The world's first enterprise-grade, cloud-native, blockchain-ready vertical navigation solution. Because your users deserve to rise above.
We've spent 7 years and $420 million perfecting the art of moving pixels upward.
Our scroll algorithm completes in just O(1) time complexity. That's right – we scroll to the top in constant time, regardless of page length. Revolutionary.
Track every scroll event with our proprietary ScrollMetrics™ dashboard. Know exactly how many times users wanted to go up. The data will shock you.
Our scroll lands exactly at Y-coordinate 0. Every. Single. Time. We call this our "Top-Notch Guarantee™" – because it literally goes to the top.
SOC2 compliant scrolling. Your scroll events are encrypted with military-grade 256-bit AES. Because even scrolls deserve privacy.
Our scroll button is served from 69 edge locations worldwide. Users in Antarctica can scroll to top with sub-millisecond latency.
WCAG 2.1 AAA compliant. Screen readers announce "Going up!" in 47 languages. We believe everyone deserves to reach the top.
Get started in just 3 easy steps. Our team of 200 engineers made this possible.
// Step 1: Install our enterprise SDK (847 dependencies) npm install @scrollflow/enterprise-scroll-solution-pro-max // Step 2: Initialize the ScrollEngine™ import { ScrollToTopFactory } from '@scrollflow/enterprise'; const scroller = ScrollToTopFactory .createBuilder() .withAI(true) .withBlockchain(true) .withAnalytics(true) .build(); // Step 3: Or just use this one line of code lol window.scrollTo({ top: 0, behavior: 'smooth' });
Join thousands of companies who've elevated their UX. Literally.
"Before ScrollFlow, our users had to manually scroll up. Like savages. Now they just click a button. This changed everything. We're on a ROLL."
"We tried building this in-house. 3 years, $50M, and 200 engineers later, we gave up. ScrollFlow did it in one line of code. Truly TOP-tier service."
"Our conversion rate went UP 340% after implementing ScrollFlow. Coincidence? We think not. The ROI is truly UPLIFTING."
Because scrolling should be accessible to everyone (but not free, obviously).