The name is the thesis.
Byblos is a consulting practice with a long memory. Here's where it comes from — and why it's built the way it is.
Enterprise technology strategy and delivery, without the enterprise overhead.
Fifteen years architecting, delivering, and modernizing enterprise systems. Work spans platform strategy, systems integration, contact center technology, identity and access management, and practical AI applications. Led initiatives from early strategy through implementation, stabilization, and improvement.
Byblos is roughly 5,000 years old. It's still standing.
One of the oldest continuously inhabited cities on earth. Phoenician, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Crusader, Ottoman — built over, burned, conquered, and rebuilt across millennia. Not preserved under glass. Lived in, the whole time, layer on layer.
That's the thesis. Systems and businesses built to outlast the trend cycle — not optimized for the next platform hype or the next funding round. Built deliberately, durably, the way Byblos itself was built.
“Byblos has carried ideas for millennia. Now we carry yours.”
The mark isn't decoration. The seal is built around Bēt — the second letter of the Phoenician alphabet, which originated in Byblos. Bēt's pictograph meant "house." The alphabet, the foundation, and the city all trace to the same place.
Our principles for systems that last.
Durable architecture
We favor systems that can be maintained, extended, and understood long after the first release.
Platform-neutral guidance
Recommendations are based on fit: business process, cost, team capacity, integration needs, and long-term ownership.
Clear technical judgment
We explain decisions plainly, including the tradeoffs, risks, constraints, and consequences.
Delivery-aware strategy
Strategy is shaped by what it will take to implement, support, and evolve the system in the real world.
Practical AI adoption
We separate useful AI opportunities from expensive distractions, then focus on integration, governance, and measurable value.
Operational results
The work is measured by better decisions, cleaner operations, lower friction, and systems that hold up over time.