Agent-run operations for surveying firms.
Khetvar runs the back office — dispatch, billing review, project risk, client follow-up. The licensed surveyor supervises.
Most software records the work. Khetvar does it.
Tell us how your firm runsThe whole firm runs on what’s inside one person’s head.
The Principal knows everything. He knows which Party Chief to send on the ALTA/NSPS, which client always pays sixty days late, which monument on which corner has been wrong since 1987. He knows the firm because he is the firm. He’s also doing the dispatch, the billing review, the scope clarifications, and the AR — himself, at nine at night, re-keying numbers from the field into the books by hand. And the day he retires, twenty-five years of judgment walks out the door. The record of how the firm runs was never set.
Memory is the one instrument a surveyor would never trust.
Ask it what to worry about Monday morning.
Sit down Monday morning and ask what needs your attention. Khetvar reads across projects, schedules, invoices, client history, and field capacity, then hands back the brief a senior PM would give you — naming names — if they’d spent the weekend watching the firm.
It does the work. The licensed surveyor supervises.
Agents do the coordination. The licensed surveyor stays in control.
You can’t watch forty Projects at once — not on a Friday, not in your head. Khetvar can. It reads across the firm and drafts the next move, then waits for you before anything happens. You decide; the record keeps the receipt.
Your firm stops living in your head. Projects, schedules, invoices, plats, and client history become one record the firm runs on.
You see risk before it bills against you. Khetvar reads every Project at once — stalled scope, AR past terms, a Party Chief double-booked Thursday, a deliverable about to slip.
The blank page is gone. It drafts a proposal and shows its reasoning — a dispatch swap, an AR follow-up, a Project escalation. Always a draft. Never a decision.
Nothing reaches a crew, a client, or the books until you say so. Approve, edit, reject, or ask why. The licensed call was never the agent’s to make.
The firm gets a memory you can stand behind. Every action and its reason re-enters the record, so the next read starts where you left off.
Khetvar doesn’t make licensed calls and doesn’t act behind your back. It reads, it drafts, it logs — you decide. Not replacing your judgment — preserving it, and putting it on the record, every decision carrying your name and your reason. The seal on the plat stays yours alone; the record just remembers why you made the call.
Old software remembered the work. It never noticed. Khetvar notices — and still, nothing moves until you say so.
Run the firm without being the firm.
The industry thinks the problem is a labor shortage. It isn’t. It’s a coordination shortage that masquerades as one — and what changes shows up in the terms a Principal already measures.
The ALTA/NSPS quietly waiting on a client gets flagged Monday — not the week it’s due.
Crew and equipment conflicts surface before the trucks roll, not from a Party Chief’s voicemail.
The stuck invoice gets chased the day it stalls — the draft is already written.
Dispatch, billing review, and scope clarifications stop routing through your nine-at-night.
Another ten Projects don’t mean another office hire — coordination was the bottleneck, not headcount.
When a Party Chief or the Principal leaves, how the firm runs doesn’t walk out the door with them.
Khetvar is built so a Principal can run a fifty-person firm with the overhead of a twelve-person firm — without selling to private equity just to survive the growth.
Checked before the crew left the site.
Every stake gets checked against design in the field — so a bust shows up at the truck, not three weeks later in the office. One real run, start to finish:
For the firm that lives in one person’s head.
The owner is the bottleneck — doing CAD, billing, dispatch, and sales personally. Technically excellent, administratively underwater. If that’s the firm, Khetvar was built for it.
Built by someone who lived the problem — and can build the fix.
Not a software company that toured a few firms. Khetvar comes from thirteen years in the field and the office — dispatch, billing review, the scope calls at nine at night — paired with the economics training to read the business and the discipline to build the software by hand. The overlap this needed: someone who lived the operational drag, and can ship the thing that ends it. Built for the firm he used to work for.
The oldest job in the world, instrumented.
The job was never the measuring. It was restoring the record — against the thing that kept erasing it.
If the firm is in your head, we should talk.
We’re opening early access to a handful of principal-led surveying firms. No sales pitch — we want to hear how your firm actually runs, where the record breaks, and what your week costs you.
Not software. Not a tool. The operating layer for land surveying.