This section describes how DomiDo runs as a working business: how universal blocks and fasteners are made, how quality is held to a known standard, how the platform is launched, supported, and observed, and how risk, sustainability, and architectural options are handled day to day. DomiDo is an AI-assisted modular outdoor construction platform built by Avvyland Limited (UK). The company manufactures only universal blocks and fasteners; every construction shown on the platform is a user-generated design, not a finished good supplied by DomiDo. The pages below explain how that production-and-platform business is operated, surface by surface, from the workshop floor and the third-party warehouse through to the live beta, the founder's operating room, and the long sustainability roadmap that frames everything else.
- Manufacturing and fulfilment — How blocks and fasteners are tooled, moulded, kitted, packed, and delivered, including UK contract manufacturing, European alternatives, third-party logistics, and the per-unit cost structure.
- Quality assurance — The standards, sampling regime, inspection points, traceability, and corrective-action processes that keep every block dimensionally correct, structurally sound, and weather-durable.
- Delivery plan — The current phased delivery plan: what Phase A public interest beta requires, what Phase A.5 gated no-capture pre-orders require, and what Phase B fulfilment unlocks.
- Phase A backlog — The developer-ready work breakdown that takes the platform from foundations through public interest beta to gated no-capture pre-order conversion.
- Beta launch checklist — The hard launch gates, no-go conditions, smoke-test script, launch-day operating room, and evidence pack required before public beta opens.
- Risks, decisions, and cuts — Locked product decisions, explicit cuts from scope, the top operating risks, kill-and-pivot signals, and the first-customer plan.
- Risk analysis — The full risk catalogue across technical, intellectual-property, market, manufacturing, financial, regulatory, team, competitive, and operational categories, with mitigations and contingency plans.
- Observability — The product-analytics, logging, metrics, tracing, error-tracking, alerting, and performance-monitoring stack that keeps the platform measurable.
- Support and telemetry — The minimum support workflow, event dictionary, alert table, and data-class boundaries that let a small team learn from real users from day one.
- Sustainability — The material choices, circular-economy positioning, manufacturing sustainability, carbon footprint, regulatory landscape, packaging, and long-term sustainability roadmap.
- Architecture options — The current technology stack, key architecture choices, infrastructure cost model, build-versus-buy decisions, scaling path, and architectural risks.