Your firmware team lives in Jira, hardware in spreadsheets, and the tape-out date is a guess: cost breakdown
Custom project management software for a Sunnyvale hardware program, unifying firmware, hardware, and silicon timelines, runs $60k to $140k over 4 to 7 months. Jira, Asana, and Monday manage software sprints well. They can't model the cross-discipline dependencies between firmware, PCB spins, and chip tape-outs that determine whether a hardware product actually ships.
If you are budgeting a build in Sunnyvale, this is what actually moves the number, where software and technology, semiconductors, hardware engineering teams overspend, and how to scope so the quote matches the outcome.
A hardware program in Sunnyvale runs on three clocks that don't tick together. Firmware moves in two-week sprints in Jira. Hardware moves in PCB spin cycles measured in weeks of fab and assembly. Silicon moves in tape-out windows measured in months, where a missed window costs a quarter. Jira understands the firmware clock and nothing else, so the cross-discipline dependencies, the ones that actually decide the ship date, live in a program manager's spreadsheet and head.
Asana and Monday are no better; they're built for general task management, not for a Gantt where a firmware feature blocks on a board spin that blocks on a chip respin. So your tape-out date is a guess, your firmware team commits to dates the hardware can't support, and nobody has a single view of the program. The tools manage tasks; they don't manage a hardware program.
Budgeting a project management build in Sunnyvale
| Project scope | Typical cost | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Cross-discipline program layer on Jira | $60k to $95k | 4 to 5 months |
| Full program management platform with tape-out tracking | $95k to $140k | 6 to 7 months |
| Dependency and timeline module only | $35k to $60k | 2 to 3 months |
The case for owning your project management
Custom project management software models a hardware program across all three clocks: firmware sprints, hardware spin cycles, and silicon tape-out windows, with the cross-discipline dependencies that determine the ship date. It gives your program manager one view that connects a firmware feature to the board spin and chip respin it depends on, so commitments are real.
- Firmware, hardware, and silicon schedules live in separate tools and a PM's head
- Your tape-out date is a guess because dependencies aren't modeled
- Teams commit to dates other disciplines can't support
- Leadership has no single, trustworthy view of the program
- You're a software-only team and Jira or Linear covers you
- Your hardware program is small enough to track in one spreadsheet
- Disciplines run loosely coupled with few cross-dependencies
- You can't get PMs and leads to maintain a richer model
What your build should include
Project Management services we deliver in Sunnyvale
The engagements Sunnyvale teams bring us most often: time tracking, team collaboration software, workflow management, custom project management software and task management.
Delivery, week by week
Exactly what you get
You get a program tool that finally connects all three clocks: firmware sprints, hardware spins, and silicon tape-outs, with the dependencies that decide the ship date. Jira stays where your engineers live. The custom layer gives program managers and leadership one trustworthy view. It integrates with Jira and Linear, feeds your business intelligence dashboards, and links to your internal tools so the program picture flows into how the rest of the company plans and reports.
How to choose a developer in Sunnyvale
The key question is whether they'll integrate with Jira rather than replace it, because an engineer-dense team will revolt against a new task tracker. Ask how they'd model a firmware feature blocking on a board spin blocking on a chip respin. The right partner treats Jira as the engineering source and builds the program layer on top. Scope it with your internal tools and business intelligence dashboards so the program view connects to the rest of the business.
- One program view spanning firmware, hardware, and silicon instead of three disconnected tools
- Cross-discipline dependency modeling so a firmware date reflects the hardware it relies on
- Tape-out and fab-window tracking that flags a missed window before it costs a quarter
- Realistic commitments because every team sees what the others are blocked on
- Integration with Jira so engineers keep their sprint workflow while PMs get the full picture
- It overlaps with Jira, so you must integrate, not replace, or you'll fight your engineers
- Modeling multi-discipline dependencies is complex and specific to your process
- Adoption requires program managers and leads to actually maintain the cross-links
- For a software-only team, Jira or Linear already does everything you need
- !They want to replace Jira; ask how they integrate so engineers keep their workflow
- !No cross-discipline modeling; ask how a firmware date reflects a board spin
- !Tape-out windows ignored; ask how they flag a missed fab window
- !Generic task-tool background; ask for a hardware-program reference
- !No resource view; ask how leadership sees capacity across disciplines
Teams investing in project management in Sunnyvale usually scope it next to field service management, booking & scheduling, mobile app, since these systems share data and budgets.
Rohan advises mid-market and enterprise teams on ERP, CRM and custom software, and has led delivery on dozens of business-software builds.
Writes for Digital Heroes, shipping business software for 2,000+ brands across 55+ countries since 2017.
Frequently asked questions
Why doesn't Jira work for a hardware program in Sunnyvale?
Because Jira models firmware sprints and nothing else, while a hardware program also runs on PCB spin cycles and silicon tape-out windows. The cross-discipline dependencies between those clocks, which actually determine the ship date, live in a program manager's spreadsheet. Custom software models all three together so the schedule is real, not a guess.
Should custom PM software replace Jira?
No, it should integrate with it. Your engineers live in Jira and will resist a replacement, so the right approach keeps Jira as the sprint source of truth and builds a program layer on top that adds hardware and silicon timelines and cross-discipline dependencies. That gives PMs the full picture without disrupting engineering.
What does custom project management software cost in Sunnyvale?
Between $60k and $140k. A cross-discipline program layer on Jira runs $60k to $95k; a full platform with tape-out tracking and resource planning runs $95k to $140k. Cross-discipline dependency modeling is the biggest cost driver, followed by the Jira integration and tape-out logic.
How does it help with tape-out dates?
By modeling the tape-out and fab windows alongside firmware and hardware milestones and flagging slips on the critical path before they cost a quarter. Instead of a tape-out date that's a hopeful guess, you get a date grounded in the dependencies that drive it, with early warning when something upstream is going to push it.
Can it show resource capacity across teams?
Yes. A full build includes resource and capacity views across firmware, hardware, and silicon, so leadership can see where the program is constrained and rebalance. This cross-discipline visibility is exactly what general task tools lack and what a hardware program needs to plan realistically.