A Human Future is a software development studio.
We build digital products, platforms and prototypes that help motivated organisations pull the future towards them, faster.
We build digital products, platforms and prototypes that help motivated organisations pull the future towards them, faster.
A Human Future is a remote team of software developers, user experience specialists and product development experts. HQ is in Cambridge, England, but that’s usually not very important, because we are, indeed, Extremely Online.
The studio exists with a singular calling - to meet nasty digital problems with modern, elegant solutions - and launch brilliant products that help our clients grow quickly, intentionally, and safely.
We move fast & make things
The best parts of the Internet are built by tiny teams of inventors, oddballs and misfits - motivated, ambitious and experienced enough to make sense of any mess.
It’s why we’re a small team by design and why the mission is purist, sharp and principled: Tight client circle, tricky, collaborative problems, and clean, unambiguous results.
Beyond that, we’re strongly committed to running an ethical, no-bullshit practice, and seek out the kinds of partners that let us underpin our work with that philosophy. Technology isn’t the most important part of the future - the way that we wield it, is.
Care is the motive and impact is the mission.
We build products, websites, platforms and apps in sectors like consultancy, data science and logistics. It’s knotty work that takes care and consideration - in plan, execution and delivery.
What our clients do is complex, but what they have in common is simple. They want to build lean, tough, agile products to inspirational quality.
We’re a speciality Python & Django house, but we work with all sorts of other tools too - whatever’s the most appropriate for each project’s problem space.
And we’re real champions of open-source - so your products have low running costs, are easy to extend, and can be supported by an expert community into the long-term.