Services
Four ways to work together — all of them end with something live.
idea → launched product
Full-stack web application development
This is the core service: you describe the product, I build all of it. React or Next.js frontend, a Node.js or Laravel API, MySQL or MongoDB, authentication, payments, admin panels, deployment. You get one accountable person instead of a frontend dev, a backend dev and a project manager passing tickets between them.
Best for SaaS MVPs, booking systems, internal dashboards and tools — projects where a founder or small business needs a real product working, not a proof of concept.
code → Play Store
Android app development
I build and publish Android apps — and unlike most agencies, I've shipped my own to Google Play and maintained them through reviews, crashes and OS updates. That experience is the difference between an app that launches and one that dies in review.
Pairs well with a web build: one product, web and mobile, one developer. Very few solo developers can credibly offer both.
figma → production
Design-to-code (Figma to React)
For teams that already have a designer: I turn Figma files into pixel-perfect, responsive, accessible production React. Spacing, states, breakpoints — matched to the file, not approximated from it.
Design agencies use this as an ongoing partnership: you keep designing, I keep building, your clients get one seamless team.
tracked → provable
Analytics, tracking & conversion setup
You can have a fast, good-looking site and still have no idea which pages or buttons actually turn visitors into customers. I set up the tracking layer most sites get wrong — Google Search Console, GA4, Google Tag Manager and the Meta Pixel — wired to fire on real conversions, not just clicks, so the numbers in your reports are ones you can actually trust.
For lead-gen and dealership-style sites especially, this isn't a bolt-on — it's the product. Knowing which page, which form and which ad actually produced a lead is the difference between spending a marketing budget well and guessing.
Google Search Console setup & verification
So your site can actually be found, crawled and indexed.
- Domain/URL ownership verification (DNS or HTML tag)
- XML sitemap submission
- Indexing and coverage checks so every important page shows up in search
Conversion tracking (GA4 + Google Tag Manager)
Know exactly which pages and buttons turn visitors into leads.
- Every CTA and form wired to fire on real submissions, not just clicks
- Each lead type tracked as its own conversion — contact, quote, application, appointment
- Clean GA4 + GTM setup with events registered as key conversions
- Accurate, non-duplicated numbers you can trust in reports
Meta (Facebook) Pixel & event setup
Make Meta ads measurable and optimizable.
- Base Pixel install and PageView verification
- Standard events: ViewContent, Lead, Contact and more as needed
- Product/detail-page events populated with real data — item, price, ID
- Verified in Meta Events Manager with Pixel Helper and Test Events
Google Tag Manager implementation
Centralized, maintainable tracking — no messy code scattered across the site.
- Single container managing all analytics and marketing tags
- Custom dataLayer events built at the template level for accuracy
- Easy to extend later without touching site code
Tracking audit & QA
Confirm existing tracking actually works — many sites look tracked but aren't.
- Full audit of current GA4, GTM and Pixel setup
- Duplicate/misfiring tag cleanup
- End-to-end testing of every event before go-live
Analytics for dealership & lead-gen sites
Tracking built for sites where the whole point is generating leads.
- Vehicle/product detail-page tracking with live inventory data
- Multi-form lead attribution — test drive, trade-in, financing, offers, contact
- Click-to-call and click-to-text conversion tracking
questions, answered
Frequently asked questions
How much does a project cost?+
It depends on scope, but most projects fall between $2,000 and $15,000. You'll get a fixed quote before any work starts — never an open-ended hourly rate — based on a short call where we define exactly what "done" looks like.
How long does a project take?+
Most projects launch in a matter of weeks, not months or quarters. The exact timeline depends on scope, but you'll see weekly demo links throughout the build so you're never waiting in the dark.
Do you charge hourly, or is it a fixed quote?+
Fixed quote, agreed before anything begins. There's no hourly meter running and no surprise invoices — the scope and price are set together on the first call.
Can you build both the web app and the Android app, or just one?+
Both, if you need them — one product, web and mobile, built by the same person. Most solo developers only credibly offer one side of that; I've shipped my own apps to both.
Who owns the code and accounts after launch?+
You do — your code, your repository, your hosting and API accounts. Nothing is held back or locked to me after the project ends.
What happens if something breaks after launch?+
Every project includes 30 days of fixes after launch at no extra cost. After that, I'm still reachable for ongoing maintenance or new work — you're never left with a product nobody can touch.
Is my project too big or too small for a one-person studio?+
Probably not too small — SaaS MVPs, internal tools and single-feature apps are the core of this business. It can be too big: very large builds that genuinely need five parallel developers aren't a fit, and I'll say so honestly on the first call rather than take the project anyway.
Do you also set up analytics and conversion tracking?+
Yes — GA4, Google Tag Manager, Meta Pixel and Google Search Console setup are all separate services I offer, either alongside a new build or as a standalone audit of a site you already have.
Not sure which one fits?
Describe the project in plain words — we’ll get on a call, define the deliverables together, and you’ll get an honest answer, even if it’s “you need less than you think.”
Tell me about your project