Software sucks when teams don't talk.
A while back a team I was on delivered a feature three months late. Deadline after deadline flew by. Finally we shipped, but it didn’t feel like a success.
The team was one of the best I’d ever worked in, and no one could pinpoint the problem. We were 40% over-estimate – a staggering amount in terms of cost and business hours. Was it poor discovery? Scope creep?
Our feature retro found some immediate issues:
key endpoints were removed months too late
architecture failed to evolve with API contracts
progress was undercut by conflicts with other teams
And so on – a thousand little communication failures that accumulated into massive debt. Months of unnecessary time and work, all because we weren’t talking to each other. Sound familiar?
The retro made it painfully clear that team members were siloing themselves. Here’s how most of us tended to operate:
gave a one-minute update at stand-up that only the product owner listened to
carried out work in silence, only telling people it was done when asked
assumed if people needed something, they’d ask
assumed it was someone else’s job to take care of the bigger picture
Add to the fact that:
software developers are introverted
distributed team members prefer to suffer in silence
high industry staff turnover decimates knowledge-owners
PMs are over-stretched and reactive
The result was a communication black hole that left our team fragmented and unproductive while creating real business cost. I experienced each of these issues firsthand and was guilty of all of them. I was also convinced we could do better.
Devs have Copilot, designers have FigmaAI. What does your team have?
I thought about the Guide archetype. Luke had Obi Wan. Pinnochio had the Blue Fairy. For better or worse, Millenials had Clippy. Guides are handy companions to have. They are proactive, context-aware, and, importantly, understand that oftentimes we don’t know what we don’t know.
Our team needed a guide of its own. So I built one. BlueFairy began as a browser extension. A little glowing avatar that lives in your Github repos, your Figma projects, and your Jira boards. Users sign up to BlueFairy, tell it who they are and which projects they want it to care about, and BlueFairy does the rest. BlueFairy knows each team member and their work implicitly, and can be used by as few or as many individuals as desired. BlueFairy is for:
leads who require greater visibility over developments within their team
team members who want instant, curated insights into events that impact their work
external stakeholders who need a personalised update feed
Once a user registers, they begin receiving live, tailored updates on anything that is directly relevant for them. BlueFairy knows when a backend dev has updated an endpoint, and can tell the frontend developers. It knows when another team has started work in your team’s product area, and can give members a heads-up on conflicts as they develop. It knows what your junior devs are working on, when UX have updated their designs, when a release is made, and much more. BlueFairy doesn’t just send automated notifications – it delivers smart, targeted, contextually-aware updates.
Give AI the wheel? No thanks.
The transformative potential of AI is still nascent and BlueFairy could not exist without it. But with the recent boom in bandwagon AI solutions, it felt important to define an approach that gave as much importance to rich and rewarding UX as it did to solving business problems. Thus, three defining principles became BlueFairy’s North Star:
AUGMENTATION
AI should be the secondary interactor and never the primary. It should never run a standup, take care of a customer, or conduct a job interview. BlueFairy is your safety net, not a replacement for in-person communication, augmenting your workflows while preventing human error from slipping through the cracks.
PROACTIVITY
AI should help us before we ask it to. Too many AI tools require us taking extra steps out of our routine, front-loading context and killing momentum. BlueFairy anticipates your need wherever possible.
EMPOWERMENT
AI shouldn’t appropriate the work that gives you value. BlueFairy doesn’t code or design for you – it empowers you to do those things exponentially better. It cuts through the noise, handles communication, and allows your team members to focus on doing what they do best.
No more wrappers, vibe-ware, or chatbots.
Transformation is at the heart of BlueFairy’s mission, and merge conflicts and endpoint changes are only the beginning. We are building a centralised team brain, one that is intimate with the work of each one of its team members past and present, one that recalls delivery metrics and stores domain knowledge, one that can mesh business requirements with production realities and convert them into smooth, efficient delivery.
I hesitate to call BlueFairy an AI tool given that AI will soon be as intrinsic to SaaS as code is today. The quicker we view AI as a feature rather than a product, the quicker we’ll start shaping it to fit our tools rather than the other way round. Building tomorrow’s SaaS layer will take thought and care: do we pursue solutions that maximise quick results at the expense of sustainable growth? Or do we create resilient intelligence layers that augment human connection, anticipate our needs, and empower us to do the things we love? At BlueFairy, we’re excited to be building the first true manifestation of this layer in SaaS.
If you like the sound of BlueFairy’s vision, we’d love your help. If you’re a tech lead, software developer, designer, product owner, or other member of a cross-functional software team, you are perfectly placed to trial BlueFairy for free. Experience the future of software development and have a hand in shaping it. Sign up now to be added to the waitlist as a valued early-adopter. Thanks for your support.
Jake
