About
One product. One person. Muscat.
Sanad is built by Mubarik Alhasani, working from Muscat in the Sultanate of Oman. This is the one page on the site where I drop the formal voice and write directly.
Why I built Sanad.
I work at the Royal Opera House in Muscat. Across my time there and in conversations with peers across Omani institutions, a pattern kept repeating: people wanted to use AI assistants to make sense of their own documents, but every option meant sending those documents to a cloud they didn't operate, in a country they didn't choose, under a contract written by someone else's lawyer.
That isn't paranoia. In the institutions I've worked with — ministries, banks, cultural and educational bodies — the documents in question are HR policies, procurement workflows, internal correspondence, board minutes, regulatory filings. Material that doesn't belong in a third party's training pipeline.
So I built the alternative. Sanad runs the language model on the customer's own machines. The model weights ship with the installer; the prompts never leave the network. The only thing our servers learn is when a particular installation last refreshed its licence. Everything else is local by design.
What I'm aiming for.
A product that ministries and banks in this region can adopt without a procurement officer holding their breath. Bilingual from the first screen. Priced in Omani Rial. Backed by a contract written under Omani law. Supported in business hours that align with our customers'.
I'm building this deliberately, one customer at a time. The first ten will get more of my time than they expect; in return, they'll shape what Sanad becomes over the next three years.
What this isn't yet.
A team. A funding round. A logo wall. I'm taking the slow path on purpose — small commitments, kept honestly, beats big promises that fail to deliver. The product is ready; the company is still small.
If you want to talk.
The shortest path is a 20-minute demo. I'll come to your office in Muscat, or we'll meet remotely. Bring a sample policy document and we'll see Sanad answer questions about it with the laptop in airplane mode.