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Aleo came to atQuo early. Before the conferences, before the scale, before zero-knowledge cryptography became a phrase that people outside cryptography circles actually recognized. They were building something technically serious and needed a web presence that could keep pace with a product and organization that were moving fast.
The relationship wasn't a single project. It was ongoing technical support — the kind that early-stage companies need but rarely know how to scope in advance.
When a company is growing quickly, the website is never finished. New pages appear, integrations break, something needs to change before the next announcement, and the dev capacity to handle it either doesn't exist internally or is occupied with more critical infrastructure. For a technical brand like Aleo, a website that lags behind the product is a credibility problem.
What they needed wasn't an agency engagement with a defined deliverable. It was a reliable technical partner who could handle whatever came up — and handle it without requiring a full briefing cycle each time.
Across the engagement, atQuo handled Webflow development as the need arose: punctual builds, integrations, maintenance, and incremental changes as Aleo's presence evolved. The work ranged from targeted fixes to more involved development, always tied to what the team needed at that moment rather than a predetermined scope.
That kind of work is unglamorous by design. Done well, nobody notices it — the site just works, the changes ship on time, and the team can focus on the things that actually require their attention.
Aleo grew into one of the more significant names in zero-knowledge infrastructure. The work atQuo did was part of the foundation that let their web presence keep up during the period when keeping up mattered most.

