At a company I worked with closely last year, the head of IT walked me through their AI rollout — twelve tools, three vendors, a six-month timeline. Twelve months later, the tools were still running. The team had stopped using eight of them.
The gap wasn't the technology. It was that nobody had designed what happens after the demo.
After working with companies across Japan, Vietnam, and India, I've seen the same failure patterns appear again and again. They're structural — and they're fixable if you know which one you're looking at.
Pick the situation that fits best. Each one points to where we'd start — though the first conversation usually clarifies things further.
Whether you're designing AI strategy, building systems, training staff, shipping mobile, or entering Vietnam — the same lab structure applies: dedicated teams, ongoing collaboration, no handoff at launch.
The three core services aren't separate offerings. They're sequential phases. Companies that try to skip phase one — or run all three at once — consistently hit the same wall: activity without adoption.
Measure first
Reaching out cold can feel like a big step. So before that, two free tools to see — right here — whether offshore development fits your company, and how your cost would change. Bring the result to a 30-minute session, and the conversation moves a lot faster.
Answer eight questions and we score your readiness, then send back three specific recommendations from your answers. Not “you should do this” — “here’s what to do, in your situation.”
Check your readiness → Cost calculator / instantEnter your team size and budget, and see how the next 12 months change — right here, with the reasoning behind the numbers laid out.
Calculate your cost →Every engagement starts the same way: a 30-minute conversation where I ask where things are stuck. By the end of it, we usually know exactly which of these makes sense first — and which ones to ignore entirely.

I've been based in Vietnam for 15 years. I run Linnoedge on AI tools — not as a pilot program, but as the actual operating model. Claude Code, daily. Structured prompting across every function.
The question I ask in every first session is the same: where are decisions getting made by instinct that could be made by data — and where is the opposite happening? That usually points to where to start.
Answers to the questions that come up in almost every first conversation.
We use cookies to improve your experience on our site. By using our site, you consent to cookies.
Manage your cookie preferences below:
Essential cookies enable basic functions and are necessary for the proper function of the website.
These cookies are needed for adding comments on this website.
Statistics cookies collect information anonymously. This information helps us understand how visitors use our website.
Google Analytics is a powerful tool that tracks and analyzes website traffic for informed marketing decisions.
Service URL: policies.google.com (opens in a new window)
Marketing cookies are used to follow visitors to websites. The intention is to show ads that are relevant and engaging to the individual user.
Google Maps is a web mapping service providing satellite imagery, real-time navigation, and location-based information.
Service URL: policies.google.com (opens in a new window)
You can find more information in our Cookie Policy and Privacy Policy.