A wheat-trading marketplace for buyers, sellers, and millers. iOS, Android, and a web admin panel, all on FlutterFlow. Two-step approval flow that mirrors how offline brokerage actually works.

Cropzy is a mobile marketplace for wheat traders and flour millers. iOS, Android, and a web-based admin panel, all shipped on FlutterFlow. First release was deliberately focused: one commodity, two user types, and a two-step approval flow that mirrors how brokerage deals actually get confirmed.
Wheat traders and flour millers in the target market were running brokerage operations the old way. Phone calls, offline brokers, manual deal tracking. There was no central place to post requirements, match buyers with sellers, or confirm deals without back-and-forth friction.
The brief was to digitise that entire process for the 2026 wheat season. Keep it lean. Get it live. Prove the concept with a limited user base first.
The hard part wasn't features. It was respecting how the market already works. The users were traders, not tech-native consumers. Every screen had to be simple enough that a first-time user could post a requirement or respond to a deal without any hand-holding.
Aumadi handled the full build. Design, development, backend, QA, and launch support.
The stack was chosen for speed and scalability:
Scope was well defined from the start. One commodity (wheat), two user types (buyers and sellers), and a two-step approval workflow. The admin panel was scoped alongside the app so Cropzy had full visibility over users and activity from day one.
Design. The UI was built on the ShadCN component library to keep the interface familiar and professional. Focus stayed on reducing cognitive load: a clear marketplace feed, a simple post-creation flow, and a deal dashboard that showed exactly where each trade stood. No clutter. No unnecessary steps.
Development. FlutterFlow powered the mobile app and the admin panel. Supabase handled the database and push notifications. Custom functions were written in Node.js and Flutter where FlutterFlow needed extending. Git version control kept the whole build tracked and clean.
The two-step approval workflow was the most nuanced piece. When a buyer accepts a seller's post (or vice versa), the deal doesn't auto-confirm. The original poster still has to approve it. That mirrors how brokerage works offline and avoids conflicts with trades that may already be in progress through other channels.
Testing. The app was tested across iOS and Android with a focus on the core deal flow. Real-time status updates, notification triggers, and the approval workflow were all put through their paces. The admin panel was tested separately for visibility and control.
Launch. Play Store went live in the first week of March. App Store followed by end of March. Cropzy received strong feedback from early users. A clear signal that the core concept landed in a market that had never had a digital tool built for it before.
The outcome. Cropzy launched on time across iOS and Android, hitting every target set at the start. Early feedback praised the simplicity of the deal flow and the real-time approval system.
The bigger story is the market itself. Commodity brokerage in this space has operated offline for decades. Cropzy is the first digital layer on top of a process traders and millers already know well. The first release is wheat only; the foundation is already in place to expand to other crops and scale the user base.
Sometimes the best product is the one that does exactly what it needs to do and nothing more. Cropzy is that product.



30-minute discovery call. Scope, timeline, and fixed quote out the other side. No strings attached.