As a development studio, we turn loose ideas, voice notes,
and half-baked diagrams
into structured software specifications your devs can actually build from — no assumptions, no missing logic,
no mid-sprint surprises.
Dev team asks different questions every week.
Flows clarified. Edge cases mapped. Scope cleared.
What’s written doesn’t match what’s expected.
We align technical documentation with logic.
Everyone’s working
off a different version.
Single source of truth established. Specs updated.
No one knows what’s
done until it breaks.
States, roles, behaviors are documented — not improvised.
The more we detail, the fewer surprises in development.
Choose the level of clarity you actually need.
I liked how adaptable the team was. Even when we changed direction halfway, they stayed calm and helped us re-prioritize without losing momentum.
The final product matched our vision perfectly. But what stood out most was the openness — everything was discussed upfront, no hidden surprises.
They care about details. You can tell everything is double-checked before delivery.
Super easy collaboration. Thanks!
Didn’t find what you were looking for? Drop us a line at info@toimi.pro.
A technical requirements document defines the architecture, technology stack, third-party integrations, security protocols, hosting infrastructure, and deployment pipeline for your product. For Fairfax companies — whether you're agovtech contractor near the George Mason campus or a cybersecurity startup in the Fairfax Circle area — we outline API specifications, database schemas, authentication flows, compliance requirements (FedRAMP, NIST, SOC 2), and performance benchmarks. The document serves as the blueprint your dev team or vendor will follow, reducing miscommunication and scope creep. We deliver it as a structured PDF or Notion workspace with diagrams, user flows, and acceptance criteria.
Pricing depends on project complexity, the number of user roles, integrations, and compliance frameworks you need to address. A straightforward web app with standard features might start from a few thousand dollars, while an enterprise platform serving Fairfax's defense contractors or healthcare networks — requiring HIPAA, FedRAMP, or multi-tenant architecture — will require a larger budget. We scope the work after a discovery call where we review your business goals, existing systems, and technical constraints. Exact cost is provided in a detailed proposal once we understand your full requirements and timeline.
Most projects take two to four weeks, depending on the system's complexity and stakeholder availability. For a Fairfax SaaS startup targeting government clients, we might need extra time to research compliance standards and security protocols. For a local retail or professional services app, timelines are shorter. We begin with a kickoff workshop (remote or in-person if you're near Old Town Fairfax), gather inputs from your team, draft the document, and iterate based on your feedback. Rush delivery is possible if you need documentation for an RFP deadline or investor meeting.
Govtech contractors, cybersecurity firms, healthcare platforms, fintech startups, and logistics companies near Fairfax's Route 50 corridor see the greatest value. Many Fairfax businesses work with federal agencies or Fortune 500 clients who demand clear specs, security audits, and compliance documentation before approving vendors. A well-written technical requirements doc becomes your reference during RFP responses, investor due diligence, or when onboarding offshore dev teams. It ensures everyone — from your CTO to external auditors — understands the system architecture and data handling policies.
Yes — we document every third-party service, API endpoint, webhook, and data sync your product will use. If your Fairfax business needs to integrate with Salesforce, Stripe, AWS GovCloud, or legacy enterprise systems common in Northern Virginia's contractor ecosystem, we specify authentication methods, rate limits, error handling, and fallback logic. We also define internal API contracts if you're building microservices or a mobile app that talks to a custom backend. This section is critical for dev teams to estimate effort and avoid integration surprises mid-project.
Absolutely — most clients come to us with a vision, not a spec sheet. We run structured discovery workshops to extract details about user roles, workflows, edge cases, and business rules. For Fairfax clients in regulated industries, we ask about compliance needs, data residency, and audit trails. We then translate your inputs into technical language: database relationships, state machines, permission matrices, and API contracts. You don't need to know the difference between REST and GraphQL — we guide you through decisions and explain trade-offs in plain terms.
We use Slack or email for daily updates and schedule two to three video calls to review drafts and gather feedback. For Fairfax clients, we can meet in person if you're near the Fairfax County Government Center or downtown area. You'll have access to a shared Notion or Google Doc where we build the requirements in real time, so you see progress between calls. We encourage your product manager, CTO, or lead engineer to join review sessions — their input ensures the final document reflects both business goals and technical reality.
You receive a final PDF and editable source files (Figma, Notion, or Markdown) that you can share with dev teams, investors, or RFP evaluators. We offer one round of revisions within 30 days if your Fairfax stakeholders request changes or if new compliance requirements emerge. If you hire us for development, the requirements doc becomes the project charter — we follow it during sprints and update it as scope evolves. If you're working with another vendor, we can join a handoff call to walk their team through the architecture and answer technical questions.