Web and mobile products that earn their keep
Based in Nigeria, building for founders worldwide. Most clients come to us with an idea and leave with a product their customers actually use — not a demo, not a slide, a working thing.
Two ways to look at the same answer — what we build, and who we build it with.
Based in Nigeria, building for founders worldwide. Most clients come to us with an idea and leave with a product their customers actually use — not a demo, not a slide, a working thing.
Some clients show up with a napkin idea. Others arrive carrying a decade of duct-taped spreadsheets. Different starting points; same approach: understand the problem first, then build.
Victor started Ginoid after seeing the same pattern over and over: good ideas stalling because the right technical team wasn't there to build them. Engineers who could ship without a translator. Designers who cared whether anyone could use the thing. People who finished what they started.
Ginoid exists to fix that. We take a business from idea to live product, without the chaos that usually comes with it. The team has grown — but the bar hasn't moved.

“Good ideas deserve good engineering. Too many products never ship, or ship broken. That's the gap we close.”

The studio serious builders come to when it needs to be done right. Not the cheapest. Not the flashiest. A team that ships solid products and stands behind them.
Web, mobile, AI, blockchain — the tool comes after the question. If a better answer needs a new technology, we learn it.
A product that ships and then falls apart isn't a win for anyone. We build with the next 18 months in mind, not the launch screenshot.
Every decision gets measured against one question: does this make the product better for the person using it? If not, it doesn't ship.
If you're learning to build and want real experience — not another tutorial — Ginoid takes on interns who are serious about the craft. You'll work on live projects alongside engineers who care whether the thing actually works.
Applications closed
Eight things founders and operators usually want to know before reaching out.