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Ideal Customer Profile

Purpose: Cross-TextCAD customer thesis for who we should target first, why they are a fit, and how RapidDraft and Fatigue Agent land inside the same buyer environment. Last updated: April 2026


Executive Summary

The strongest early customers are mid-market mechanical product companies in Germany and Central Europe that ship drawing-heavy physical products, run real manufacturing feedback loops, and let engineering leaders make pragmatic buying decisions.

The best targets are not generic "AI users." They are companies where engineering documentation, review, manufacturability, and release quality still create visible friction. In practice, that means machine builders, packaging OEMs, intralogistics suppliers, heavy-equipment suppliers, and precision mechanical manufacturers with repeatable drawing and release pain.

RapidDraft Refined Wedge

The shared ICP remains the umbrella thesis, but RapidDraft now sits on a narrower April 2026 wedge: structured mechanical teams where design-change documentation, drawing updates, and release review still create repetitive manual work.

That refined method is documented in RapidDraft_Refined_Search_Loop.md. The company output of that loop lives in RapidDraft_Refined_Targets.md.


Shared Customer Thesis

TextCAD should target companies with all four of these traits:

  1. Mechanical complexity is real but still operationally manageable. The company ships machines, assemblies, devices, or engineered hardware rather than pure software or pure contract services.
  2. Drawings and traceability still matter. Manufacturing depends on released drawings, review discipline, and explicit engineering decisions.
  3. Manufacturing feedback is visible. Problems show up quickly through internal production, local suppliers, rework, NCRs, or release delays.
  4. Buying can stay engineering-led. The first commercial conversation can start with a head of design, engineering manager, manufacturing engineering lead, or small simulation team rather than an enterprise committee.

Core Company Profile

Dimension Target profile Why it matters
Geography Germany first, then Central Europe Strong founder proximity, strong Mittelstand base, high engineering-tool adoption
Company size Roughly 50-2,000 employees Large enough to feel real workflow pain, small enough to pilot quickly
Engineering team Roughly 10-150 design engineers, or 1-5 FEA engineers for fatigue workflows Enough volume for ROI, still manageable as a pilot
Product type Machines, conveyors, packaging systems, special-purpose equipment, precision hardware, industrial devices High drawing and release pressure with clear manufacturing consequences
CAD/PLM maturity NX + Teamcenter is ideal for RapidDraft; broader structured CAD/PDM maturity is acceptable Stronger process discipline makes adoption easier and value clearer
Manufacturing loop Machining, sheet metal, weldments, assembly, or internal shop / local supplier feedback Creates fast ROI from review, DFM, and traceability improvements
Workflow pain Frequent revisions, ECO churn, repeated review comments, manual fatigue post-processing, or weak documentation reuse This is the problem worth paying to fix
Buying motion Engineering-led, founder-accessible, pilot-friendly Speeds up discovery, scoping, and rollout

Shared Buying Committee

The person who feels the pain is often the design engineer or analyst. The person who says yes is usually one of these roles:

  • Head of Mechanical Design / Design lead for drawing throughput, standards, and release quality
  • Engineering Manager for team velocity, repeated review work, and operational bottlenecks
  • Manufacturing Engineering Lead for DFM feedback, rework reduction, and supplier coordination
  • Quality / Compliance lead when traceability, NCRs, or auditability drive the decision

For Fatigue Agent specifically, an additional buyer can be the small internal FEA or structural-analysis team, but the commercial approval still usually sits with engineering leadership.


Shared Fit Patterns

These are the signals that matter across the portfolio:

  • High drawing throughput or high documentation intensity
  • Frequent revision churn or customer-specific variant work
  • Clear manufacturing-critical feedback loops
  • Structured release governance or visible PLM discipline
  • Enough engineering maturity to pilot, but not so much bureaucracy that progress stalls

The strongest shared segments today are:

Segment Shared fit Why it matters
Special-purpose machinery / industrial automation Very high Variant-heavy, drawing-heavy, pragmatic buyers
Packaging and food-processing machinery Very high Strong release pressure, repeatable platforms, real manufacturing impact
Intralogistics / conveyors / material handling High Welded structures, continuous-duty equipment, strong review and fatigue use cases
Heavy equipment / off-highway suppliers High Complex variants, formal release processes, clear mechanical pain
Precision mechanics / Gerätebau / high-mix assemblies Medium-high Clear drawing value, especially for RapidDraft and DFM
Medical-mechanical devices Conditional Strong traceability need, but slower compliance-heavy sales motion

Product-Specific Notes

RapidDraft

RapidDraft fits best where released drawings still drive manufacturing and where teams repeatedly lose time in review, redrawing, release hygiene, and design-to-manufacturing coordination.

Best RapidDraft signals:

  • NX + Teamcenter or similarly structured CAD/PDM workflows
  • 20+ CAD seats or a clearly formal drawing-release process
  • Machined, sheet-metal, welded, or assembly-heavy products
  • Frequent ECOs, customer-driven changes, or large documentation packages
  • Engineering managers who care about fewer review escapes and faster release cycles

RapidDraft is strongest in industrial machinery, packaging equipment, automation hardware, and heavy-equipment-adjacent suppliers.

Fatigue Agent

Fatigue Agent fits best where a small engineering team already runs static or FE analysis, but fatigue post-processing is still manual, spreadsheet-heavy, or skipped.

Best Fatigue Agent signals:

  • Welded frames, conveyors, machine structures, brackets, or duty-cycle-driven components
  • 1-5 FEA engineers doing standards-based work without dedicated fatigue tooling
  • Existing solver use with manual downstream fatigue calculations
  • Need for traceable engineering reports without adding a new solver workflow

Fatigue Agent is strongest in industrial equipment, packaging machinery, conveyors, test rigs, and other mechanical systems with repeatable cyclic loading.

Shared Fit

The best overlap companies are machine builders and industrial-equipment firms where both of these are true:

  • Drawings and engineering decisions are operationally important
  • Structural durability and manufacturability also matter

That overlap is why packaging machinery, special-purpose machines, conveyors, and related Mittelstand mechanical manufacturers are the clearest cross-TextCAD targets.


Qualification Checklist

Must-Haves

  • Mechanical product company, not software-first
  • Clear engineering ownership of drawings, release, or physical product validation
  • Real manufacturing or supplier feedback loop
  • Team size and workflow volume large enough to justify a pilot
  • A reachable engineering leader who can discuss the current process honestly

Strong Positive Signals

  • Explicit NX, Teamcenter, PLM, or other structured release tooling
  • Job postings that mention design, manufacturing engineering, simulation, or PLM
  • Visible product variants, configurable platforms, or customer-specific project work
  • Internal fabrication, steel construction, sheet-metal production, or CNC manufacturing
  • Public evidence of simulation, analysis, or standards-heavy reporting

Disqualifiers

  • Very large enterprise environments where pilot approval is committee-bound
  • Software-first organizations with minimal physical-product complexity
  • Extremely small teams with no repeatable process or no budget signal
  • Highly specialized domains where the current product scope is too narrow, such as composite-heavy aerospace structures
  • Research-heavy materials or chemistry workflows outside the current product boundary

Open Questions

  • RapidDraft still has the strongest near-term thesis around NX + Teamcenter. The open question is how quickly to widen that aperture to "structured CAD/PDM maturity" in pilot selection without diluting the first wedge.
  • Some medical-device and electronics-hardware targets look strategically attractive, but the current repo evidence is not yet strong enough to rank them alongside the best industrial machinery targets.

Sources