About
It started as a necessity — and grew into something real.
The story
In 2020, I was hired as a developer for a project that, like a lot of early-stage ideas, changed shape more than once before it found its footing. What didn't change was the relationship — and by the time that project became DocsHero, I needed more than just myself to keep building it. That's how Code Foresight came to exist.
Since then, we’ve figured out what kind of company we want to be: a small, focused studio that builds web applications for people who need a team they can genuinely rely on — not just for launch day, but for the years that follow.
A lot of that approach comes from my own path into software. I studied Electrical Engineering and began by researching health data, geospatial monitoring, and public health visualization before fully moving into web development. More than ten years later, I still like being close to the work, writing production code, improving the tests and tools behind it, and exploring how AI can help us build more carefully.
The last one to sleep, the first one to wake up.
Mohammad Amin · Founder
In the early years, that meant exactly what it sounds like — first in, last out, more focused on whether a client was happy than on anything else. It still sets the bar, but experience has changed how we clear it: reliability comes from clear thinking and solid systems, not late nights. The commitment is the same — these days it's backed by a team and the judgment to know what actually matters.
The team
Code Foresight today is a lean team of developers — frontend, backend, and full-stack — with senior people on every project. We've intentionally stayed small. We'd rather do fewer things exceptionally than spread ourselves thin trying to be everything to everyone.
If you're looking for an agency that disappears after invoicing you, we're probably not the right fit. If you're looking for a technical partner who'll still be there in year three, let's talk.
Let's talk →