Was scrolling through job listings and came across something unexpected.
A seat-sharing platform for charter flights. Houston. Private jets.
The ask: Make.com, Airtable, Stripe, AI voice agents, Twilio, QuickBooks, refunds via API.
Same story as any other service business.
Just swap the product page for a seat booking on a private aircraft.
This is what I love about this work: you never know what industry you’ll land in next.
One day it’s a flower shop. The next it’s charter aviation.
The context keeps changing.
The processes never do.
There’s a business. There’s an operation.
That means there’s something to wire into a system that actually works.
It doesn’t matter if you’re selling a software subscription or a window seat somewhere over the Gulf of Mexico.
Three nearby posts worth opening next.

Apr 9, 2026
Automation ideas always sound simple at first. The real work starts when the business, the tools, and the constraints force the solution into something stranger but more real.

Apr 5, 2026
Before hiring or automating, map the process first. That is how you see what is repeated, what wastes founder time, and what the business is actually ready to change.

Apr 13, 2026
The most important parts of a process are often the invisible pauses between visible triggers. That is where delays, distractions, and real dependencies usually live.
If you have a manual workflow between tools, I can help map the logic, design the system, and automate it in a way your team can actually use.