฆ" spinner while somebody else's backend catches up. You pick a file, it's done.
Nothing to install, nothing to sign up for. Everything works from a browser tab. No account, no email capture, no free trial that turns into a subscription.
Most tools are free, and the ones that aren't stay cheap. The default is free. If a tool ever needs to be paid โ because it costs real money to run โ it'll be priced like a utility, not like a SaaS product pretending to be something bigger.
Requests actually get built. If you submit a request and say "I wish there was a tool that did X," there's a good chance it shows up on the site within the next few days (within reason...). In fact, that's literally how half the current tools got made. Try that with Adobe.
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