Readme
This is not a pitch deck.
This is not a feature list, not a pricing page, and not a sales brochure.
This is a story about warehouses full of parts that nobody can identify.
A story told in three acts.
It's a simple story, but it's your story.
If you've ever stared at a part and thought "what the hell is this?" — this story was written for you.
That person is you.
The Problem
(the world we inherited)
Picture this: A pallet arrives at your warehouse. Fifty industrial valves, maybe a hundred circuit boards, a box of motors that fell off a decommissioned assembly line in Bavaria.
You know they're worth something. You can feel it. But what are they? What's the part number? What's the market price in Germany versus the UK versus the US?
So you do what everyone does: You Google. You cross-reference PDF catalogs from 2008. You call a guy who knows a guy. You post on forums hoping someone recognizes the casting marks.
Three hours later, you've identified one part.
Multiply that by a thousand SKUs. Multiply it by the ten listings you need to create today. Multiply it by the six languages your European buyers speak.
This is the world parts resellers have lived in for decades.
Tribal knowledge. Manual research. Guesswork pricing.
It worked when volume was low. It doesn't scale.
The Inflection
(the moment everything changed)
We spent years in this world. Liquidation auctions at 5 AM. Warehouses in Rotterdam, warehouses in Ohio. Pallets of industrial surplus that could be gold or could be scrap — if only we could identify them fast enough.
We watched the rise of AI transform industries. Watched it write code, generate images, answer questions. And we asked ourselves a simple question:
"Why can't AI look at a greasy valve photo and tell us exactly what it is, what it's worth, and write the listing for us?"
The technology existed. The data existed. Nobody had built it for us — for the traders, the resellers, the liquidation operators who move physical goods through digital channels.
So we built it ourselves.
We trained models on millions of industrial parts. We connected to pricing feeds across three continents. We built a system that speaks six languages natively — because a German buyer doesn't want to read a listing machine-translated from English.
We named it SPEKMI.
Because every part has specifications. And now, you can know them in seconds.
The Future
(what we're building together)
SPEKMI isn't just a tool. It's the infrastructure for a new kind of commerce — where physical inventory moves at digital speed.
We see a future where:
Every part can be identified in seconds, not hours.
Every listing is market-priced with real data, not gut feeling.
Every reseller can sell globally without hiring translators.
Every warehouse of "unknown inventory" becomes a catalog of opportunity.
We're not building this for enterprise procurement teams with million-dollar budgets. We're building it for the operator who bought a shipping container of surplus at auction and needs to turn it into cash.
For the trader who knows parts, but doesn't have time to become a data entry specialist.
The technology exists to make parts reselling 100x faster. The only question is whether you're ready to use it.
We've reached the end of this page.
But only the beginning of the real story.
This is your call to action.
The pallet in your warehouse is waiting.
5 free listings. No credit card required.