Custom Web Application Development

Software built around how your business actually works.

Off-the-shelf software makes your business adapt to it. A custom web application adapts to you — your workflow, your rules, your customers. I design and build them, and I stay to run them.

What a custom app can do for a business

  • Turn your process into a tool. That operation your team runs on spreadsheets, email threads, and institutional memory? It can be a screen with three buttons. Purpose-built software removes the friction your staff has learned to live with — and stops the business from depending on what’s in one person’s head.
  • Make the software you already own work as one system. Your CRM, accounting, inventory, and e-commerce platforms each do their job, but they don’t talk to each other — so your team re-types data between them and errors slip in at every seam. Most modern business software has an API. I build the connective tissue that turns a pile of subscriptions into a single system.
  • Fill the gaps off-the-shelf leaves. You rarely need to replace software that mostly works. A focused application can handle just the part it doesn’t do: the quoting logic unique to your pricing, the compliance report your industry demands, the customer portal your clients keep asking for.
  • Automate the repeatable. The weekly report assembled by hand, the confirmations copied between systems, the file downloaded and re-uploaded every morning. If a person does it the same way every time, software can probably do it for them — and never call in sick.
  • Carry the business itself. Sometimes the application isn’t support — it’s the product: the ordering system your distributors use, the platform your service runs on. These are the builds where experience matters most, because they can’t afford to be someone’s learning project.

When custom is the right call (and when it isn’t)

Custom development is the right answer when the process is genuinely yours — when it’s a competitive advantage, when off-the-shelf tools force painful workarounds, or when the cost of people doing machine-work every day quietly exceeds the cost of building the machine.

It’s the wrong answer when good software already exists for the problem. If a $50/month product does what you need, I’ll tell you so and point you to it — a custom app you didn’t need is the most expensive kind. This honesty costs me projects and keeps me clients.

How a project runs

1. Discovery.

Before anything gets built, I learn how the work actually happens — usually by watching people do it, not by reading a requirements document. The gap between how owners think a process works and how it really works is where most software projects fail.

2. Scope small, ship early.

The first version does the core job and nothing else. You get working software in weeks, not a big reveal after months — and every step after that is guided by real use instead of guesses.

3. Build on boring technology.

Laravel, PHP, AWS — a stack that’s been running businesses for decades and will be hireable-for and supportable in ten years. Exciting technology is for demos; your business deserves reliable.

4. Launch, then stay.

The app goes live on infrastructure I manage, with monitoring, backups, and a developer who already knows every line. Custom software isn’t a purchase — it’s an asset, and assets need an owner. Most of my client relationships are measured in years for exactly this reason.

Straight answers about ownership

You own the code. You own the accounts. You own the data.

All of it, in writing, from day one — hosted in accounts registered to your business, documented well enough that any competent developer could take over tomorrow. That’s not a sales point; after 30 years of rescuing projects where the business didn’t own its own application, it’s a principle.

FAQ

What does a custom application cost?

Honestly: more than a subscription, less than the payroll hours it replaces — that’s the math that has to work, and we’ll do it together in the first conversation. After discovery you get a fixed quote for a defined first version, not an open-ended hourly estimate.

How long does it take?

A focused internal tool: weeks. A customer-facing system: a few months to a solid first version. The ship-early approach means you’re using something real long before the project is “done.”

One developer — what if something happens to you?

A fair question, and the answer is the ownership principle above: your code, your accounts, real documentation. You’re never locked in — you just get the advantages of one accountable expert while you’re here.

Can you work with our existing systems?

That’s usually the point. Integrating with what you already run — CRMs, accounting, e-commerce, industry software — is the bread and butter of this work.

Tell me about the gap in your business.

Describe the process that hurts — in your words, not technical ones. I’ll tell you honestly whether it’s a custom app, an off-the-shelf product, or a spreadsheet doing just fine.