San Jose runs on the most expensive real estate in the country — and Valley homeowners expect a finished kitchen to look like it. SlabOS is the all-in-one platform that lets South Bay shops quote in live 3D at the speed clients here demand, protect margin on premium stone with automatic slab nesting, and run the whole operation on one login.
▶ The platform tour — playing now · tap for sound
San Jose isn't a volume-of-cheap-kitchens market — it's a value-per-kitchen market. With Bay Area home prices among the highest in the nation, South Bay remodels skew high-end: Willow Glen and Rose Garden character homes getting gutted to the studs, Almaden and Evergreen estate kitchens, Cupertino and Saratoga remodels feeding off the tech economy, and an ADU boom across Santa Clara County adding second kitchens by the thousands.
Clients here have seen the inside of a designer's portfolio. They expect to see the finished kitchen before they commit — and they expect the shop to move at Valley speed. A flat estimate emailed three days later loses to a 3D render handed over on the first visit.
Draw the job in 2D. The client sees it in live 3D.
California's accessory-dwelling-unit rules turned half of Santa Clara County into a backyard build site — small, fast kitchens that have to be quoted accurately and turned around quickly.
Los Gatos, Saratoga, Willow Glen and Palo Alto clients often come with an interior designer and a Pinterest board. The visual has to match the vision, exactly, on the first pass.
Waterfall islands, book-matched panels and dramatic veining are the Valley signature — and that's exactly where slab layout and yield decide whether the job is profitable.
Bay Area labor, rent and slab costs are some of the steepest anywhere. An extra slab "to be safe" on premium stone isn't a rounding error here — it's the whole profit on the job.
Office break rooms, lab benches and multifamily towers around North San Jose and the Golden Triangle mean bigger jobs, more line items, and more crews to coordinate.
A template in Morgan Hill, an install in Mountain View, a slab pickup in Hayward — Bay Area gridlock means crews and calendars have to be planned to the hour, not the day.
Neighborhoods and cities are named only to describe the San Jose and Silicon Valley market in general. SlabOS makes no claim about, and does not reference, any specific local fabrication business.
Draw the countertop in 2D and watch it render in real-time 3D as you go. Pricing updates live off your own Bay Area price lists — edges, cutouts, thickness, splash, waterfall ends — so the number is right the moment the design is.
A Saratoga homeowner working with their designer sees the waterfall island rendered in their stone, not a flat sketch — and gets a real number while you're still at the table. When the client and the designer both expect a polished, professional experience, being the shop that delivers it is how you win the high-margin work.
One login for the estimating desk, the 3D studio, the schedule, and the crew in the field.
In a market where a single slab of exotic quartzite can run into four figures, yield is the difference between a job that pays and a job that doesn't. SlabOS nests your pieces automatically — one click runs roughly 30,000 placement operations to find a best-fit layout that gets more out of every slab.
Moraware's stack has nesting too — but it's done by hand. Manual layout means padding "to be safe," and on book-matched marble or big-vein quartzite at Bay Area prices, the slab you give away is the whole margin. Automatic nesting lets you quote a competitive number on a premium job and still keep the profit.
One click tests tens of thousands of placements per slab.
Canadian Countertops used SlabOS nesting to underbid a $1M+ job — and held their margin doing it. In a high-cost market like Silicon Valley, that same automatic-yield advantage is worth even more, on everything from a backyard ADU kitchen to a tech-campus fit-out.
SlabOS clearly understands how to strike the right balance between fabrication and software. My only gripe: I didn't discover it sooner.
UI, integrations, performance, pricing ROI, sales features, support, onboarding, AI, the quoting engine, KPIs. Nothing to dislike — it's everything we've ever wanted.
CounterGo to quote, Systemize for jobs and the calendar, a separate Inventory product for slabs — re-keyed by hand.
Manual layout means padding for safety — and at Bay Area slab prices that's serious money on every job.
Valley clients and their designers want to picture the finished job — a flat drawing doesn't sell at this level.
DIY exports and spreadsheets to move your own history — so shops stay stuck on the old stack.
If your San Jose shop is on the Moraware stack — CounterGo, Systemize, and a separate Inventory product stitched together — SlabOS replaces all three with one platform, one login, one bill.
And the switch is done for you. We migrate accounts, contacts, quotes (with the actual drawings), jobs, activity history, calendar, and slab inventory. Canadian Countertops moved 20,000+ jobs and 18,000+ quotes in about four hours — quoting in SlabOS the same day. A South Bay shop's switch looks the same: no data left behind, searchable from day one, with no busy week lost to migration in the middle of your season.
“All of it came over in an afternoon — 18,000+ quotes and our full job history migrated in about 4 hours. Nothing was lost. We were quoting in SlabOS the same day.”
Book a demo and we'll draw one of your actual jobs in 3D, nest it onto a slab, quote it live off your price list, and show you the whole shop running on one screen.
One platform · one flat fee · unlimited seats · see pricing
Yes. San Jose and the wider Silicon Valley are a high-value market — premium remodels in neighborhoods like Willow Glen, Almaden and Saratoga, a busy ADU and second-kitchen pipeline across Santa Clara County, and tech-campus and multifamily fit-outs around North San Jose. SlabOS is built for that pressure: fast 2D→3D quoting to win design-driven clients, automatic slab nesting to protect margin on exotic quartzite, porcelain and marble, plus scheduling, a mobile crew app, slab inventory, a customer portal, and built-in AI — all on one login. It works for a two-person shop and scales to a multi-crew operation running from the South Bay up the Peninsula.
Yes. Moraware is three products — CounterGo for quoting, Systemize for jobs and the calendar, and a separate Inventory product for slabs — that you stitch together by hand. SlabOS replaces all three with one platform: quoting, live 3D, scheduling, the crew app, slab inventory, the customer portal, and AI under a single login and one flat bill. The biggest practical difference is nesting — Moraware nests slabs manually, SlabOS does it automatically — which matters enormously at Bay Area slab prices, where one wasted slab can erase the margin on a job. See the full SlabOS vs Moraware breakdown.
It's done for you. We migrate your accounts, contacts, quotes (with the actual drawings), jobs, activity history, calendar, and slab inventory — your shop doesn't have to wrangle exports and spreadsheets or lose a week of a busy Valley season. As a reference point, Canadian Countertops moved 20,000+ jobs and 18,000+ quotes across in about four hours and were quoting in SlabOS the same day. A San Jose shop's switch follows the same path: nothing left behind, everything searchable from day one.
In the Valley, slab cost is one of your biggest line items, so yield is where the margin lives. SlabOS nests your pieces automatically — one click runs roughly 30,000 placement operations to find a best-fit layout that gets more out of every slab. That recovered yield is real profit: it lets you quote a competitive number on a premium job without padding the slab count by hand "to be safe." On book-matched marble and big-vein quartzite — favorites in South Bay kitchens — the difference is even bigger. See how nesting works.
Yes. The same platform handles a single backyard ADU kitchen in Cupertino and a multi-crew commercial fit-out around the Golden Triangle or North San Jose. Quoting, live 3D, scheduling, slab inventory, the crew app, and the customer portal all live in one system, so larger jobs with more line items and more crews stay coordinated across the Valley's gridlocked metro footprint instead of fragmenting across three products and a spreadsheet.
Pricing is custom to your shop — one flat platform fee for the whole system (drawing, quoting, scheduling, inventory, crew app, portal, and AI) with unlimited seats, instead of paying per-product and per-seat across three separate tools. See the pricing page, or book a demo and we'll set the right plan for a San Jose operation your size.