We built CodeOn to make those plugins behave.
A typical Georgian e-commerce store needs card processing and installments from twobanks, accounting sync with their 1C or Fina back office, and a courier integration for delivery. That's five or six separate plugins from as many vendors — each with its own licensing model, its own admin panel, its own update channel, its own opinions about how WooCommerce order meta should look.
When something breaks during a checkout at midnight, you open four log files to figure out which plugin did what. When TBC rotates a credential, you update it in one vendor's plugin; when BoG does the same, you update it in another. When a plugin author disappears, you're stuck on a version that no longer matches the bank's API contract — and there's no source to fork from.
Eight focused plugins. Each does one thing. TBC Card Payments: accept Visa and Mastercard via TBC Bank's hosted checkout. 1C ↔ WooCommerce: keep WooCommerce prices, stock and products aligned with your 1C books. QuickShipper Delivery: live courier rates at checkout — Glovo, Wolt, Go Delivery, OnWay, Easy Way, Georgian Post. None of them know about the others. Each ships its own license, its own settings page, its own GitHub repo, its own release stream.
Buy what you need. If you only sell card payments through TBC, you don't install or pay for BoG. When the TBC installments API changes at 11pm, only the TBC Installments plugin needs a release — your BoG checkout isn't at risk. Each plugin is small enough to read in one sitting; under the hood they share a common framework (license layer, watermarking, update channel) but ship independently.
We're not trying to be a payment processor — the banks already are. We're the boring layer between WooCommerce and whatever TBC, Bank of Georgia, Flitt, 1C, Fina, or QuickShipper decide their next API change looks like.
Six decisions we've committed to that show up in every line of the plugin and every API response.
One engineer who's been shipping WooCommerce and WordPress for a decade. No sales team, no quotas, no call schedulers. Same person designs, builds, supports, and responds to emails.
Designs the products, writes the plugins, runs the license server, replies to support. Previous builds include industrial accounting + CRM integrations on WordPress and Laravel for Georgian businesses. Reachable directly at [email protected].
Popular, well-documented tools with proven operational stories. Every choice below can be swapped by a competent WordPress or Next.js engineer without ceremony.