Play Store: https://play.google.com/store/apps/dev?id=5664936822736890930
Case ONMAQ: Building a complete agribusiness ecosystem using Adalo
By Matheus G. Spartalis, C.T.O at ONMAQ
Hey everyone! How’s it going?
I’m Matheus, C.T.O at ONMAQ, and I wanted to share a bit of our journey building a complete ecosystem for the agribusiness sector using Adalo.
When we started this project, the idea was simple: create a marketplace for the agricultural market. But as we learned more about how suppliers, farmers, and logistics actually operate, we quickly realized that a single application wouldn’t be enough. The operation is dynamic and full of specifics, and Adalo ended up being the perfect tool to shape everything quickly as we evolved.
Today we have six different applications working together, each one with a clear role inside the ecosystem:
ONMAQ Marketplace: where farmers browse and make purchases.
ONMAQ Loja: where suppliers manage their store, subscription plan, profile, and brand information.
ONMAQ Pedidos: focused on the supplier’s operational routines, including orders, status updates, logistics, and daily workflow.
ONMAQ Entregas: the app for delivery partners to track and complete deliveries.
Licensed City Panel: each licensed city uses this admin panel to track metrics, stores, commissions, and performance.
ONMAQ Support: our internal tool for providing assistance and monitoring all applications.
Everything runs on Adalo on the frontend, with Xano as the backend, Make for automations, and Asaas for payments with split.
The architecture evolved as we learned from real operations, and that flexibility is exactly what makes no-code so valuable for us.
The most exciting part for me is seeing that we’ve built something that actually solves real problems in the agricultural sector, which still struggles to adopt digital solutions in a simple and accessible way. Several suppliers are already using the system daily, and we’re beginning to expand to more cities through our licensing model.
We still have a lot to improve, like refining UX, automating more processes, expanding integrations, and even exploring drone delivery in the future. But watching this ecosystem take shape shows how far no-code can go when the solution is built with intention and strategy.
If anyone wants to chat about architecture, processes, or building marketplaces in Adalo, I’m totally open to talking.
I love discussing the complexities and fun challenges of building full ecosystems with no-code. ![]()
Cheers,
Matheus G. Spartalis
C.T.O at ONMAQ
P.S.: The apps will also be available on the Apple Store very soon.
