BUILT FOR BUILDERS. BANGALORE
Custom AI agents and multi-agent systems for Bangalore's startups and SaaS companies — fully documented, fully yours.
Bangalore's density of startups and SaaS companies makes it a different kind of market from Mumbai or Delhi — most inbound work here is AI Orchestration first, brand or creative work second. Founders in this market are usually already technical, and the ask is rarely "build me an agent"; it's "design the actual workflow, memory, and coordination logic behind a system we can maintain ourselves."
That's a deliberate contrast with what most AI vendors in this market sell — a chatbot wired through a no-code platform, branded as an "AI agent." Wish Master's approach here is custom-coded, Python-based multi-agent architecture, designed around the specific business workflow before a single agent gets built. Documentation and handover are non-negotiable: a Bangalore founder who's already building software expects to actually own and understand the system they're paying for, not depend on an outside freelancer to keep it running.
When Bangalore-based clients also need Brand Solutions or Digital Experience — common for startups moving from a technical MVP toward an actual market-facing brand — the same "business-first" principle applies: understand what the product actually does and who it's for, before any positioning or website work starts.
Engagement here follows the same model as everywhere else: no fixed retainers, budget discussed upfront, and a defined stabilization window after any AI system goes live — real issues get fixed as part of the original scope, not billed as a surprise follow-up.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
BASED IN BANGALORE?
LET’S TALKMAKE A
WISH.
Tell me what you're building. I'll tell you how loud it can get.
- /01
YOU WRITE
Tell me what you're building and what's in the way. Two lines is enough.
- /02
WE TALK
A 30-minute call within 48 hours. Real questions, no pitch theatre.
- /03
YOU GET A PLAN
Scope, timeline and an honest number, usually within a week.
