Founder

Beyond every boundary is a breakthrough, and that's where Skimbox begins

Aman Shams

A personal note from Aman Shams on why Skimbox exists, the day we stopped being an agency, and what we are building next across the UAE and India.

Beyond every boundary is a breakthrough, and that's where Skimbox begins

I started Skimbox because I was tired of watching good ideas get stuck in agencies that did not care if they shipped. That is the whole origin story, said honestly. Everything else, the offices, the funding, the Nasr Capital deal, the SUI reserve, came later. The first thing was the frustration.

I have been writing this note for about three months in scraps. Notes on my phone at 2am after a call with a client in Riyadh. A paragraph in a Notion doc on a Tuesday in Bengaluru. A voice memo to myself walking past the Burj on the way back from a meeting that did not go well. What you are reading is the cleaned-up version. I wanted to put it down properly because we changed a lot in 2025 and 2026, and I owe a clearer explanation than what fits on a homepage.

If you have been following Skimbox for a while, some of this you already know. If you are new, the short version is this. We are a technology consultancy. We have offices in Dubai and Bengaluru. We are backed by Nasr Capital. We build serious software for serious operators. And we are unusual in a couple of ways that I will get to below.

Where this started

The first version of Skimbox was an agency. We built websites. We built apps. We took almost every brief that came in for the first two years because that is what you do when you are figuring out whether the business is real. We learned a lot. We also took on a lot of work that, looking back, I would not take today.

The turning point was a six-month stretch in 2024 where two clients in a row asked us to rebuild their products to look like a competitor. Same layout. Same flow. Different logo. I remember sitting in a coffee shop in Karama with one of those briefs open on my laptop, and thinking, very clearly, that I did not want to spend the next decade doing this. It was the first time I really understood that the difference between an agency and a consultancy is not the price tag. It is whether you are willing to push back.

The moment we changed

August 2025 is the date I will give you if you ask when Skimbox became a consultancy. That month we put out a new positioning, we updated the contracts, and we turned down our first three briefs in a row for the same reason. The reason was always some version of, the client has not done the thinking yet, and they want us to skip past it to delivery.

Revenue dipped for a quarter. I will not pretend it did not. Cash got tight. I had a couple of conversations with my co-founders that were not fun. But by November the pipeline was full again, and this time it was full of the work I actually wanted us to be doing. Operations transformation. Blockchain infrastructure. AI features inside products that already worked. Real questions with real budgets behind them.

Around the same time, Nasr Capital approached us. They had been watching the digital asset space in the region and they wanted a technology partner with senior delivery capacity. We closed the deal in late 2025. They took a controlling stake. I kept the operating role and the technical direction. It is the cleanest version of a strategic acquisition I have seen, which is a phrase I would have laughed at three years ago.

What we got wrong

I want to be honest about this part because every founder note skips it.

We hired too fast in 2023. We took our headcount from eight to twenty-six in nine months and the quality of our output dropped, not because the new people were bad, but because we did not have the systems to onboard them properly. We had to let some of them go in early 2024 and that is a thing I still think about.

We also spent too long doing fixed-bid work for clients who were not ready. Fixed bids reward optimism. They punish honesty. The honest answer on most software projects is, the spec is going to change, so let us agree on a way to handle that. Fixed bids do not let you say that.

And we underinvested in our own products for the first five years. I tell every founder I mentor now to keep a small product bet running alongside the services work, even when it feels like a distraction. The product muscle is different from the services muscle, and you do not build it by accident.

What we got right

A few things.

We hired senior. Most of our team has 10 plus years of experience. That number went up, not down, after the Nasr Capital deal, which is unusual. Most companies dilute seniority when they scale. We did the opposite on purpose.

We picked WeWork over a private office. People made fun of me for this at first. The reason was simple. I wanted to be in a building with other operators, not a building with my own logo on the wall. Bengaluru and Dubai both. The cost is higher per square foot. The compounding value of running into another founder on the way to the coffee machine is much higher.

We started a small strategic reserve. A position in SUI, a position in BTC, and a small allocation to physical gold. None of it is large. The point is alignment. We tell clients to think in five-year arcs, so our balance sheet should reflect that, not just sit in a current account.

And we moved our core infrastructure to Mumbai in March 2026. Boring decision. Big impact. Latency to the GCC dropped, our cost base dropped, and we got a closer working relationship with the team running our hardware. We kept a CDN edge in the UAE for compliance and speed.

What I believe about the UAE and the wider GCC

This is where I have a slightly contrarian view.

The UAE market is not one market. It is at least five overlapping markets. Government and quasi-government. Family offices. Free zone SMEs. Multinational regional HQs. And founder-led startups. Each one buys software differently. Each one has different timelines, different risk appetites, different vocabularies. The mistake almost every external consultancy makes is treating Dubai as a single buyer. You sell to a family office the way you would sell to a free zone SME and you will lose the deal before you have finished the second meeting.

The other thing I believe is that the GCC is going to produce real software companies in the next decade, not just import them. The capital is here. The talent is increasingly here. The political will is here. The piece that is missing is the senior operating bench, and that is the piece we are trying to be useful for. Not by writing strategy decks. By sitting next to founders and building the thing. The UAE software consulting market is sitting at roughly USD 2.5 billion right now, and the IT consulting slice alone crossed USD 180 million in 2025. The growth rate is real, but the quality of delivery in the region is uneven. That gap is the opportunity.

