You make something good with your hands, and you sell it. At a Saturday market, online, or out of the front room. At some point you went looking for an app to keep the numbers straight, and you probably came back a little tired. We built Wares for that exact moment, and we want to tell you plainly what it does well and who it's for.
What Wares is built to do
We started from one question: what does a single maker, standing at a market stall, actually need in the next ten seconds? Everything in the app follows from that. Logging a sale takes two taps. Marking a batch ready takes one. It works fully offline, so a dead signal in a field doesn't cost you a sale. And because it already knows your products, your lead times, and your markets, it does the connecting for you instead of asking you to type the same thing into three different places.
It also answers the question that actually keeps makers up at night: not "how much did I sell," but "how much did I keep." Real profit, net after booth fees, with a slice of your estimated taxes set aside as you go, so tax time arrives as a date and not an ambush.
Where the usual tools genuinely shine
Most established tracking tools are excellent software. They're built for a business that has, or is growing into, a back office: detailed cost-of-goods accounting, manufacturing workflows, integrations with your sales channels and your bookkeeping, multiple users with their own logins. If you've crossed into a real company, with staff and a warehouse and an accountant on retainer, that depth is a gift, and we'd happily point you toward it. We made deliberate trade-offs to be great at one thing instead of passable at forty.
The difference is really a difference in starting point. One approach asks what a growing company needs. We asked what a business of one needs on a busy Saturday. Here's how that plays out side by side.
| The usual approach | The Wares way | |
|---|---|---|
| Who it's built for | Growing companies and power users | Solo makers and market vendors |
| Cost | Monthly subscription, forever | Pay once, yours to keep |
| Account required | Yes, sign up to begin | No account, no sign-up |
| Where your data lives | On their servers, in the cloud | Only on your device |
| At the market | Needs a connection; built for a desk | Works fully offline, built for your phone |
| Time to your first sale logged | An onboarding session | A couple of taps |
| Best at | Deep accounting, integrations, teams | Speed, simplicity, and staying out of your way |
Two things worth saying out loud
Your business stays yours
Everything you enter lives on your device and nowhere else. There's no account, because there's no server. No database of makers' sales sitting somewhere waiting to leak, nothing to hand to advertisers, nothing we could turn over even if someone asked, because we never had it in the first place. Back it up yourself, to wherever you trust. It's your ledger book, and it stays in your drawer.
You buy it once
Start free, no card and no sign-up. When you want the full set you unlock it one time and it's yours. A monthly charge has a way of feeling personal during a slow market season, and we'd rather you spend that mental energy on your work than on whether an app earned its keep this month. You own this one. It does not renew quietly in the background while you sleep.
The best tool isn't the one with the most features. It's the one that disappears, and leaves you with your craft and a clear head.
If you've felt overwhelmed or over-charged by business software that was clearly built for someone bigger than you, that feeling isn't a personal failing. It's a mismatch. There's a tool shaped like your actual business. We made it because we wanted it too.