Custom software development
Build internal tools, customer-facing products, portals, and workflow systems around the business process they need to support.
Wolfes Den Consulting builds new software, repairs inherited systems, implements APIs, supports remote development, manages servers, networks, and databases, and delivers mobile work that fits the product and backend it depends on.
Build
new platforms, internal tools, and customer-facing software
Repair
inherited code, integrations, and fragile release paths
Scope
pricing and licensing set for the engagement
Software work stated clearly
What Wolfes Den handles
Wolfes Den Consulting builds custom software, takes over inherited codebases, implements APIs and integrations, handles remote systems administration, network administration, database administration, database tuning and design, and delivers mobile work that fits the backend and release process behind the product.
Common reasons people reach out
How engagements are handled
Where to go next
Visit the services page for scope, the software page for project examples, the methodology page for delivery approach, and the contact page when you are ready to discuss the work.
Services
If you need new software, recovery work on an inherited system, API implementation, integration work, remote development support, remote systems administration, network administration, database administration, tuning, design work, or mobile delivery tied to the backend, this is where the scope is laid out clearly.
Build internal tools, customer-facing products, portals, and workflow systems around the business process they need to support.
Take over inherited systems, reduce operational drag, repair release flow, and keep live software moving while larger modernization decisions are made.
Design service boundaries, implement internal and public APIs, and connect the systems that need to exchange data cleanly and reliably.
Deliver mobile work that fits the product, backend, release flow, and support expectations behind it.
Handle server environments, network administration, operational maintenance, migrations, backup and recovery work, database tuning, and database structure work when the surrounding system needs as much attention as the application code.
Step into active delivery remotely, carry feature work forward, reduce backlog drag, and give a team experienced implementation help.
Method
The work starts with assessment, moves through stabilization and build, and ships with commercial terms and support expectations clearly defined.
Assess
The first pass is scoping what already exists: code, systems, constraints, deadlines, deployment risk, and the operational problem underneath the request.
Stabilize
Inherited systems usually need risk removed before new work accelerates. That means clarifying interfaces, untangling brittle areas, and getting the release path under control.
Build
New software, API layers, integrations, and mobile features get built against the real use case, not against a canned package description.
Ship
Pricing, licensing, ownership, and follow-on support are defined around the engagement so everyone is clear on what is being delivered and what comes after launch.
Delivery details
These pages go deeper into custom software delivery, inherited-system recovery, API integration work, and the way projects are scoped, stabilized, built, and shipped.
Methodology
A direct walkthrough of the delivery model behind custom software work, existing code recovery, API implementation, and project scoping.
Case study
A practical example of greenfield software delivery when the workflow, backend, interfaces, and release plan all need to be built around the real business use case.
Case study
A concrete engagement pattern showing how inherited systems are assessed, stabilized, modernized, and moved into a safer release path.
Case study
A practical example of cleaning up service boundaries, implementing integrations, and reducing drag between product work and backend reality.
Case study
A practical example of stepping into a live codebase, reducing release risk, cleaning up fragile areas, and making the software easier to maintain.
Case study
A practical example of moving data safely between systems, mapping schemas, repairing integrations, and reducing migration risk before the switch happens.
Case study
A practical example of mobile app delivery that stays tied to the APIs, backend systems, release process, and support reality behind the product.
Case study
A practical example of remote environment care that improves uptime, backup confidence, network reliability, database performance, schema quality, change control, and day-to-day operational stability.
Case study
A practical example of remote development support that helps a team keep shipping, reduce backlog drag, and stabilize delivery without waiting on a full hiring cycle.
Experience
The work is described directly because most software projects do not need a polished pitch. They need someone who can build new systems, fix inherited ones, implement APIs, and work inside the operational reality the product already has.
Open a project inquiryWork grounded in senior and lead engineering experience across software delivery, systems administration, networking, DevOps, infrastructure, and operational support.
A large share of real consulting work starts with live systems, inherited code, rough deployment flow, and business pressure rather than with a clean greenfield brief.
Commercial terms are shaped around the work, the reuse rights, and the support load of the engagement.
Common questions
Custom software development, existing codebase recovery, API work, system integration, internal tooling, remote development support, remote systems administration, network administration, database administration, database tuning and design work, and mobile delivery tied to the larger backend and operational system.
Yes. A significant amount of the work is on active systems that need cleanup, extension, modernization, integration repair, or better release discipline while they continue to matter to the business.
Pricing is scoped per project, and ownership, licensing, reuse rights, and support expectations are defined per engagement.
A rough project goal, the current system situation, the integration or delivery problem, and any timeline pressure is enough to start the conversation and determine service fit.
Ready to start