The Build & Operate Manifesto
The handoff is where projects go to die
For decades, the digital services industry has operated on a simple model: a client briefs an agency, the agency builds something, and then hands it over. The client is left to figure out how to run it, maintain it, and grow it. If something breaks, they call the agency back — at hourly rates.
This model worked when "digital" meant a website. But today, businesses need platforms: interconnected systems that handle customer intake, intelligent matching, automated workflows, payment processing, and real-time communication. A platform is not a project you finish. It's a system you operate.
Why the agency model breaks down
The traditional agency model has three structural problems that make it unsuitable for platform work:
- Misaligned incentives. Agencies are paid to build. The longer the build, the higher the revenue. There is no incentive to build something that's easy to operate, because operating it is someone else's problem.
- Knowledge loss at handoff. The team that designed and built the platform understands its architecture, trade-offs, and edge cases. When they move to the next client project, that knowledge walks out the door. The operations team inherits a system they didn't build, with documentation that's always incomplete.
- No feedback loop. The agency never sees how the platform performs in production. They never learn which decisions were right and which were wrong. Every new project starts from the same assumptions, because there's no operational data flowing back into the design process.
What replaces it: the Build & Operate model
At NOVARINT, we made a deliberate choice: we operate everything we build. Not as an afterthought, not as an upsell — as the core of how we work.
This changes everything:
- We build for operability. Because we'll be the ones waking up at 3am if something breaks, we design systems that are observable, resilient, and easy to maintain. This isn't altruism — it's self-preservation.
- We accumulate operational knowledge. After operating HetPlein across 12 marketplace verticals for over a year, we know exactly which architectural patterns work under real load, which matching algorithms produce satisfied customers, and which onboarding flows convert. This knowledge is irreplaceable.
- We close the feedback loop. Production data informs every design decision. When we add a new vertical to HetPlein or a new feature to InnConnect, we're not guessing. We're building on thousands of data points from live operations.
What this means for clients
If you're a company that needs a digital platform — a marketplace, a SaaS product, an internal operations system — the Build & Operate model gives you three things no agency can:
- One partner, no handoffs. The people who understand your business, designed your architecture, and wrote the code are the same people who operate it daily. No finger-pointing between teams.
- Continuous improvement. Your platform doesn't launch and stagnate. It improves every week based on real usage data, performance metrics, and your evolving business needs.
- Predictable costs. Instead of unpredictable agency retainers and emergency fix budgets, you get a clear operational agreement. We're invested in keeping the platform efficient because we're the ones running it.
The proof is in production
This isn't theory. HetPlein.eu runs 12 marketplace verticals connecting Dutch customers with professionals across construction, accounting, legal, dental, and more. InnConnect handles thousands of customer service conversations with AI-powered chatbots, knowledge base retrieval, and intelligent escalation. Both are EU-hosted, GDPR-native, and operated 24/7 from Noordwijk.
We didn't build these for clients. We built them for ourselves. That's the ultimate proof that our model works: we bet our own revenue on the platforms we operate.
The best way to prove you can build and operate platforms is to build and operate your own. Everything else is a sales deck.
Is this model for everyone?
No. If you need a campaign website or a one-off mobile app, a traditional agency is fine. The Build & Operate model makes sense when:
- Your platform is core to your business, not a marketing channel
- You need it to run reliably for years, not months
- You don't have (or don't want) an in-house platform engineering team
- You need European hosting and compliance built into the architecture
If that sounds like your situation, the question isn't whether you need a platform partner. It's how long you can afford to keep patching together agency projects and SaaS workarounds.