The manifesto
We didn't buy AI. We rebuilt our company with it.
We're a transport company. We move freight across Europe, in our own trucks, every day. So when the guesswork cost us — a missed ETA, a truck in the shop with no warning, a CMR re-keyed for the seventh time — it cost us, not a slide in someone's pitch.
So we did the hard thing. We closed the loops, one process at a time — documents, dispatch, maintenance, planning, people, finance — until each one ran itself, checked itself and held. Then we noticed something: the loops we built to run ourselves are exactly what every logistics company is being told to build, usually by people who've never sat in a cab.
So we hand them over. We build the loops for your business, run them on our own fleet first, and keep a human in command of every one. Proof, not promises. Solid beats soft. Every time.
Where we come from
Grown out of real freight.
SuperSolid grew out of running real freight across Europe. We closed the loops one process at a time until each ran itself and held — and then turned what we'd built into a service. The transport runs day to day through our operating arm; SuperSolid is how we move freight and share the loops we built.
Short founder / company note — who's behind SuperSolid, in two or three sentences.
The path
Prove. Move. Transform. Multiply.
The order is deliberate. First we prove: close the loops on our own fleet, where every leak costs us. Then we move: the margin gains show on our own lanes, published on the proof page. Then we transform: the same loops, built bespoke for a first external operation, one process at a time. And then we multiply: the method goes outward — the writing, the teardowns, eventually the book.
The story outward is a loop too. It senses what the market asks, publishes, checks what lands, and learns.
The promise
Solid state.
Solid-state electronics replaced fragile, failure-prone moving parts with something instant, silent and almost impossible to break. That's the feeling we're after — and loops are how we get there. Every loop we close removes a moving part. Close enough of them and the operation stops jamming: everything moves, nothing slips.
And the name goes one layer deeper. In physics, a supersolid is matter that does the impossible: it holds its rigid, crystalline shape and flows without friction — both at the same time. That's the operation we're building. Solid enough that nothing slips. Fluid enough that everything moves.
Everything moves. Nothing slips.
One door
Work with us.
Freight to move, or loops to close — either way, you'll be talking to an operator.