Benjamin Durin, business tools developer
Over 25 years of web development, 10 of them freelancing, serving SMEs, B2B startups and large companies. A simple conviction: a good tool comes from a good understanding of the business, not from a pile-up of technology.
A developer who speaks business first
I started web development over 25 years ago, at a time when you had to understand everything end to end. That habit stuck: looking at a problem as a whole, from the real need to the tool running in production.
Freelancing for 10 years, I support SMEs, B2B startups and large companies. I've seen many teams stuck not by a lack of tools, but by a pile-up of partial tools that don't fit the way they work.
My role: understand the need before building, stay pragmatic about scope, and deliver tools that last over time — readable, reliable, made to evolve.
Three simple principles
Understand before coding
Business first, technology second. A useful tool reflects a real process, not a theoretical idea.
Stay pragmatic
Aim for the scope that helps, not the maximal project. Simplicity is a decision, not a shortcoming.
Ship maintainable
A good tool must be able to evolve and stay readable — by me and by others, over time.
A business tool need in mind?
Whether to scope an idea, build a first tool or take over a fragile system, we can talk it through simply.