Customers
Calm, confident teams. That's the pattern.
From 5-person studios to 5,000-person companies, Maestro is the layer that makes the rest of the stack quieter.
“The first tool I've added to my stack that made my stack smaller.”
Lena Visser · Head of Ops, Holm · 32 ppl
“Calm. That's the word the team keeps using when we talk about Maestro.”
Marcus Allen · Founder, Folio · 8 ppl
“We stopped having the ‘where does this live’ conversation in standup. That alone paid for it.”
Aiyana Ferreira · COO, Lattice Tea · 14 ppl
“Three project tools, two doc tools, four chat channels. Maestro made them act like one.”
Tomás Rivera · CTO, Northbeat · 27 ppl
“Notifications dropped 70%. Output didn't.”
Suki Tanaka · Engineering Lead, Klang · 19 ppl
“Onboarding new hires used to take a week of tab-tours. Now I send them the Maestro link.”
Iris Mokoena · Head of People, Bedrock · 64 ppl
Holm is a 32-person product studio in Rotterdam. Before Maestro, they ran on Linear, Notion, GitHub, Slack, and three calendars. After Maestro, they still do — only now the team works from one place.
The problem
Holm's design and engineering teams used different project tools. Their PMs lived in Notion. Standups started with five minutes of “where is that” before any actual work talk.
What changed
Maestro connected to all five tools in an afternoon. By the next standup, every PM was reading from the same timeline as their team — no more cross-tool reconciliation. Three months in, the design team retired Notion-as-PM (kept it for docs only) and the standup dropped from 25 to 11 minutes.
What stayed the same
Every existing tool. No migrations, no archived data, no “rolling out a new system.” Maestro never asked Holm to change how they work — only to read what was already there.
−56%
standup time
−70%
cross-tool notifications
+1
tool retired (Notion-as-PM)