Franz Wiebe, a product engineer based in Aylmer, Ontario, has formally launched a dedicated consulting practice offering custom internal tools and SaaS MVP development for fintech firms, ministry organizations, and early-stage software ventures. The launch formalizes more than a decade of project work built around a single conviction: that most growing teams are slowed not by a lack of ambition, but by the software they are forced to work around.
Before founding his practice, Wiebe spent years building products inside organizations where the same pattern played out repeatedly. Teams would adopt one SaaS tool to solve an immediate problem, then another to fill the gap the first one left, and eventually find themselves managing a stack of six or eight subscriptions that barely communicated with each other. Data lived in silos. Processes required manual handoffs. The tools that were supposed to create leverage became the source of friction.
That experience shaped the focus of his practice. Rather than patching existing systems, Wiebe builds replacements—custom admin panels, multi-tenant SaaS platforms, and internal dashboards—designed around the specific workflows his clients actually use. His technical foundation is FilamentPHP and the TALL stack (Tailwind CSS, Alpine.js, Laravel, and Livewire), a combination he selected for speed of development and long-term maintainability.
Wiebe's client list covers fintech platforms requiring precise data integrity, church management systems handling member records and giving history, and enterprise admin panels that consolidate what were previously multiple separate tools into a single role-based interface. Each project involves direct integration work through APIs including Twilio for messaging, Stripe for payments, and DocuSign for document workflows.
“The project I keep thinking about is a fintech admin panel we shipped in under 10 weeks that replaced 3 separate subscriptions the team had been managing manually,” said Wiebe. “That is the outcome I am trying to replicate for every client—not just cleaner code, but actual hours returned to the team.”
Wiebe is deliberate about his tooling choices. As a FilamentPHP developer, he works within an ecosystem that allows rapid iteration on complex admin interfaces without the overhead of heavier frameworks. FilamentPHP, built on Laravel and Livewire, produces interfaces that non-technical team members can navigate without training, while giving developers control over edge cases specific to each business.
The TALL stack reflects a preference for cohesion over complexity. Where other developers reach for multiple JavaScript frameworks or distributed microservices architectures, Wiebe works within a stack that keeps the application surface area manageable. For founders who need to move fast and maintain what they built, that distinction matters.
Positioning himself as a SaaS MVP developer in Canada speaks to a gap Wiebe has observed. Early-stage Canadian founders often have strong product instincts but limited access to senior engineers willing to engage at the MVP stage rather than waiting until Series A budgets are in play. Wiebe deliberately works at that earlier stage.
His practice accepts projects from teams that need a capable TALL-stack developer who can hold the full technical picture, make architecture decisions independently, and deliver something that scales. The consulting practice is based in Aylmer, Ontario, and works with clients across Canada and the United States.


