Hill15... but why?
At first glance, Hill15 sounds like a place. Or a challenge. Or both. In reality, it starts with something much smaller.
Time.
Modern digital systems rely on quartz oscillators to measure time. A quartz crystal vibrates at a stable frequency, and from that vibration, seconds are derived. One common reference point is a power of two.
2¹⁵.
That number represents a fundamental oscillation cycle. Scaled, counted, and stabilized, it becomes something we all rely on without thinking about it. One second. Reliable. Precise. Always there.
We liked that idea.
Hill15 is rooted in this principle. Stable foundations. Clean signals. Predictable systems. When systems are designed well, time stops leaking. Delays disappear. Friction drops. That is what clarity looks like in practice.
Of course, real businesses do not operate in laboratory conditions. They operate uphill. Tools accumulate. Interfaces do not talk. Processes grow organically until the signal gets noisy.
That is where we work.
We take vibrating, fragmented setups and turn them into systems that tick calmly in the background. We build clarity where systems get messy.
Hill15 is not about moving faster at all costs. It is about rhythm. Reliability. And engineering environments where progress feels controlled rather than chaotic.
A small number. A fundamental signal.
And a clear stance on how systems should behave.
Till
worries about the fine print (legal)
Drafts contracts, thinks through risk, and looks at automations and server setups from a data protection and regulatory perspective. Also contributes to automation logic, usually by asking the uncomfortable questions early.
Studies Law & Economics at the University of St. Gallen (HSG) with a strong interest in AI regulation.Future partner at a major law firm (unless Hill15 gets in the way).

Flo
handles the rest (operations)
Keeps projects, meetings, and day-to-day operations running smoothly. Looks after timelines, project flow, and bookkeeping, and steps in on solution architecture whenever things get complex.
Studies Business Administration at the University of St. Gallen (HSG). Very likely to become CFO of a very successful company one day (Hill15).

Dom
does the tech part
Builds and maintains secure server and backend systems so automations run reliably and scale without drama. Focuses on stability, security, and clean execution, and supports automation logic where infrastructure matters.
Studies Computer Science in Bern and has a talent for building systems that hold up. Dedicated to building and running Hill15’s systems for the long run.

Nico
looks after Instagram
Keeps projects, meetings, and day-to-day operations running smoothly. Looks after timelines, project flow, and bookkeeping, and steps in on solution architecture whenever things get complex.
Currently focused on coordination, clarity, and alignment. Future dentist (with an unusual side career in keeping Hill15’s communication clean).
