Studio portrait
A Portuguese unipessoal built for marketing operations that touch code
Algoritmo Da Sorte is registered in Tavira as a single-shareholder company with a deliberately small footprint: fewer hand-offs, direct access to the people who write the briefs and the measurement notes, and correspondence that stays in English when your team is distributed across borders. We sit where brand storytelling meets release calendars, consent strings, and the spreadsheets finance actually opens.
Legal seat & posture
Governance you can paste into a vendor form
ALGORITMO DA SORTE — UNIPESSOAL LDA trades under its full legal name, files accounts in Portugal, and issues proposals with explicit VAT treatment so procurement in Lisbon, London, or Berlin receives paperwork that already matches their checklist—not a reinterpretation cobbled together after signature.
Our registered office on Rua da Atalaia is the anchor for contracts, registered letters, and on-site workshops when you want a whiteboard session without flying a committee through hub airports. Day-to-day delivery stays remote-first, but the address is real, inspectable, and tied to a jurisdiction your counsel can reason about in minutes.
Commercial focus
Where we earn our hours
We concentrate on programmes where paid media, owned surfaces, and product telemetry must agree: SaaS renewals, regulated consumer apps, industrial marketplaces, and publisher-side experiments that cannot afford vanity headlines once CAC is reviewed quarterly.
Engagements are scoped as either milestone arcs—launch, migration, or audit—or as retained advisory slices when your internal team owns execution but needs a steady editor for channel plans, UTM hygiene, and stakeholder readouts. We decline work that would require us to impersonate in-house legal counsel or to guarantee rankings; we accept assignments where the success test is written in numbers your CFO already tracks.
How collaboration feels
Written artefacts before calendar theatre
You receive agendas the evening before calls, decisions captured as bullet minutes within twenty-four hours, and annexes that separate “nice for LinkedIn” from “required for launch.” We default to shared drives and ticket links instead of opaque attachments, so new joiners on your side inherit context without a private archaeology chat.
Core availability follows Western European Time, with deep-work blocks protected in the afternoon when Atlantic colleagues are still asleep. When a crisis hits, we escalate with a single subject line convention and a pre-agreed phone tree—no emoji storms, no duplicated threads that bury the actual error message six screens down.