I also think the conversation about AI in the region has gotten louder than the actual deployment. Plenty of clients ask us to add AI to a workflow and when we dig in, the underlying process is not documented, the data is sitting in three different SaaS tools that do not talk to each other, and there is no owner for the output. Fix the boring stuff first. The AI layer becomes obvious once the substrate underneath it is clean.

Where we are now

Around 60 people across Dubai and Bengaluru. Active engagements in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman, India, and one client in the UK. Backed by Nasr Capital. Two internal products in early-stage development that I am not ready to talk about yet. A small treasury reserve. A team I am proud of. A client list that I would put up against any consultancy in the region of our size.

What's next

Three things I will commit to in writing.

First, we are going to expand carefully. We have turned down two acquisition offers this year for smaller agencies because the cultural fit was not there. We will keep turning them down until we find one that is.

Second, we are going to ship at least one of our internal products to public beta by the end of 2026. Probably both. I will write a separate note when we are ready.

Third, we are going to keep saying no. To the wrong clients. To the wrong hires. To the wrong shortcuts. This is the part that is hardest to hold the line on as you grow. It is also the part that matters most.

If you have read this far, here is the only thing I want you to take away. Skimbox exists because I genuinely believe the gap between a good idea and a shipped product is where most companies fail, and I want us to be the people who close that gap for the founders and operators who deserve it. That is the whole thesis. Everything else is execution.

Thanks for reading. If you want to talk, my email is at the bottom of this site.

Aman

Sources:

Frequently asked questions

  • Who is Aman Shams?

    I am the founder of Skimbox. I started the company in 2019 building websites and product work for clients across the UAE and India, and I now run it as a consultancy backed by Nasr Capital.

  • What is Skimbox?

    Skimbox is a global technology consultancy based in Dubai and Bengaluru. We build web, app, blockchain, and AI systems for clients across the GCC, and we hold a small strategic crypto and gold reserve as part of our balance sheet.

  • When did Skimbox become a consultancy?

    August 2025. That is the month we stopped describing ourselves as an agency and began turning down briefs that did not have a clear strategic question behind them. Revenue dipped for a quarter. The work got significantly better.

  • What is the Nasr Capital deal?

    Nasr Capital strategically acquired Skimbox in 2025 to expand their digital asset and technology portfolio across the Middle East. They own a controlling stake. I still run the company day to day and set the technical direction.

  • Why does Skimbox hold SUI reserves?

    We hold a small position in SUI, BTC, and physical gold as part of a strategic reserve. SUI specifically because we ship Move-based work and want skin in the chain we recommend. It is a small slice of our treasury, not a trading book.

  • Where are the Skimbox offices?

    Two main locations. WeWork Hub71 in Dubai and WeWork Galaxy in Bengaluru. We picked WeWork on purpose. It gave us global infrastructure on day one without locking us into a five-year lease.

  • What is Skimbox's stance on AI?

    AI is a tool, not a strategy. We use it heavily inside our own delivery, and we build AI features into client products where the use case is real. We do not sell AI as a buzzword. If a problem is solved better with a database query, that is what we ship.

  • How does Skimbox pick clients?

    Three filters. The founder or operator has thought hard about the problem. There is a real budget that matches the ambition. The team is willing to be told no. If any of those is missing, we usually pass.

  • What does Skimbox say no to?

    Vanity rebuilds, scope-creep retainers, anything that looks like a body shop arrangement, and projects where the brief is to copy a competitor pixel for pixel. Saying no to those was the single biggest change in the last 12 months.

  • What makes a Skimbox project succeed?

    A small, senior team. Direct access to the founder or product owner on the client side. A weekly review with real decisions, not status updates. Shipping in two-week increments. Boring on paper, very effective in practice.

  • What are common founder mistakes you see in the UAE?

    Hiring a marketing agency before the product works. Spending on paid ads to mask a broken funnel. Buying enterprise software for a 12-person company. And treating Dubai like a single market when it is actually five or six overlapping ones.

  • Why did Skimbox move infrastructure to Mumbai?

    Lower latency for our GCC and South Asia traffic, better cost economics at our scale, and a closer relationship with our hosting team. We made the move in March 2026 and kept a CDN edge in the UAE for compliance and speed.

  • How do I contact Aman directly?

    Email aman@skimbox.io for partnership, investment, and senior consultancy inquiries. The team handles new project intake through the contact form, and I read summaries of every one of those.

  • Does Skimbox invest in startups?

    Occasionally, and only in companies we already know through consultancy work. We are not a VC. When we invest, it is usually a small services-for-equity arrangement with a founder we have shipped with before.

  • What does 'beyond every boundary' actually mean?

    It means refusing the easy version of the question. The easy version is what most agencies and consultancies sell. The harder version, the one past the obvious answer, is where the breakthroughs sit. That is the only work I am interested in doing now.

  • How does Aman pick a tech stack?

    Pick the stack the senior people on the project already know cold. Boring is good. Resume-driven architecture is the number one reason projects miss deadlines. I would rather ship a Postgres monolith on schedule than a microservice diagram on a slide.

  • Advice for first-time founders?

    Talk to ten customers before you write a line of code. Charge for the first version even if you are embarrassed by it. Keep your burn rate boring. And get used to writing the email you do not want to send, because that email is usually the most important one in your week.

  • Where is Skimbox in five years?

    A senior, lean consultancy of around 80 to 100 people across Dubai, Bengaluru, and a third hub I am not ready to name. A portfolio of three or four products we own. Quietly the place that smart founders in the region call first when they have a hard technical question.

Aman Shams

Founder, Skimbox

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