SaaS Booking System for Tanning Salons
- E-Commerce Development
- $50,000 to $199,999
- Sep. 2014 - Ongoing
- Quality
- 4.5
- Schedule
- 4.0
- Cost
- 5.0
- Willing to Refer
- 5.0
“Dalmet has a deep understanding so I can explain in a few sentences what I want, and they can code it.”
- Information technology
- Arlington, Virginia
- 1-10 Employees
- Phone Interview
- Verified
Dalmet built a software platform to manage appointments, integrate credit cards, and send instructions by email and text. The platform processes credit cards with Authorize.Net.
Dalmet is able to understand project requirements easily, saving their customers valuable time. Also, they deliver their products quickly and affordably. The deliverables include all of the capabilities requested and is now being monetized through other tanning vendors.
A Clutch analyst personally interviewed this client over the phone. Below is an edited transcript.
BACKGROUND
Introduce your business and what you do there.
I'm the co-founder of a company called Spray Booker LLC, a software-as-a-service (SaaS) online booking and company management platform that Dalmet Technologies created from the ground up for us.
OPPORTUNITY / CHALLENGE
What challenge were you trying to address with Dalmet?
Just like the users of our software, we also own an airbrush tanning company. We do a significant amount of volume: 6,500 tans per year approximately. In 2014, we reached a peak in the logistics of booking appointments over email or phone. We decided that we needed an online booking system that met our needs.
SOLUTION
What was the scope of their involvement?
Unlike other appointment-based services like a barber or nail salon, there are specific steps that you have to do before and after tanning. One important requirement that we had was the ability to send out customized instructions and have the person making the appointment confirm that they received those instructions so that they properly prepared for the appointment.
There are a number of large services online that do generic bookings, but none of them met our needs. They didn’t have credit card integration to hold or conduct the transactions, or couldn’t do the notifications to both text and email like we wanted. We decided to build our own internal management software platform around these core requirements.
We had some initial requirement gathering sessions. They specified an initial cost. We were financed in part by the Small Business Administration. Dalmet built it and delivered the initial version in March of 2015, but it was clear that it was a fixed price contract, and that we had a bit of scope creep and fell behind schedule. We needed more features to make it functional for our use. We engaged with Dalmet to get the work put in so that we could go live on the platform on mid-2015.
The platform integrates with Authorize.Net to validate and securely store credit card information. It can then pass on the charges to any merchant processor, as long as the merchant processor has a configuration variable that integrates with Authorize.Net. The use case is the customer logs in and wants to make an appointment. We ask them to put a credit card in to hold the appointment.
The credit card gets input into our system, passed to Authorize.Net, validated and stored there, and then a pointer to the Authorize.Net is stored on our side. When the person comes in, they get their service done, and then we can charge the card on file via paperless transaction. They could also enter a new card, and we could input directly at the point of check out.
What is the team dynamic?
I only communicated with Staney [Dalmet] and Ronnie [Dalmet], the two principals of Dalmet. Dalmet has a deep understanding so I can explain in a few sentences what I want, and they can code it.
How did you come to work with Dalmet?
We initially contracted with a company called Concord Software to do the initial phase of it, but Concord subcontracted it out to Dalmet. After the first phase, they parted ways and Concord gave up the contract, and we engaged directly with Dalmet for the rest of the implementation and the subsequent work. We found Concord through a referral from another company that I own. We wanted to build this in Java and JavaScript, but they were primarily .NET specialists, so they didn't have those skills in-house. That's why they subcontracted the whole project to Dalmet.
How much have you invested with them?
We've invested about $120,000 in development, including subsequent feature additions and bug fixes. That was all primarily spent in 2014–2016. We've spent a few hundred dollars in nominal bug fixes and support in 2017. The product is very stable at this point.
What is the status of this engagement?
We've been working with them since September 2014.
RESULTS & FEEDBACK
What evidence can you share that demonstrates the impact of the engagement?
We sell it as a SaaS. It's not just internal corporate software. We've had more than 200 airbrush tanning companies that have evaluated it, and, we have between 15–20 that are using it in production and paying for it. There are close to 20,000 customers that have logged into it through the various companies.
How did Dalmet perform from a project management standpoint?
I alluded to the fact that we were late in the initial delivery, but I don't attribute that to Dalmet. The scope creep and a lack of project management were on Concord's side. Dalmet wasn't engaged full-time on this, so they were at Concord's mercy of being told what to do when.
Once we started dealing with Dalmet directly and they were doing their own project management, we stood up a Bugzilla platform to hold both bugs and features, and we put in bugs and asked them to price out bugs, features, or augmentations to the code. We'd tell them which ones to do, and they had already quoted us a firm, fixed price, and number of hours. We have a standing hourly rate with them.
What did you find most impressive about them?
They are excellent at turning functional requirements into deliverables with very little need to discuss them, which is valuable from a business perspective.
Are there any areas they could improve?
There are some minor typos in some of the data definition language, but they’re behind the scenes so they don't affect the way the app works. They may have stemmed from some of the offshore resources that they used because some of the words that were misspelled were esoteric English words that not every non-English speaker would know how to spell properly.
Do you have any advice for potential customers?
We like them because their rates are affordable and they complete the work quickly. The biggest concern with working with them is their bandwidth. They work for us on a part-time basis, so I don't know what projects they are engaged in full-time. If I was trying to hire them, I would want to know how they're going to staff the project, the engagements they're committed to, and the percentage of time they're going to be committing to my project.
RATINGS
-
Quality
4.5Service & Deliverables
-
Schedule
4.0On time / deadlines
"They were totally engaged for a while, but lately, they've been very busy, and their response time is slower. They're probably busy elsewhere."
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Cost
5.0Value / within estimates
"Our contract with them is incredibly affordable based on the market for their particular skills."
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Willing to Refer
5.0NPS