What Preisser Tech does for Plainville businesses
Plainville, Kansas sits in Rooks County, 25 miles north of Hays on US-183. The town has a deep oilfield service history, an active ag economy, and a small downtown business class along Main Street. It is the closest non-Hays town in the firm's home market — a 30-minute drive door to door.
Tyler Preisser handles every Plainville engagement personally. In-person scoping is normal, not a billable expense. The firm's HG Oil Holdings work and Cassidy HVAC work both apply directly to Plainville operators with similar back-office and customer-facing automation needs.
Plainville industries served
Plainville's economy mirrors most working western Kansas towns — oilfield, ag, services, healthcare.
- Oil and gas operators and service firms — drillers, water haulers, well operators across Rooks County
- Agricultural operations — family farms, custom harvesters, ag retail, equipment dealers
- Main Street businesses — downtown retail, restaurants, professional services
- Healthcare — Rooks County Health Center and surrounding clinics
- Construction and trades — local contractors, HVAC, plumbing, electrical
- Trucking and ag transport — fleets running US-183 and county roads
Five services available in Plainville
Plainville clients access the full Preisser Tech service line — every project custom-coded:
- Custom Website Development — modern, fast, custom-coded sites in Next.js, React, TypeScript.
- Web Application Development — internal tools, client portals, scheduling systems.
- Business Automation Systems — invoicing, dispatch, inventory, and reporting workflows.
- AI Agent Development — custom AI agents for customer service, document parsing, decision support.
- Dashboards & Analytics — real-time KPI dashboards for owners and operators.
Why a Hays-based firm fits Plainville
Plainville is 25 miles from Tyler's office. There is no closer premium custom-software firm. Coastal agencies don't fly into Hays for a Plainville scoping call — Tyler drives up US-183 and is at the shop in half an hour.
Tyler personally understands what an oilfield operator's February looks like, how a custom harvester schedules a season, and how a Rooks County family business actually runs the books. That context is the difference between software that gets used and software that gets abandoned.
