Anviam is a web3 development company that builds smart contracts, tokenization platforms and wallet infrastructure for businesses that need verifiable ownership, programmable payments or a tamper-proof record, not a token for its own sake.
Most of the noise around Web3 is about price charts. The useful part is quieter: a ledger that no single party controls, a contract that executes exactly as written every time, and an asset that can be split, transferred or verified without a middleman re-checking everyone's paperwork.
That's the case for tokenized real estate, invoices that settle themselves once conditions are met, or a supply chain record nobody can quietly edit after the fact. As a smart contract development services provider, we start by asking whether a blockchain is actually the right tool for what you're trying to do, and we're honest when it isn't.
Every engagement is scoped around a specific asset, workflow or compliance requirement, not a generic "blockchain project."
Solidity contracts for token issuance, escrow, revenue splits and other logic that needs to run exactly as written, every time.
Custodial and non-custodial wallets with multi-chain support, key management and the security review a wallet product needs before launch.
Real-world-asset tokenization for property, invoices and equity, turning a paper claim into a transferable, auditable on-chain record.
Lending, staking and liquidity products built with the same rigor as any financial application handling other people's money.
Minting, marketplace and royalty infrastructure for NFTs used as tickets, certificates or ownership records, not just collectibles.
Feasibility review, architecture design and smart contract audits for teams that need a second, technical opinion before they build or ship.
Fractional ownership of property, with title and transfer history recorded on-chain instead of buried in paper filings.
A shared, tamper-resistant record of where a shipment has been, so provenance disputes have one source of truth.
Credentials and certifications that can be verified instantly without calling the issuing institution.
Settlement logic that moves value between parties without the delay and fees of routing through multiple correspondent banks.
Peer-to-peer trading platforms where escrow and settlement are handled by contract logic instead of a middleman.
Points programs that customers can actually transfer or redeem across partner brands instead of a closed, single-store balance.
We confirm what actually needs to be on-chain versus what's better left in a regular database.
Token standards, contract interactions and chain selection are settled before a line of Solidity is written.
Contracts and any wallet or front-end components are built and tested on testnet against real scenarios.
A dedicated audit pass checks for reentrancy, access-control and logic issues before anything touches mainnet.
Mainnet deployment with monitoring in place to catch anomalies in contract activity early.
RWA tokenization is the process of representing a real-world asset (property, invoices, equity, commodities) as a digital token on a blockchain. The token records ownership or a claim on the underlying asset, which makes that ownership easier to verify, transfer and split into smaller units than the original paperwork allows.
Yes. Every smart contract we write goes through internal code review and automated testing, and we run a dedicated audit pass that checks for reentrancy, access-control and logic errors before anything touches mainnet. For contracts handling significant value, we also recommend a third-party audit alongside our own.
Most of our smart contract work is on Ethereum and EVM-compatible chains such as Polygon, using Solidity and Hardhat. We also build on Solana where transaction throughput or cost is the priority. The right chain depends on your use case, not the other way around.
No. Most of the businesses we talk to about blockchain aren't crypto companies at all. They're using it for things like verifiable asset ownership, tamper-proof audit trails or programmable payment logic inside an otherwise ordinary product. The token or coin is a means, not the point.
Pricing depends on contract complexity, how many contracts interact with each other, and how much audit and testing the use case warrants. A single, well-scoped contract is a fixed-price engagement; a multi-contract platform with an audit cycle is usually milestone-based. We'll give you a scoped estimate after a short discovery call.
Yes. If you'd rather extend your own team than hand off a fixed-scope project, you can hire blockchain developers from Anviam on a dedicated, monthly staff-augmentation basis.