What I believe
I believe nobody gets into consulting to track time.
Nobody builds a practice so they can spend Friday nights creating pivot tables, or Tuesday mornings playing forensic archaeologist in a PDF to find the one clause a lawyer moved. Nobody signs up for the privilege of hand-keying invoices into QuickBooks, or chasing a colleague for a status update so finance can bill something that should have billed itself.
I believe the work that burns people out isn't the hard work. It's not the challenging client, or the tight deadline, or the scope that stretches your thinking. That work, the real work, the problem-solving, the advice worth paying for, is the reason anyone showed up in the first place.
What burns people out is the broken work. The work-about-work. The operational gunk that accretes silently between every handoff in a practice until your best people are spending their best hours on their worst tasks. And nobody decided it should be this way. It just sort of happened.
I believe that's fixable. And I believe fixing it is worth building a company around.
Every firm runs on the same chain
Sales → Agreement → Delivery → Finance → Renewal
Each crack bills you twice.
The business cost
- The deal that cooled while the SOW was being over-engineered by a committee.
- The hours that leaked through unsigned scope changes.
- The client who got one wrong number, or found that "find-and-replace" slip and started quietly judging you.
The human cost
The slow erosion of the reason anyone showed up. Real titles, replaced by the job nobody applied for:
Sales AE
Document Formatting Specialist
Project Lead
Expensive Pivot Table
Finance Person
Collections Agency
Partner
Midnight Status Email Author
Your wins don't tell you how healthy your practice is. Your seams do.
I believe this because I've lived it.
I spent twenty-five years in professional services before I built Bridge. I did not wake up one day dreaming of writing software. I built it because I was sick of watching genuinely talented people spend their best hours on their worst tasks, and sick of doing it myself.
I've been the person rebuilding a pricing table from a blank page like it's 2009. I've been the person who couldn't answer a basic question about my own business without kicking off a research project. I've watched knowledge walk out the door when someone went on vacation, because the "system of record" was a person remembering to tell other people things.
I believe that every practice has someone who is the bridge. Someone hauling context from one system to another by email, by spreadsheet, by memory, all day, every day, until they're tired in a way a vacation doesn't fix.
That shouldn't be a person's job. That should be software's job.
That's why Bridge exists.

And I believe they've been putting up with it so long they've stopped noticing it's there.
Bridge seals the seams.
Not by replacing the tools you already like. Your CRM, your accounting, your time tracker. By building the spans between them, so the handoffs stop being a person's second job.
Agreements in minutes, not days.
Your real pricing, already loaded, identical across the team. The redline that comes back gets read for you, with every change rated from cosmetic to "call the lawyer."
Knowledge that outlives any one person.
Every conversation becomes part of the engagement record. Context survives vacation, resignation, and the passage of time.
Scope that stays defined.
Changes become signed change orders, not email threads. Budget burn sits one glance away, not one archaeology session away.
Finance that doesn't chase.
Retainers track themselves. Invoices pull from the record. Your books stay in step with your billing without transcription.
Visibility without a fire drill.
The basic questions and the margin questions, both answered without pulling someone off real work. Including by just asking in plain English.
Real forecasting across your entire practice.
See where your team is headed — capacity, utilization, revenue — before it arrives. Plan from data, not gut feel.
The cracks don't stay the same. Business gets more complex. Client expectations rise. The tools multiply. New gaps open between new systems faster than anyone can build spreadsheets to bridge them.
As AI matures, Bridge will use it to close gaps that used to require a person staring at a screen: reading a redline, drafting a status update, answering a question about your own data. Not AI for the sake of AI. AI in service of removing one more piece of broken work from someone's day.
The job isn't to build a static system and declare victory. The job is to keep sealing seams, wherever they appear, for as long as professional services firms exist.
Built by Tommy Spann after 25 years running consulting firms. Bridge is the practice software he wanted and couldn't find — so he built it.