Focused tools for underserved B2B markets

At Rovaryn Digital, we build focused tools for underserved B2B markets — problems big enough to matter, too specific for enterprise software vendors to bother solving. MaintenanceCalculator.com is our tool for the maintenance manager at a 50-person fabricated metal plant who has been managing PM intervals in a shared Excel spreadsheet for five years and knows there has to be a better way.

Why we built this

The tools available to SMB maintenance managers sit at two extremes. Free calculator pages from Fiix and ClickMaint produce a one-time estimate, capture an email address, and disappear. Full CMMS platforms like UpKeep, Limble, and Fiix solve work-order execution — mobile technician dispatch, spare parts inventory, vendor management — for $200–$750 per month for a 10-user team. No product occupies the gap: a persistent, flat-rate, subscription-based PM interval calculator and annual maintenance cost forecasting engine for the buyer who needs structured planning, not a full CMMS.

We built MaintenanceCalculator.com to occupy that gap. It is explicitly not a CMMS. It answers one question: “when should I maintain this equipment and what will it cost me?” — and it answers it well.

Our values

Focused on the right problem

We build tools that do one thing exceptionally well. We don't add features to justify pricing; we add features when they make the core problem easier to solve.

Honest about scope

MaintenanceCalculator.com is a planning tool, not a CMMS. We say so clearly. We'd rather lose a sale to a buyer who needs work orders than oversell scope we don't have.

Priced for the people who use it

Flat-rate pricing means no surprises when your maintenance team grows. A Business plan costs the same whether you have 3 users or 15.

Built for the long term

PM history logs are retained for 5 years post-cancellation because OSHA audits don't come on a subscription cycle. Your compliance trail outlives your billing relationship with us.

Who it's for

The primary buyer is the maintenance manager, plant manager, or facilities manager at a manufacturing company with 10–150 employees and $2M–$50M in equipment assets. Industries served: fabricated metal products (NAICS 332), food and beverage manufacturing (NAICS 311), plastics and rubber (NAICS 326), machinery manufacturing (NAICS 333), and light industrial warehousing and logistics (NAICS 493). Primary geography: United States and Canada.