Your Outsourced CTO
AI Code Reviews & Optimization in Utah
We help teams large and small across Utah implement AI code reviews using senior engineers with decades of experience.
Businesses across Utah leverage our team to expedite software, implement AI solutions, complete in-house work, and optimize AI spend. Ask us how we can helps your team apply AI code reviews for maximum ROI.
Explore the regions we currently offer AI code reviews support in.
Markets we serve in Utah
We publish service pages only for enterprise metros where demand for ai code reviews is credible. These markets in Utah are a strong fit for Bowtie's delivery model.
Salt Lake City, UT
Salt Lake City-Murray, UT Metro Area · Market score: 85/100 · Enterprise Orgs (100+ employees): 113
- Ecommerce
- Couriers & Delivery
- Warehousing & Storage
Provo, UT
Provo-Orem-Lehi, UT Metro Area · Market score: 85/100 · Enterprise Orgs (100+ employees): 31
- Ecommerce
- Couriers & Delivery
- Insurance
Ogden, UT
Ogden, UT Metro Area · Market score: 70/100 · Enterprise Orgs (100+ employees): 19
- Couriers & Delivery
- Warehousing & Storage
- Systems & Technical Consulting
Logan, UT
Logan, UT-ID Metro Area · Market score: 44/100 · Enterprise Orgs (100+ employees): 3
- Couriers & Delivery
Where AI Code Reviews & Optimization creates leverage
- Remove unnecessary complexity
- Identify security vulnerabilities
- Reduce token and context usage
- Improve architecture and organization
- Eliminate duplicate functionality
- Make future AI-assisted development faster and cheaper
Frequently Asked Questions
Will you only point out problems, or can you fix them too?
Both. We can deliver an audit, a prioritized cleanup plan, and implementation help where it makes sense.
Do AI code reviews help if the product already works?
Yes. Working software can still be fragile, expensive, or risky to extend. We focus on long-term maintainability and delivery cost.
Can you review just one critical workflow?
Yes. We can scope narrowly around a checkout flow, internal automation, API surface, or another high-risk area.
What do you typically look for first?
Complexity, security gaps, duplicated logic, unclear ownership boundaries, and spots where AI-generated code will slow future changes.