Bryndeli is the AI companion every frontline carer should have. This is what we believe and why those beliefs shape every decision we make.
Care is one of the most demanding professions in the country, performed largely without the tools the people doing it deserve. The software that exists tends to be built for the office and the back-end of the system — not the doorstep, the kettle, or the eight minutes between visits.
Bryndeli exists to close that gap. We read the care plans, handovers, and notes a team already has, and turn them into something a carer can actually use in the moment — voice-first, visit-tailored, time-aware. The work is the same; the support around it is finally worthy of it.
These are not slogans. They're the principles a feature has to pass before we ship it, and the questions we ask whenever we don't know what to do next.
The work happens at someone's doorstep, in their living room, in eight minutes between visits. Anything that helps a carer in those moments matters. Anything that doesn't is paperwork.
A regular carer accumulates knowledge about a service user that's invaluable: the green mug, the 3pm change in mood, the family member who calls on Tuesdays. None of that should disappear when a different carer arrives for the next visit.
Handovers, briefings, shift-end notes — these aren't bureaucratic chores. They're how good care happens across multiple carers, days, and weeks. Software should treat them with the seriousness the work demands.
A carer standing at a front door at 7am can't wait for a callback, an email, or a thirty-page PDF. Information is only useful when it arrives in time to change something. Speed isn't a luxury here — it's the whole point.
Most UK tech companies cluster in London, Manchester, or Cambridge. Bryndeli is built from a small office in Telford — a town better known for its iron bridge than its software industry, sitting between the West Midlands and the Welsh borders.
There's no grand strategic story behind that. It's where the founder lives. It's quieter. It's the kind of place where you can spend a morning thinking carefully about a problem instead of rushing to the next meeting. We think care software is better for being built in a place that isn't trying to be anywhere else.
"Made in Telford" isn't decoration. It's where the work happens.
I'm Olu Akinyemi. I've spent most of my career as a software engineer, but a stretch of time supporting service users alongside frontline carers changed how I thought about this sector. The thing that stayed with me wasn't any single moment — it was the cumulative observation that the people doing the most demanding work were the ones with the least information at the moments it mattered most. Care plans existed. Handovers happened. The knowledge was there. It just wasn't reaching the right person at the right time.
If you run a domiciliary, residential, or supported living service in the UK, I'd love to hear from you. No slide deck, no sales pitch — just a 15-minute conversation about whether this would help your team. olu@bryndeli.co.uk. I read every email.
The fastest way to understand what we're building is to see it. Email Olu directly, or take the tour from the homepage.