For breeders and breeding projects

"I'd have to check"sells no animals.

At the table the buyer asks about hatch date, genetics and feeding history. Whoever starts flipping through binders loses them to the next table. KeeperLog gives every animal a record you can show in seconds: at the expo, via link, at the handover.

  • Every hatchling gets its own record from hatch day, weight curve included
  • One QR label per box: scan, record open, question answered
  • When you sell, the buyer takes over the record, not a piece of paper

No strings attached · 15 minutes · Directly with the founder

Printed QR label on a box in a breeding rack

Three moments every breeder knows

Your head knows everything about your animals. It just can't prove any of it.

Breeding documentation rarely fails for lack of discipline. It fails because one season produces more data than a head or a spreadsheet can hold.

Expo, Saturday

"What did it eat last? And what's in the genetics?"

The buyer is seriously interested and wants details. You flip through a binder or say "I'd have to check". Three tables down, someone answers instantly.

With a record: scan the QR label on the box. Hatch date, lineage, every feeding. The buyer sees it on your phone, in black and white.

July, clutch season

30 hatchlings from three clutches. Who ate yesterday, who refused for the third time?

From box twelve onwards the tally marks blur. A refuser only stands out once it is visibly underweight.

With a record: every entry takes ten seconds and sticks to the right animal. The refusers show up in your morning list, not eventually on the scale.

Three years later

A buyer gets in touch: the animal won't eat, the vet asks about its history.

The spreadsheet lives on a computer from two moves ago. You can't help, and that is what people remember about your breeding.

With a record: the animal took its history along at the sale. The buyer has had the feeding list since hatch day all along.

The record per animal

A weight curve convinces more than "eats well".

Each entry takes seconds. Together they add up to what serious buyers want to see: a gapless development from hatch day on.

Corn snake · CB25-07Available

Weight since hatch

46 g

Hatch · 8 gToday
  • Feeding · pinky · acceptedYesterday
  • Shed · complete9 days ago
  • The weight curve from hatch day shows buyers the development instead of claiming it
  • Every feeding marked accepted or refused: problems surface in the list, not on the scale
  • You enter origin and parent animals once. After that they appear in every record you show

One label per box, printed from the app.

Printing labels and opening records by scan works today. One-tap logging straight from the scan is in active development.

A sale becomes a handover

The buyer takes the record home. Not just the animal.

Others hand over a care sheet. With KeeperLog the sale runs as a handover: your buyer scans, confirms and takes over the complete history from hatch day. This is the flow we are building right now.

Handover moment: the buyer scans the animal profile on the breeder's phone
The moment at the table: the record changes hands with the animal.
In development
  1. Your table

    Tap sell

    You open the animal in the app and tap sell. A full-screen QR appears on your phone, right at the table.

  2. Your buyer

    Scan the QR

    Your buyer scans it with the phone camera. No app needed. They see photos, the weight curve and the feeding list since hatch.

  3. Your buyer

    Confirm the purchase

    Enter an address, confirm, done. The account comes into being on the side via an email link.

  4. The handover moment

    Sales contract, signed by both sides

    A signed PDF lands in both inboxes. Proof of your documentation for you, peace of mind for the buyer.

  5. Your buyer

    The record has moved

    Your buyer starts with the complete history from hatch day. Your breeding stays in the record as the origin.

The shareable animal profile behind these steps already exists today. The handover itself is the next thing we build.

Looking for pilot partners

The first breeders are moving in right now. Out of Excel, off paper, out of their heads.

Philipp, founder of KeeperLog, in front of his own setup
Philipp, founder of KeeperLog. Keeps exotic animals himself.

"I keep exotic animals myself and know how fast a season gets out of hand. For the breeding side I'm looking for a handful of breeders who define with me what breeding documentation really has to look like."

This is not a waitlist. Pilot partners work with the real product, talk directly to me and shape what gets built next.

  • Personal onboarding

    I set up your animals and racks with you, via video or on site, until it runs through the season.

  • Your data moves with you

    Spreadsheets, paper notes, index cards: we bring your animals into the app together, animal by animal.

  • A direct line

    No ticket system. You write to me, I answer. Problems get fixed, not managed.

  • You shape the product

    What breeders actually need mid-season drives the roadmap, not the other way around.

Answered briefly

The four questions every breeder asks first

What does it cost?

During the pilot phase we settle that in a conversation: fair, transparent and with an edge for the first partners. You start with no risk and no credit card.

My breeding lives in Excel. How does the data get over?

Together. You give me your list, we move the animals over as a team. That is part of the pilot onboarding.

What do buyers see, and what not?

Only what you share per animal: feedings, sheds, weight curve, photos. Your notes, your prices and the rest of your collection stay private by default.

Does this work at the expo when the internet is shaky?

Honest answer: partly. The record is a website and needs internet. In most halls mobile data is enough. Without reception the printed labels still work, and the buyer simply opens the record at home. A true offline mode does not exist yet.

Let's talk about your breeding.

15 minutes, no strings attached, directly with the founder. Tell me how you document today and I'll show you what your next season looks like with records.