One place where TMB's bids, subs, and paperwork actually live — a tool the company owns.
Not a binder. Not a spreadsheet. Not locked in one person's head. Brigid is built to be handed down and grown with the company.
Drag a bid PDF onto Brigid and it lays the whole thing out for you — read, sorted, and ready to check over in one clear view.
Brigid does the busywork; you do the judgment. No double entry, no lost paperwork, no "where did that bid go?"



A TMB whose operations live on paper and in people's heads can't be sold, handed down, or expanded.
A TMB whose operations live in Brigid can.
When Jen is out, the bid still moves.
When Nick steps back, his process stays.
Everything lives in Brigid — not in any one person's head.
Less chasing, more visibility: see every sub on every job, send RFPs in a few clicks, stop re-keying the same paperwork.
Across the office that's 5–8 hours a day — $28,000–$60,000 back in the company every year.
Brigid is a real product TMB can use, sell, and hand down. The work to finish it is real engineering work — months of design, schema, and code already in the repo, built to last decades.
For me, this is the structured path into tech, IT, and AI that I wasn't going to get through college. Worst case Brigid doesn't land by month 12 — the skills carry forward. Best case, Brigid becomes part of how TMB operates.