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  <title>BlitzFin Journal</title>
  <subtitle>Notes from building BlitzFin: updates, milestones, and the decisions behind the product.</subtitle>
  <link href="https://blitzfin.com/journal/feed.xml" rel="self"/>
  <link href="https://blitzfin.com/journal/"/>
  <id>https://blitzfin.com/journal/</id>
  <updated>2026-04-30T00:00:00.000Z</updated>
  <author>
    <name>Dr. Jan-Marco Bremer</name>
    <uri>https://blitzfin.com/</uri>
  </author>
  <entry>
    <title>Welcome to BlitzFin</title>
    <link href="https://blitzfin.com/journal/welcome-to-blitzfin/"/>
    <id>https://blitzfin.com/journal/welcome-to-blitzfin/</id>
    <updated>2026-04-30T00:00:00.000Z</updated>
    <published>2026-04-30T00:00:00.000Z</published>
    <summary>To mark the launch of the new website: the story behind BlitzFin, the studio that runs it, and the philosophy we measure ourselves against.</summary>
    <content type="html">
&lt;p&gt;
  Along with the new website, we&#39;re starting this journal: notes from the engine room
  of BlitzFin. This is where we write about updates and milestones, about the
  decisions behind the product — and occasionally about why we deliberately chose
  &lt;em&gt;not&lt;/em&gt; to build something. The fitting first entry is an introduction:
  what is BlitzFin, and who is behind it?
&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;Why BlitzFin exists&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
  Owners, developers, and project managers in German construction run their cost
  controlling mostly in Excel. Not out of preference, but because the alternatives
  are too heavy, too expensive, or too far removed from day-to-day work: Bechmann,
  RIB, and California are built for large corporations. Excel is built for no one.
  In between sits a gap — and that&#39;s exactly where BlitzFin lives.
&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
  In concrete terms: one project room per construction project, a dedicated email
  inbox per project, semi-automatic extraction of incoming invoices, and
  &lt;a href=&quot;/guide/&quot;&gt;DIN 276&lt;/a&gt; — the German construction cost standard — built in
  as the default rather than a footnote. &lt;strong&gt;Live in 5 minutes&lt;/strong&gt; is not
  a marketing slogan but our minimum bar: if a new user needs longer to get their
  first project running, we have failed.
&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;Who&#39;s behind it&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
  BlitzFin was created between 2019 and 2025 by a founding team that laid the
  groundwork — data model, workflow, DIN 276 logic. Since 2026 it has been run by
  &lt;strong&gt;blue media labs GmbH&lt;/strong&gt;, an independent operator studio based in
  Hamburg and Hanover: small, focused, with product, engineering, and customer
  contact in one pair of hands. That has consequences we communicate openly — no
  sales organization, no endless roadmap of marketing promises. In return: short
  paths and fast decisions.
&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
  BlitzFin did not emerge in a vacuum. The first project room, the first DIN 276
  reports, and the first hard questions from real practice came from Stadtblick
  Architekten in Hamburg — development partner from day one and an active user to
  this day. Much of what looks like software pragmatism in the platform is in fact
  the second or third iteration following a concrete question from their daily
  project work. The formal version of this story lives on the
  &lt;a href=&quot;/ueber-uns/&quot;&gt;About&lt;/a&gt; page; here in the journal you get the workshop cut.
&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;Set it up once, then forget it&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
  If there is one sentence we measure every release against, it&#39;s this: you hook
  BlitzFin into your project once — and never have to think about it again.
  Invoices flow into the project inbox, get extracted and assigned to cost groups,
  and the cost status stays current without anyone updating a spreadsheet on
  Friday afternoons.
&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
  With every release, more automation takes over the manual work, and AI
  increasingly has a seat at the table — as a reliable helper, not a buzzword.
  In the medium term, BlitzFin will open up to AI assistants via MCP: your project
  status becomes queryable truth, whatever tools you otherwise use. What is a
  dashboard today can be a single sentence to your own assistant tomorrow.
&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;h2&gt;What comes next here&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
  Alongside the journal, we&#39;re building out the &lt;a href=&quot;/guide/&quot;&gt;Guide&lt;/a&gt; section —
  foundational knowledge on construction cost management, in plain language and
  without reciting standards. Most of it starts in German
  (see the &lt;a href=&quot;/ratgeber/&quot;&gt;Ratgeber&lt;/a&gt;), with English articles to follow where
  they make sense — beginning with an introduction to DIN 276 for readers outside
  Germany.
&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
  And if you&#39;d rather see BlitzFin for yourself right away: there&#39;s a fully
  functional &lt;a href=&quot;https://form.typeform.com/to/mBZn2Ls9&quot;&gt;demo project room&lt;/a&gt; with sample
  invoices — no sign-up, no sales call.
&lt;/p&gt;
</content>
  </entry>
</feed>
