A collective of vetted tech people, built around honest work, real relationships, and a genuine commitment to the craft.
satco. started from a simple observation: most tech projects fail not because of bad code, but because of bad communication. Agencies that don't listen. Developers who disappear after delivery. Proposals full of words nobody understands.
At the same time, a lot of genuinely talented developers, designers, and consultants are working in isolation — doing good work, but without the community, infrastructure, or energy that makes work meaningful over time.
satco. is the answer to both problems. A vetted collective that gives talented people a real home, and gives clients a tech partner they can actually trust.
The collective becomes the identity. Not any one person — the network itself and the work it produces.
We started in Morocco because that's where we're from, and because we believe there's something real being built here. From Morocco, we operate across Southern Europe — where the travel is manageable and the relationships are worth building.
If we can't explain something plainly, we don't understand it well enough yet.
We build with clients we want to work with for years, not just for an invoice.
We travel. We sit across the table. Physically showing up signals genuine commitment.
Fewer things done well beats more things done adequately. Always.
We tell clients what's realistic. We tell members when something isn't working.
Membership isn't just leads — it's getting better at your craft and building something lasting.
No calls, no pitch decks sent in advance. The first conversation is real, in person, wherever is comfortable for you.
No synergies. No leveraging. We say what we mean and make sure the other person understood before moving on.
Weekly updates, honest assessments, real progress reports. No surprises at the end of a project.
We don't hand over a product and disappear. We support what we build for as long as you need us.
If a project isn't right — wrong fit, wrong timing — we say so. A rejected project is better than a poorly delivered one.
I'm a web developer with 5 years of basic experience in HTML/CSS/JS and React. I build web and mobile apps for a range of companies and industries.
I created satco. from a frustration with how tech work gets done, and with the isolation that comes from being a skilled independent without a real community behind you.
The goal was never to build a big agency. It was to build something honest — a place where good people do good work together, and clients feel the difference.
If what we're building resonates — as a potential member or a potential client — let's talk.