Insurance software · est. 2024, for a long time

We build software for the business of insurance. The hard parts, especially.

Longsince is the home of Dinero, InsureTrek, Remit, and Appetite — software built by people who know commissions, licensing, billing, and underwriting cold. Real problems, deeply solved, for agencies, FMOs, and carriers.

Fourproducts
Oneindustry
Zerogeneralists
long since /ˌlɔːŋ ˈsɪns/ adverb
1. a long time ago. “The hard part was long since handled.”
2. and ever since. Still true. Still working. Still ours to keep working.
The products

Built for the problems everyone else works around.

usedinero.com ↗

Dinero

Commission intelligence for insurance. Reconciliation, downlines, and lifetime value — from statement chaos to settled books.

Deep in: commissions · downlines · LTV
insuretrek.com ↗

InsureTrek

Producer licensing without the labyrinth. Appointed, compliant, and selling sooner — in every state that matters.

Deep in: licensing · appointments · compliance

Remit

Billing for the business of insurance. Invoices out, remittance in, and every penny accounted for — down to the trust ledger.

Deep in: invoicing · remittance · trust accounting

Appetite

Underwriting, in appetite. Clean intake, honest risk data, and decisions you can defend at renewal.

Deep in: intake · risk data · decisions

More to come. Same industry.

The approach

Know the work. Then build.

Insurance runs on work most software companies never see: commission statements that refuse to reconcile, licenses that lapse quietly, carrier feeds that disagree with each other. We build products there — in the weeds — because that’s where the real problems live.

Knowing one industry deeply isn’t a niche strategy. It’s the whole advantage: we’ve read the statements, walked the licensing maze, and sat with the people who do this work every day. We go at the hard problems until they’re handled — and then they stay handled.

We’re not in a hurry, which is different from being slow.

i.

Deep, not wide

We’d rather understand one industry completely than dabble in ten.

ii.

Real problems only

If it doesn’t fix someone’s working day, we don’t build it.

iii.

Operators, not tourists

We build alongside the people who do the work — not above them.