Dilly Labs – structured vendor selection for banks and credit unions
Regulated finance procurement with compliance scoring when Coupa exists for everyone else.

The landing page sells the right things: free assessment, zero upfront cost and success‑based pricing, plus a 72‑hour audit promise and file-every-claim workflow. It calls out concrete wins — SLA credits, billing errors, zombie subscriptions — and makes it frictionless to upload contracts and invoices. Not a technical breakthrough: this is process, legal muscle and vendor relationships more than clever engineering, but it’s exactly the practical service teams will pay for if their cloud bills are out of control.
Finance/procurement teams, FinOps/cloud cost managers, CTOs and IT ops at mid-to-large companies with significant cloud/SaaS spend
I think there’s a massive market for monitoring and enforcing complicated SLAs.
Would love feedback or experiences for SLA enforcement!
Regulated finance procurement with compliance scoring when Coupa exists for everyone else.
Five-minute setup for audit logs that usually take weeks to build.
This actually implements a surprisingly large slice of Snowflake: VARIANT/ARRAY/OBJECT types, LATERAL FLATTEN, QUALIFY, MERGE, COPY, transactions and ~90 JSON/array/window functions — all exposed via Snowflake SQL API v2 and compatible with the Go driver so most clients can point at localhost. Running on DataFusion in Rust and shipped as a Docker image with testcontainers/GHA examples makes it immediately useful in CI; just remember it's an emulator, not Snowflake's full runtime, so you may hit edge-case behavioral differences.
Cross-vendor verification catches hallucinations when LangSmith and Arize exist.
Embeddable widget shows vendor outages so users don't blame your app.
Pretty launch checklist, but Lighthouse, Sitebullet, and manual checklists already cover most of this.