About Votion
One workspace for everything between you and government.
Votion connects your business to the official public data for every place you operate, then builds the tools you need on top of it.
What we do
Your relationship with government is scattered. The licenses, permits, and certifications you hold live in spreadsheets and inboxes. The rules that govern them live on state and county websites. The moment a job crosses a state line, you are guessing. Generic AI guesses with you: it answers from training data — a snapshot of the public internet frozen in the past — and was never built to work against the live rules of the place you operate today.
Votion is built for the opposite. It captures the live public record of every place you operate — licenses, permits, rules, and opportunities — straight from the official source, and gives your team one workspace to act on it and build the tools it needs on top: check whether a worker is cleared for a job before you commit, track every license and renewal across every market, and get warned when a rule changes. It can draft a response to a solicitation from your own document library, too. Every answer shows its source and the date it was pulled — you are working with the real rules of your place, not a model's memory of them.
What your team can do
Know you're cleared to work
Check a worker, crew, or project against every license and certification a job requires, in any jurisdiction, before you commit.
Never miss a renewal
Track every license, certification, and insurance policy across every market and entity, with each expiration flagged before it lapses.
See the rule change coming
Get told when legislation or an agency rule shifts in a place you operate, while there is still time to act.
Built by someone who watched teams drown in government paperwork
Votion was built solo by Graham Huber. Before this, Graham spent six years at Collaborative Solutions — a Workday partner — selling to governments and universities, close enough to the teams doing the paperwork to watch them burn weeks on government requirements that were not moving their business forward.
A 2023 ski accident in Aspen put him in surgery for two years. He learned to code from a hospital bed, picked up Cursor in early 2024, and went full-time on Votion in August 2025. The first tools he built are the ones design partners asked for — checking who is cleared to work, and keeping their licenses current across states.
What's next
We are working with regulated firms whose work crosses jurisdictions — staffing, energy, engineering — that need their licenses, permits, and rules in one place. If that is you, the signup link in the navigation gets you started.