Practical automation that buys back hours: Make.com, n8n, and custom AI workflows wired into the tools you already run on.
Practical automation that buys back hours: Make.com, n8n, and custom AI workflows wired into the tools you already run on.
Process automation takes the boring, repetitive work off your plate: from quotes and invoices to data moving between your systems. Practical AI aimed at real bottlenecks, often using tools you already have, so you feel the time saved in the same week.
I automate the repetitive work that eats your week (quotes, follow-ups, data entry, enquiry handling) using Make.com, n8n, Zapier, or custom code. You keep your existing tools; I connect them and add AI where it actually saves time.
Workflow automation (Make.com / n8n)
Custom integrations & APIs
AI-assisted email & quotes
Lead & enquiry routing
Document & data processing
CRM & billing sync
Reporting automation
Chat & support assistants
We find the work that costs the most time and automates best.
A clear proposal per process. You know what you get.
I connect your existing tools and add just enough AI or logic.
We run it on real cases until it works flawlessly.
It runs, you stay in control, and I stay reachable.
Most small teams lose hours every week to copy-paste, chasing, and manual admin. That work doesn't need a human. It needs a system. I build the automations that run while you don't, so your time goes to the work that actually grows the business.
For transport company BMD Logistics I'm building a custom middleware API that connects their WMS and TMS, ending the manual re-keying between systems.
Whatever fits the job: Make.com and n8n for visual workflows, Zapier for quick connections, and custom code when the logic gets complex. I'm not tied to one platform; I pick what's reliable and affordable for your stack.
No. I connect the tools you already use (your CRM, inbox, spreadsheets, billing) rather than forcing a migration. The goal is to remove manual steps between them, not start over.
In the judgement-heavy bits: drafting replies, summarising documents, categorising enquiries, extracting data from messy inputs. I add AI only where it reliably saves time, not for the sake of it.
I agree upfront on what I'm removing (hours saved, response time, error rate) and report against it. If an automation isn't earning its keep, I change or kill it.
Often combined with:
Book a free call. Tell me what's eating your week and I'll show you what can be automated.