Skip to content

Logistics & delivery

Dispatch teams live in dashboards; couriers and customers live in apps. Everyone needs the same status.

Expertise

Logistics & delivery — Dispatch teams live in dashboards; couriers and customers live in apps. Everyone needs the same status.

Features & roles

Customer or shipper creates a job or shipment. Courier or driver app shows assigned tasks, navigation, and status updates. Dispatcher or admin assigns routes, reassigns failures, and watches the board. B2B adds bulk upload and SLA windows.

Core features: create shipment, assign courier, pickup, in transit, out for delivery, delivered, failed or returned, proof of delivery, and ops dashboards with filters.

End-to-end process flow

Book or create shipment → assign to courier → accepted → pickup → in transit → delivered (or failed) → confirm and close. Package and errand products share the skeleton; laundry and food add their own status legs on top.

Ops lives in the dashboard; couriers and customers live in apps — everyone reads the same status from PHP. I define that chain in a process flow doc before mobile and backend split the work.

How I run the project (workflow)

I don't jump straight to screens. Every build starts with a process flow — who does what, in what order, and what status the system shows at each step. That flow becomes the shared map for you, me, backend devs, and QA.

Typical sequence: discovery call → role and feature matrix → process flow sign-off → API contract draft → mobile build per role → integration passes → store or web release → handoff notes. AI speeds drafting at each step; sign-off stays human.

You get visibility at each gate — not a black box and a surprise at launch.

Mobile implementation — Framework7 & Cordova

Production mobile for these products is Framework7 plus Cordova — one JavaScript codebase for iOS and Android, native plugins where the product needs camera, GPS, push, or file upload.

I usually split by role: consumer app, merchant or provider app, rider or courier app, and sometimes a lightweight admin mobile surface. Same API layer pattern in each — auth token, role guard, API module, status-driven screens that match the process flow we agreed on.

Framework7 handles routing, lists, forms, modals, and pull-to-refresh patterns that feel native enough for delivery and booking products. Cordova wraps it for the stores. I map each process-flow step to a screen or state so backend devs and QA know exactly what mobile expects at each status.

Before store submission I run device passes on real phones — cold start, background resume, location permissions, and offline or slow-network behavior on the paths that matter for your product.

Guiding backend developers on the same process flow

I'm not siloed on mobile while backend guesses endpoints. I lead with the process flow and a written API contract — roles, status enums, request and response shapes, and error codes the apps already handle.

What I hand backend devs: a status diagram (order/trip/booking/shipment states), JSON samples per endpoint, which role calls which route, and what happens on 401 or invalid transitions. PHP and MySQL on the server side; PDO with prepared statements; thin handlers that match the contract mobile already built against.

During build I review backend PRs for contract drift — field renames, missing statuses, auth gaps — before mobile QA wastes a week. When the contract must change, we version it and update mobile in the same sprint. That coordination is how multi-role platforms stay in sync in production.

Full stack delivery with AI engineering

On solo or lead full-stack work I own mobile, API shape, and often the PHP layer behind it. AI engineering means Cursor rules in the repo — Framework7 patterns, Cordova plugin usage, API client conventions, security bans — plus skills for recurring tasks like new screens or endpoints.

AI drafts Framework7 pages, API boilerplate, and PHP handlers from the signed-off process flow. I review every diff for security, contract alignment, and store rules before merge. Fellow devs get the same rules and contract doc so AI output stays consistent across the team.

Fast drafts, careful release — whether the product is a delivery app, booking platform, or member portal. See AI engineer services or the blog posts on React Native rules and PHP backends for the same discipline on other stacks.

FAQ

Questions I get asked

B2B and consumer delivery?

Same core mechanics either way — who assigns, who moves, who sees status. The business rules change; the architecture rhymes.

Can you work with our existing dispatch team workflow?

We map your ops steps to statuses and admin screens first. Courier and customer apps read the same PHP layer the dashboard uses — no duplicate truth.

Do you use Framework7 and Cordova in production?

Yes — that is my production mobile stack for multi-role delivery, ride, booking, and logistics products. One JavaScript codebase for iOS and Android, with store publishing when the product is ready.

How do you guide backend developers on the same product?

Process flow and API contract first — status enums, JSON samples, role permissions — then parallel mobile and PHP work. I review backend changes for contract drift before QA so apps and server stay aligned.

Where does AI fit in full-stack delivery?

AI drafts Framework7 screens, API boilerplate, and PHP handlers from the signed-off flow. Cursor rules keep patterns consistent; I review every diff for security and contract alignment before release.

Do you work with teams outside the Philippines?

Yes. I'm based in the Philippines and work with local teams and remote clients. English is fine, and I'm used to coordinating across time zones on production teams and direct collaboration.

Related