What this is
Most stores already know what their weekly work looks like. Checking performance, following up with customers, cleaning product data, and figuring out where the time should go next. Ecommerce tools earn their place by making that work less manual, not by reinventing it.
The useful ones stay close to orders, revenue, and the operator’s day. They don’t try to replace anyone’s judgement. They cut the small things that keep slipping, and put the right view in front of whoever has to decide.
Selected projects
Monday Morning Metrics
A weekly store briefing with order data, analysis, and a useful summary for the week ahead.
Instead of another dashboard to remember, the store check arrives as a short Monday email: what changed, what looks unusual, and where attention is likely to pay off this week.
Showcase A redacted sample email, the input metrics, and a short note on how the weekly recommendation is generated.
chronoMelon Loyalty
A WooCommerce loyalty tool for small stores, customer rewards, and repeat purchases.
A loyalty system for merchants who want points, rewards, customer balances, and a simple portal that fits around their existing WooCommerce workflow.
Showcase Merchant dashboard, reward setup, customer portal, and transaction views.
Review Reminder Automation for Woo
A deployed review-request workflow for completed WooCommerce orders.
The automation watches order state, waits until the customer has plausibly received and used the product, then sends a review reminder through Mailgun while preventing duplicate requests.
Showcase The Render-deployed workflow, WooCommerce order checks, Mailgun delivery, timing rules, and duplicate-send prevention.
chronoMelon Product Center
A product operations app that treats WooCommerce and Shopify as downstream channels.
Product Center is built around the recurring drag of scattered catalog data: inconsistent variants, weak product structure, risky bulk edits, and sync failures that are hard to see from inside a sales channel.
Showcase Canonical product data, WooCommerce publishing, Shopify-ready adapter design, sync logs, and AI-assisted catalog quality work.
How I approach it
I build close to how the store actually runs, not how the documentation says it does. The useful starting question is rarely “what can we automate?” It’s “what does the operator need to see, decide, or trust more often than they currently can?”