SevTech product launch
In what is a natural evolution for AI-enabled technology company SevTech, they have launched Forge, a software delivery engine powered by AI.
The company, which was founded in 2025 and is led by Rob Curley, readily embraced AI from its origin, using it to speed up application development. But now, with Forge, they’re taking it a step further.
“Most AI tools help you write code faster. They don’t help you ship a compliant, tested, documented application,” explains Rob Curley, MD of SevTech. That’s why his team built Forge, a new AI-powered software delivery engine.
The SevTech team had been using AI tools like Claude and Codex for software development, but realised there were shortcomings with existing tools, particularly when it came to building an end-to-end solution.
“Forge isn’t a coding assistant bolted onto a dev team, it’s an end-to-end AI delivery engine. Give it a set of requirements and it runs the full lifecycle: architecture, build, testing, documentation, and deployment, right through to a working application in the client’s own environment,” explains Curley.
“It isn’t just writing code, it’s doing the cross-checking, the audit controls, and the testing that normally eats weeks of a delivery team’s time. And the client owns everything that comes out the other end: the code, the tests, the documentation, the architecture. There’s no lock-in, no dependency on us.”
Compliance and all relevant regulations are built into the system including ISO compliance and the EU AI act. “This means the applications that come out the other end are fully compliant for all regulated environments.”
That’s squarely aimed at regulated enterprises like financial services, telecoms, aviation and semi-state organisations, typically 200 to 5,000 employees, where every application has to be documented, tested and audited.
SevTech’s software delivery engine dramatically reduces the application build time from two to three months to just days for well-scoped requirements, says Curley.
“We’re saying to clients now that if they have a set of requirements and an idea that they want to build an application on, we will run it through a minimal viable product or proof of concept process, and using Forge, we’ll output an application the next day.”
Curley explains that the process starts with a short proof of value, so clients can see Forge work against their own requirements before committing to anything. From there, clients can access the application on the SevTech cloud environment where they can test it. “They can go in and we will walk through the documentation, walk through all the dependencies between all the different code elements, and they can track them accordingly within the documentation and the code base, so it’s all fully auditable.”
This particular feature is resonating with early users, says Curley. “We were initially pitching Forge as a way to speed up the development process, and of course it does that, but transparency is really landing with our clients, it’s much easier for them to track every step. At the end of the day, they don’t just get the code base, they’re getting a fully documented, fully audited application.”
Right now, most SevTech clients want the SevTech team behind the wheel, using Forge to build and deliver their applications for them. But it will soon be available as a product in its own right, for clients who want to run it themselves.
“Clients can run it internally across their application development function,” says Curley. For an enterprise, that means every application, regardless of which team or squad builds it, gets delivered the same way: fully documented, fully tested, and fully auditable by design.
“It gives them one standard way of building software across the organisation, with governance and audit trail built in rather than bolted on afterwards. That consistency is what regulated businesses are struggling to get today, and it’s what Forge gives them out of the box.”





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