The model
There is a standard way to run a Drupal studio in a low-cost country: hire local developers cheaply, charge European rates, keep the margin. We do not do that.
MADDev pays fair wages from day one — by Malagasy standards, which is a real wage in this city. And as developers grow with the company, they do not just get promoted. They get a stake. The model is: wages into partnership. Developers who stay, who grow, who contribute to the company's direction — they become partners. That is the whole point.
This is not charity. It is the only model that makes a studio like this work in the long run. Talented developers stay when they have a reason to. Clients get consistent senior delivery. The company builds real value here instead of extracting it.
MADDev is a formally registered Malagasy company that pays its taxes — what the Malagasy tax authority calls civisme fiscal, "fiscal citizenship." In a country where informal-economy norms dominate and ~80% of local businesses operate outside the tax system, being a registered, tax-paying company is not a bureaucratic detail. It is a deliberate choice about the kind of business we want to be.
The impact angle is not a slogan. It is three things:
Decent work. Skilled, fairly paid digital-economy jobs in a city — Diego Suarez — where formal employment in the knowledge sector is genuinely rare. This maps directly to SDG 8 (decent work and economic growth).
Skills and career paths. The studio is a training environment. Developers learn Drupal, PHP, modern tooling, and project delivery — skills transferable across the industry — and they build their careers here rather than emigrating to find them. SDG 4 (quality education / skills).
Local innovation and infrastructure. We are building software that serves research, data, and public-interest organisations worldwide, from Madagascar. We are not a call centre. SDG 9 (innovation and infrastructure).
These are facts about how we operate, not values we aspire to. The work is embodied in the payslips, the company registration, and the developer career paths — not in a mission statement.