A Day in the life of Claris FileMaker Developer in 2026 - Part 2
What does a Claris FileMaker do?
This is the 2nd part, continuing on from 1st part, we asked our most veteran consultant developer, Jonathan Taberner and the most recent addition, Salman Javaherai to contrast their experiences and provide an insight for our customers as to what a working day looks like for a professional Claris FileMaker Developer in 2026.
Artificial IntelligenceI & Large Language Models in FileMaker Development
How are you (or the team) experimenting with AI and LLMs within FileMaker?
SJ: We’re experimenting with using an AI chatbot connected to internal knowledgebase. The idea is to give our team quick access to insights or historical solutions without having to dig through old documentation. It’s already proving useful for speeding up internal troubleshooting.
JT: We are offering our customers natural language searches as part of standard development.
What are the biggest opportunities you see for private AI in client solutions?
SJ: A huge opportunity is for technical support teams, they could resolve tickets faster by having AI automatically referencing similar past issues, without the risk of leaking customer information or passwords.
JT: The ability to run AI searches and summaries without sending data outside of the company network.
Can you give an example where AI/LLMs made a meaningful impact in a client project (or could in the near future)?
SJ: A practical near-term example is support ticket triage. AI could compare a new issue to similar historical cases and suggest likely pathways or fixes. It won’t replace support staff, but it will make them dramatically more efficient by removing repetitive searching. It could even make suggestions directly to the customer before the engineer has even read it, or it could guide the customer in the ticket submission process, by ensuring all required information is submitted (which is never a one size fits all process).
JT: I am currently working on a solution for an Engineering customer to verify product certificates against UK ISO standard specifications. We are also looking at using AI as an OCR tool to extract text where the certificate is saved as an image.
Collaboration & Problem-Solving
What’s the toughest technical challenge you’ve solved recently—and how did you tackle it?
SJ: One of the toughest challenges involved WebDirect worker machines not firing up reliably. The Claris documentation wasn’t quite clear on the networking requirements, so I built a testing environment and worked through it via trial and error, supplemented by advice from the Claris Community. Another challenge was a WebViewer freeze triggered by a hide condition—ultimately it turned out to be a FileMaker bug. I reported it and implemented a workaround, removing the hide condition and rethinking how layout objects were handled.
JT: We recently collaborated with a third party designer for the development of the Venue Dashboard for Band On The Wall. The designs looked great but some were a challenge to replicate in Claris FileMaker while retaining a robust user experience. We used FileMaker’s hide/show layout objects to create the illusion of subsummary parts in a list – also made good use of card windows. We (and the client) were very pleased with the results!
How does the team collaborate to brainstorm solutions or keep up with the fast pace of Claris updates?
SJ: Our regular team meetings always include space for general questions, sharing discoveries, and helping each other think through architectural decisions. It creates a steady flow of knowledge and keeps us aligned with platform changes.
JT: We regularly attend Claris Webinars and share development tips within the team. We discuss challenging or problematic development in our regular team meetings. We also have separate scheduled meetups to discuss and update documentation for client solutions.
As a developer, how do you keep learning and staying sharp with new FileMaker features?
SJ: I regularly read FileMaker blogs, subscribe to community newsletters, and watch YouTube channels like FileMaker Training and FMDisc. I’ve also been going through Claris’s “Under the Hood” videos, which offer great context for long term design choices, and deeper architectural understanding.
JT: The best incentive I have is that I have never lost my excitement with what can be done with FileMaker – and as this is constantly evolving I always have something to be excited about. I keep an eye on Twitter(X) feeds and bookmark anything of interest for follow-up.
Looking Ahead
What do you think the next big trend in the Claris ecosystem will be?
SJ: think integration of all the components will continue further, with Studio and Connect interacting with Claris FileMaker more seamlessly.
JT: The ongoing enhancement of AI features and the evolution of AI services available. We are just at the start of this journey!
How do you see AI, Claris Studio, and Claris Connect shaping the future of custom app development?
SJ: I think AI will assist in app development, so the developer and client will have an initial and ongoing discussion with the AI, in order to build and maintain solutions.
JT: These will all evolve to work more closely with FileMaker to extend capabilities. I also expect AI to integrate and assist with development (while still requiring experienced developer input!)
What advice would you give to organisations still running their operations on spreadsheets or outdated systems?
SJ: I’d ask them when they last felt passionate about the company mission. Spreadsheets are great for simple tasks, but once they’re being used as a core part of the business, they weigh everyone down by taking up mental energy, due to the inevitable mismatch between their design and company processes, not to mention the inconveniences of cleaning up mistakes made from incorrect data.
JT: “Have a look at some of our solutions and see what is possible.” Most clients who come to us with one of these solutions will tell us of their woes with using outdated systems or trying to collaborate on projects using spreadsheets. They are usually excited to hear that data can be shared using FileMaker and that it only needs to be stored once.












