Project Name
Jan 2025
Overview
2-3 sentence elevator pitch. What the project is, who it's for, and what problem it solves. This appears prominently on the project page as the opening statement.
Key features
Feature name
What it does and why it matters to the end user or business.
Feature name
What it does and why it matters to the end user or business.
Feature name
What it does and why it matters to the end user or business.
Feature name
What it does and why it matters to the end user or business.
Screenshots
The Problem
Describe the client’s situation before this project. What was broken, slow, or missing? What was the business impact? Use concrete details — numbers, pain points, real scenarios. This section builds empathy and frames the value of your work.
Use blockquotes for impactful statements or direct client quotes.
Approach
Explain your strategy and the key decisions you made. Why this stack? Why this architecture? What alternatives did you consider and reject?
Sub-heading for technical details
- Bold the decision — then explain the reasoning behind it.
- Another decision — keep these focused on the “why” not just the “what”.
Challenges
What was hard about this project? What surprised you? This section shows technical depth and problem-solving ability. Clients want to see that you can handle complexity.
Be specific about the problem and your solution. “It was hard” is useless. “The API returned paginated results with inconsistent date formats across 3 endpoints” is useful.
Results
→ Quantifiable outcome — e.g. 40% faster load times
→ Business impact — e.g. zero support tickets since launch
→ User metric — e.g. 3x increase in mobile conversions
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