The situation. A mature membership business on a website that had been cobbled together over many years. Processes held together with duct tape, an architecture that failed in a new way every month, and pages that took multiple seconds to load. The team spent its energy keeping the thing alive instead of making it better.
What I found. No single disaster, just years of shortcuts that had compounded. Every part of the system worked slightly differently, nothing trusted anything else, and the slowness and the breakage came from the same root: nobody had ever unified how things got built and shipped.
What we did. We rebuilt it from the ground up and unified everything. One way to build, one way to deploy, one architecture instead of five accidental ones. Real engineering and devops practices, so changes went out safely and problems got caught before members ever saw them.
The result. Pages that took seconds now load in a few milliseconds. The site stopped failing. And on a platform that could finally move, revenue doubled in two years.
If keeping the site alive has quietly become the team’s whole job, the free diagnostic is a good place to start.

