Calyxo
A separate project Maximilien is building independently from Oxelis: a B2B outreach platform that unifies Gmail, LinkedIn and WhatsApp into a single multichannel flow. Different legal entity, different brand — shown here as proof that we ship real software end-to-end, backend through UI.
The problem
B2B sales teams run outreach across three disconnected silos: a mailbox, a LinkedIn account, and a phone. Each silo has its own tool, its own sequencing logic, and zero awareness of what the others are doing. Reps end up double-touching the same prospect on two channels in the same day, miss the right moment on the third, and waste hours stitching together a picture of who has been contacted, where, and what they said back.
What we built
Calyxo is a separate company built by Maximilien outside Oxelis — but it’s the clearest proof that the people behind Oxelis ship real software end-to-end. A multichannel outreach platform that collapses Gmail, LinkedIn and WhatsApp into a single coordinated flow — one prospect, one journey, three channels.
- A multi-tenant Supabase backend with row-level security, so each workspace stays fully isolated.
- A queue-based engine that orchestrates outreach across the three channels, with per-channel rate limits and quiet hours to keep accounts safe.
- Stripe billing wired into Supabase auth — full self-serve signup, plans and upgrades, no manual intervention.
- A Unipile integration so a single user can run multiple accounts per channel in parallel.
- The full marketing site and product dashboard, designed and shipped on Vercel.
The same playbook used for Oxelis client work — analyse the problem, build the working system, measure that it moves the number — applied here to an internal project. It’s not an Oxelis product or service: it’s capability proof.
The result
In private beta, with the full multichannel engine in production and the first cohort of users onboarded. Public launch in 2026.