Work examples and practical proof
This page combines portfolio projects, demos, and anonymized cases. Some examples show working internal tool concepts. Others show delivery operations and management patterns without confidential client details.
JobFlow CRM
Problem
Job search activity was scattered across vacancies, contacts, documents, applications, and follow-ups.
What was done
Built a lightweight CRM-style system with pipeline views, document management, contacts, companies, reminders, and structured statuses.
Impact
Created one operating view for tracking applications, follow-ups, and supporting documents.
Lead-to-Payment Automation
Problem
Service businesses often lose leads because responses, follow-ups, and payment status updates are handled manually.
What was done
Designed a workflow covering lead capture, CRM status, confirmation email, payment link logic, follow-ups, and dashboard visibility.
Impact
Demonstrates how one inquiry can move through a controlled lead-to-payment process.
Airtable AI Marketing CRM
Problem
Marketing teams manually prepare campaign content, approvals, notifications, and status updates from repeated inputs.
What was done
Designed an Airtable-based CRM where campaign data feeds AI-generated content, approval workflow, Slack notification, and dashboard views.
Impact
Shows how structured input can reduce repeated content preparation and improve review flow.
Delivery Operations Case
Problem
Resource planning, staffing visibility, delivery coordination, and reporting cadence were difficult to manage consistently.
What was done
Structured planning, reporting, ownership, and visibility logic across delivery and resource management activities.
Impact
Improved operational visibility and made staffing, delivery status, and review cadence easier to control.
Fixed-price Delivery Stabilization
Problem
Fixed-price delivery required stronger control over scope, risks, change requests, priorities, and stakeholder alignment.
What was done
Improved delivery governance through scope clarification, risk visibility, change control, backlog focus, and regular client alignment.
Impact
Helped make delivery decisions more visible and reduce uncontrolled scope movement.
Common patterns behind the examples
The examples are different, but the same operating logic appears repeatedly: first clarify the workflow, then define statuses and ownership, then add a tool or dashboard only where it helps daily work.
Service connection
- arrow_forward If the problem starts in spreadsheets, Spreadsheet-to-App is the best entry point.
- arrow_forward If the process is unclear, Workflow Automation Diagnostic should happen before implementation.
- arrow_forward If managers lack one view, Dashboard / Reporting Setup is the first step.
- arrow_forward If delivery feels uncontrolled, Delivery Operations Audit helps find visibility gaps.
- arrow_forward If an MVP lacks execution structure, MVP Delivery Setup can clarify scope and cadence.
Demo and anonymized items are labeled clearly, so they are not presented as full public client case studies.
Discuss a similar setup
If one of these patterns is close to your situation, describe the current workflow and what is difficult to control. A focused diagnostic is usually enough to define the first useful version.