Ghana's bureaux run on Excel and paper.
We are building what comes next.
Foreign exchange bureaux are small, regulated businesses doing real work in the real economy. Ghana has hundreds of them. Almost none run on software built for what they actually do.
What tooling exists either bolts a bureau workflow onto a generic accounting package, or runs on aging Windows software that hasn't been updated since the last BoG circular. Meanwhile the cost of a missed reconciliation, a misfiled SSNIT remittance, or a rate override no one logged is borne by the owner.
CediSync exists to close that gap. One product, built around how a bureau moves cash — from the rate board in the morning to the BoG return at month-end. Priced in cedis. Supported from Accra.
Three opinions, strongly held.
Built for the counter.
The teller's screen is the one we live in. If it is wrong, nothing else matters. Every design decision starts there.
The honest path is the easy one.
Compliance should be the default — not a module you turn on when the auditor calls. The right thing should also be the cheapest, fastest, and quietest.
Ship, don't promise.
The changelog is the roadmap. We publish what we built, not what we will build next quarter. Customers buy shipped software, not pitch decks.
Who is building CediSync.
A small team across Accra and remote. Engineers, designers, operators. We prefer shipping over hiring.
- FP
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Founder · CEO
- EP
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Head of Engineering
- DP
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Design
- OP
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Customer Success
We are hiring.
Engineers, designers, and operators with a taste for unglamorous financial software. Accra or remote. We move quickly and work with real problems.