Visualize operational topology
Every account, brand, and identity rendered as a connected graph. See ownership chains and system dependencies at a glance.
Dtyon maps companies, brands, accounts, identities, billing, and spend into one operational graph — the control layer for multi-brand operations.
No credit card required · Free to start
capabilities
See how your infrastructure connects. Track ownership, spend, and access across every entity in your portfolio.
Every account, brand, and identity rendered as a connected graph. See ownership chains and system dependencies at a glance.
Map which emails, users, and roles have access to which systems. Identify orphaned accounts before they become a risk.
Allocate costs by entity, brand, or team. Reconcile subscriptions to the exact card and email they bill through.
Aggregate subscriptions, API keys, payment methods, and credentials into a single operational layer.
Surface subscriptions with no owner, expiring credentials, and accounts that fall outside your governance model.
Link every system, vendor, and tool to the business entity that owns and pays for it — across any number of brands.
who it's for
Running multiple brands, companies, or products. Dtyon gives you a single map of who owns what, what it costs, and where dependencies live.
Responsible for shared infrastructure. Track API subscriptions, service accounts, and access grants across every product and team.
Allocate costs to the correct entity, identify untracked spend, and maintain an auditable record of your operational relationships.
dtyon
Understand your operational topology. Know what you own, what it costs, who has access, and how every system relates to every other.
from the blog
Billing allocation is how you turn a single recurring charge into a defensible line on a specific entity's P&L. Here is the model that works across multi-brand operations.
Read articleOrphaned subscriptions are the silent leak in most software budgets and a recurring source of compliance risk. This is how they form and how to catch them before they compound.
Read articleOwnership mapping turns implicit knowledge — who owns what, who pays for what, who has access to what — into a queryable graph. Here is how to build one that survives reorgs.
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