When is the last time you heard someone say, “I love email?” Probably never.

Every day it seems like we’re swamped with more spam. And when we do actually rely on email for something important, well, you know how that goes. You send someone an email and ask them three questions. They reply to one. You reply with a comment about their reply and re-ask your other two questions. They reply with a comment on a whole other subject and before you know it you’ve got a long list of back and forward messages you’re scrolling through looking for who said what, when.

It’s just so totally inefficient.

Now, imagine that you’re an architect and you have to rely on this kind of communication with multiple contractors and sub-contractors to manage a construction project. This is what actually happens in the real world. It’s crazy. And that’s why Chuck Perret created a company called Centerline. Chuck says the goal of the company is, “to kill email.”

Chuck Perret, with his software company, Centerline, he's dragging archiecture out of the email era into a whole new world of efficient project management

Chuck Perret, with his software company, Centerline, he’s dragging archiecture out of the email era into a whole new world of efficient project management

Centerline is cloud-based data management for architects that pulls all of their project-related information out of their inbox and puts it into what’s called a Project Information Model.

Chuck launched Centerline in 2021, began taking clients in 2022, saw 350% growth in 2023, and today the company has architectural firm clients across the country.

If  Centerline is a software solution that solves a problem for a specific industry, imagine a company that solves any kind of problem, by simplifying any kind of task with software solutions, for any industry. Oil and gas. Maritime. Healthcare. Even sports, and local government.

You might be thinking, “That sounds a bit ambitious.” Well, sometimes shooting for the stars works, because that’s what Kellen Francis’s company, Codegig, does.

Kellen Francis, his company, Codegig, brings technology to industry, from teaching executives Excel to carbon capture

Kellen Francis, his company, Codegig, brings technology to industry, from teaching executives Excel to carbon capture

One of Codegig’s major clients is Shell. Not a local Shell gas station, but 30 different departments of Shell Oil, including the entire Gulf Coast. They also work with another couple of companies you may have heard of: Dow Chemical and Valero.

Anyone who’s ever had a job has had “one of those days” at work. One of those days where whatever we’re doing is so tedious, or the opposite – so mind-bogglingly difficult – that you just stop in your tracks and think, “Theres’ got to be a better way.”

What happens after that, typically, is that we suck it up and get on with it. But every once in a while, guys like Chuck and Kellen come along and actually invent a better way.

Ann Edelman sits in for Stephanie Riegel on this edition of Out to Lunch Baton Rouge

Ann Edelman sits in for Stephanie Riegel on this edition of Out to Lunch Baton Rouge

Ann Edelman sits in for Stephanie Riegel on this edition of Out to Lunch which was recorded live over lunch at Mansurs On the Boulevard. Photos by Ian Ledo and Miranda Albarez.

Kellen Francis, Ann Edelman, Chuck Perret, Out to Lunch at Mansurs On The Boulevard

Kellen Francis, Ann Edelman, Chuck Perret, Out to Lunch at Mansurs On The Boulevard