Each engagement below represents end-to-end product work — architecture, design, integration, and launch. The scope, stack, and outcomes are real, and the platforms are running in production today.

Martha's Vineyard has a small but busy car rental market concentrated around ferry arrivals. The existing operator wanted a modern booking experience that could handle peak-season traffic, integrate with their inventory system, and process payments reliably — without stitching together three separate platforms.
Built a front-end on Webflow paired with Booqable as the inventory and rental engine, with Stripe handling payments. A custom integration layer handles the handoff between Webflow's booking form, Booqable's availability API, and Stripe's Checkout — so customers get a single, seamless booking flow from search to confirmation.
Platform shipped in under four weeks. The first real booking came in within 24 hours of launch. The site is built to scale with the operator's fleet — adding vehicles, delivery zones, or pricing tiers is a CMS task, not a code task.

A family-run bike rental business on Martha's Vineyard since 1989 was running on a dated site that didn't reflect the brand's heritage or serve modern search intent. Beyond the site itself, the business was operating across three separate booking platforms — FareHarbor, Peek Pro, and Booqable — with no unified view of revenue, customer behavior, or inventory.
A full Webflow rebuild with a dedicated content architecture — location-specific landing pages for Oak Bluffs, Vineyard Haven, and Edgartown, a blog CMS built for SEO with schema markup and structured data, and a reservation funnel that connects to the booking platforms. Underneath, a data pipeline unifying FareHarbor, Peek Pro, and Booqable through Airbyte and BigQuery, modeled in dbt and surfaced in Looker Studio.
The site now ranks for "martha's vineyard bike rental" and related geographic searches. The data pipeline gives the operator a single revenue dashboard across platforms — something not available from any of the booking systems individually. 25+ CMS pages live, with a content system that scales as new locations or bike types get added.

Visitors planning a trip to Martha's Vineyard have to piece their stay together across a dozen platforms — one for vacation rentals, another for tours, a third for the ferry, a fourth for restaurant reservations. For operators, the flip side is that every customer arrives already exhausted by logistics. There's no single cart for "a Martha's Vineyard trip."
A multi-supplier booking platform with a unified cart. Vacation rentals via Lodgify as the channel manager. Experiences via Viator and GetYourGuide supplier APIs. Hotels via Amadeus in Phase 5. A FastAPI backend on Railway coordinates the supplier integrations, Supabase handles the database and auth, and Stripe Checkout processes payments.
In active development. Phase 1 covers vacation rentals and experiences with a launch imminent. The platform is designed so adding a new supplier category (restaurants, transport, private chef) is a matter of building an integration adapter — the cart and checkout flow are supplier-agnostic.
If you're operating a small business that needs real product thinking and actual shipped systems, we should talk.
Start a conversation →