Snackery Labs is an ecommerce and Shopify studio with two tracks: Snax Apps — a family of focused Shopify tools built for the operational gaps merchants keep working around — and consulting engagements for the complex problems that need someone who's been inside the same stores. Both come from the same place: fifteen years of running ecommerce operations across DTC and B2B.
The Snax Apps family is the primary output — a set of focused Shopify tools, each one scoped to a single operational problem merchants keep solving manually. Variant pricing rules, wholesale B2B workflows, catalog-connected content. Each app ships when it's right. Nothing ships to pad a roadmap.
Alongside the apps, Snackery Labs takes on a focused number of consulting engagements — DTC and B2B — for the operational problems that don't fit a pre-built tool. Tech stack design, platform migrations, pricing infrastructure, growth and retention strategy. The same operator lens that goes into the apps goes into every project.
The difference from a typical agency or app developer: every decision starts from commerce behavior and operational reality — not a spec sheet, a framework, or a feature checklist.
Most problems that look like technology problems are really systems problems — a mismatch between how the business operates, how customers behave, and how the stack is configured to serve both. The work always starts there.
Before a single recommendation, the whole commerce system gets mapped.
Customer journeys, operational workflows, fulfillment logic, pricing structures, integration points, and the gaps in between. We look at what the business is trying to do, how customers actually move through it, and where the current stack — or the absence of one — is getting in the way. The goal is a clear picture of the full system, not just the symptom that prompted the call.
The blueprint comes before the build — always.
Not a feature list. An architecture. What connects to what, what gets built versus configured versus replaced, what the operational reality looks like on day one and on day ninety. Commerce insights and business logic shape every decision at this stage — the technology serves the system, not the other way around. This is where most of the real work happens.
Execution with the full operational context intact.
Not just functional — designed to hold up under real volume, real complexity, and real business conditions. Whether that's a Shopify app, an operational workflow, or a full platform migration, the deliverable is something the team can actually use and maintain. The work isn't done when it launches. It's done when it runs the way it was designed to.
The best tech decisions start with understanding how customers actually move, decide, and buy — and how merchants actually manage, fulfill, and grow. The technology serves the system. Not the other way around.
A feature list isn't a measure of quality. What matters is whether what's in the tool belongs there — because someone with real operating experience decided it should be. That's a different standard than building to a spec.
A clunky checkout is often an operations problem in disguise. A slow fulfillment workflow shows up as a customer experience failure. Good systems design connects both sides — front of house and back.
Not just how it looks — how it behaves under real conditions, real volume, real pressure. A well-designed system is one that still makes sense when things get complicated. That's the standard we build to.
The consulting side of Snackery Labs takes on a focused number of engagements per quarter — complex problems that sit at the intersection of commerce strategy, operational design, and Shopify execution.
Auditing what belongs in your stack, how tools connect, and where the gaps are costing you. Infrastructure designed around how the business actually runs — not how a vendor pitched it.
Wholesale structures, tiered pricing, variant-level discount logic, PO workflows, Net-30 terms. The operational infrastructure Shopify leaves for you to figure out — designed so it scales.
Moving from Magento, BigCommerce, WooCommerce, or a custom build to Shopify — with data integrity, full URL preservation, and a launch that doesn't leave a month of cleanup behind it.
Technical SEO for Shopify — architecture, crawlability, URL structure, schema, and content strategy that compounds over time. Built around how search actually works in ecommerce, not generic blog advice.
Klaviyo flows, segmentation strategy, and lifecycle programs that treat retention as a revenue channel — not an afterthought. Built around your catalog, your customer behavior, and your margins.
Applying AI where it actually makes sense — product descriptions at scale, customer service triage, merchandising logic, inventory forecasting. Practical implementations that reduce manual work without replacing judgment.
Black Friday, product drops, new market entry, channel expansion. Operational and marketing strategy built around your actual store — how to set it up so the business doesn't break when it matters most.
The consulting side is intentionally limited. Not every project is a fit, and that's fine. Here's what Snackery Labs isn't — so neither of us wastes time figuring it out later.
A short intro call is enough to know whether a project makes sense. No pitch, no deck — just an honest conversation about what you're trying to solve.