Our Mission
Vizmado exists to reduce the administrative burden on civil associations and foundations, so they can direct more attention toward what they actually do.
The problem we address
Civil associations and foundations in Argentina operate under specific regulatory requirements. They must keep structured records of donations and membership fees, issue receipts that satisfy AFIP deduction criteria, track project expenditures with proper rendiciones, and produce an annual balance in the format IGJ expects.
Each of these tasks is manageable on its own. Together, without a dedicated tool, they consume a disproportionate amount of staff time. Spreadsheets fragment the picture. Manual receipts introduce errors. Year-end balance preparation becomes a scramble.
Vizmado was designed specifically to address this problem. Not a general accounting package adapted for nonprofits — a purpose-built administrative layer for the Argentine civil sector.
Our approach
The design philosophy behind Vizmado is that administrative tools should be clear enough for non-technical staff to use confidently. A volunteer treasurer, an executive director without accounting training, or a part-time administrator — all should be able to navigate the system without extended onboarding.
Every feature reflects the actual needs of Argentine civil associations and foundations, not generic business requirements adapted afterward.
Vizmado is an organizational tool. It works alongside certified accountants and financial platforms — it does not replace them.
The receipt formats, balance structure, and rendición layouts are built around what AFIP and IGJ actually require.
No specialized accounting knowledge required. The interface is designed for the people who actually run civil organizations day to day.
Who uses Vizmado
From small neighborhood associations with a handful of members to mid-sized foundations managing multiple projects simultaneously. The tool scales with the organization's complexity without requiring IT expertise to configure or maintain.
Executive directors, volunteer administrators, and professional staff all find the same structured workspace — each interacting with the parts relevant to their role.