Company
Atlas is an AI-native, all-in-one work platform: one workspace, one data model, one identity. We started Atlas because the tools meant to help us do our best work were quietly getting in the way. This is what we believe, and where we are taking it.
Our mission is simple to say and hard to do: remove the work that should never have existed, and give teams one calm place to do the work that actually matters.
So much of a modern team's day is spent feeding the tools instead of using them. Copying a name from the CRM into the project tracker. Re-uploading a contract that already lives in three other places. Reconciling two dashboards that should have agreed in the first place. None of that is the job. It is the tax we pay for running our work across a dozen disconnected apps.
Atlas exists to make that tax disappear. When everything lives in one system, the busywork between tools stops existing, and people get their attention back. That is the whole point.
Tool sprawl is not a minor annoyance. It is the default condition of most companies, and it quietly drains the very productivity that software was supposed to deliver.
The average company now runs around 106 SaaS apps, according to Productiv research. Each one is a login, a data silo, a bill, and one more place for the truth to drift. Work does not get lost inside any single tool. It gets lost in the gaps between them, in the handoffs no one owns and the syncs that quietly break.
The human cost is just as real. Research from the APA and a Qatalog-Cornell study found that people lose roughly 40 percent of their productive time to context switching, the constant toggling between apps and the mental reset each switch demands. We are not short on tools. We are short on focus, and the tools are the reason.
The obvious answer to tool sprawl is to integrate everything, to wire the apps together with connectors and hope the seams hold. We think that is the wrong answer. Integrations move data between systems that fundamentally disagree about what the data means, so they break, lag, and double-count. You end up maintaining the plumbing instead of doing the work.
So we built Atlas on a single data model instead. A contact, a deal, a project, a document, and a person are not five records scattered across five products that have to be kept in sync. They are one connected graph inside one platform.
The practical effect is that the deal becomes the project. Close it and the work is already there, with the same client, the same contract, the same owners, no export and re-import. One source of truth, by construction, not by integration. Nothing has to sync because nothing was ever apart.
A platform reflects the convictions of the people who build it. These are ours, and we hold them even when they make the product harder to build.
Atlas is built for teams that run the full arc of their work, from the first conversation to the signed contract to the delivered project, and who are tired of stitching that arc together by hand.
In practice that means agencies, startups, consultancies, and remote teams who need one shared system instead of a folder of tabs. It means small and mid-size businesses that want enterprise capability without an enterprise IT department. And it means regulated organizations that cannot compromise on security, residency, or auditability, and should not have to choose between control and a product people actually enjoy using.
Trust is not a tier you unlock. We built Atlas so that the smallest team and the most regulated enterprise sit on the same secure foundation from the moment they sign up.
That foundation includes SOC 2 Type II and ISO 27001, with GDPR and HIPAA support, SSO and SCIM for identity, comprehensive audit logging, and data residency options. Governance is wired into the same data model that runs the product, which is exactly why we can offer it to everyone rather than only to the largest accounts.
You can read the full security and compliance posture on our security page, and see how it maps to plans on our pricing page.
We are early, and we are deliberate about what comes next. The frontier we are most excited about is AI agents as governed teammates: assistants that can take real action across your work, but only inside the permissions, history, and audit trail that the rest of Atlas already enforces. Capable, accountable, and never a black box.
Alongside that, we are going deeper on automation, so the routine paths through your work run themselves while the judgment stays with you. And we hold one rule above the roadmap: stay all-in-one without becoming a junk drawer. Every capability we add has to earn its place in a single, coherent platform, or it does not ship. Breadth is only worth it if the whole thing still feels calm.
We would genuinely like to hear from you, whether you are evaluating Atlas, pushing back on something we got wrong, or thinking about building it with us.
Reach the team directly at hello@wrxstack.com, or use the contact page to start a conversation. If you want to help build the work OS itself, our open roles live on the careers page. Thank you for reading this far, and for caring about how work gets done.
Questions about this page? Email hello@wrxstack.com or visit our contact page.