The website you actually deserve
You’re showing up on LinkedIn, putting effort into posts — and you don’t have your own blog. That’s a missed opportunity.
I recently did a competitive analysis for a client, and the pattern was clear: companies with strong organic traffic always have a website and a blog. Not because “you’re supposed to” — but because a blog is SEO. The right articles, the right keywords, and you get found — by search engines, by people, by GPT. Stick with it for 6 months and the difference becomes very hard to ignore.
My problem: WordPress didn’t work for me. Paid plugins, endless updates, constant admin work — too much friction for someone who just wants to write and see their article live, not manage a server.
So I built my own setup:
I write in Obsidian (if you don’t know it — highly recommend, great knowledge base). I hit a button, and within a minute the post is on GitHub. From there, a script automatically deploys it to my hosting.
From idea to published — 5 to 15 minutes. No admin work. Just write and ship.
If this sounds interesting — I can walk you through how it works, or set it up for you directly.
Three nearby posts worth opening next.

Apr 19, 2026
A refund automation failed because it ran faster than the accounting system's settlement window.

Apr 18, 2026
If you took away the tools, the meetings, and the system noise, would you leave your work behind or circle back to it anyway?

Apr 17, 2026
A simple phrase often pushes automated support chats to a human, which says a lot about how fragile emotion-based escalation really is.
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.