Norwell, Massachusetts

Technology help for Norwell businesses.

Norwell sits inland from Hingham along Route 3 and the back roads that connect the rest of the South Shore, with a business community built around its year-round residential character. Professional services, residential service businesses like landscapers and builders, a healthcare contingent, and a few independent retail and food spots that have stayed loyal customers through the years. The technology conversations tend to be about cleaning up a process that has worked fine for a long time but is starting to feel its age.

You might call Lantern Harbor when...

The common thread is usually the same: a technology problem that nobody has translated into a sensible next move yet.

You are about to spend money and want an outside read.

A software contract that has been quietly renewing for years, a vendor pitch, a new tool the office across town is using. Before the next check goes out, you want someone who is not on the receiving end of it to look it over.

The system worked for a long time, and now it is starting to feel its age.

The intake form, the way calls get routed, the spreadsheet you have been carrying for six years. None of it is broken. All of it is slowing you down, and the workarounds are stacking up faster than you would like.

The compliance and patient privacy side does not leave room for guessing.

If the field is healthcare or anywhere near it, the software questions are not optional and the answers cannot be a hunch. You want a sober read on what stays, what changes, and what was never built right in the first place.

The crews are out, the calls are coming in, and the office is doing both.

Estimates, schedules, invoicing, the customer who called twice and is going to call again. The ops side has gotten heavier and you want to clean it up before you hire anyone new.

How the work usually goes

Simple on purpose. No sprawling discovery project unless the problem truly needs one.

  1. We name the actual problem.

    Not the vague version. The specific decision, bottleneck, or question that is costing you time or confidence.

  2. I look at the real work.

    The website, the workflow, the vendor materials, the current tools, or a morning sitting with your team. The point is to react to the work itself, not guess from the abstract.

  3. You get a clear next move.

    Sometimes that is a short written plan. Sometimes it is a build. Sometimes it is a calm recommendation not to do the project at all.

Lantern Harbor also serves other South Shore towns from Hingham. The same in-person approach applies anywhere within about forty-five minutes.

If something feels murky, that is usually the right time to talk.

A calm first conversation is often enough to tell whether the next step is a small fix, a clearer plan, or nothing at all.