Sorry to suggest a reversion to paper, ink and pencils....... I live in a part of the world where mobile phones are completely useless - no usable signal for miles.
Many years ago, long before fancy apps, when mobile phones filled an average pocket, I had a job to do that used a large amount of Birch Ply sheets cut into many repetitive component shapes.
My solution then, which I still use when I (very rarely, these days) use sheet material, was to use that new-fangled Microsoft Excel to make a template on paper; in A4, though if you can copy on A3, it's better.
The template consists of a rectangular grid grid of squares, 96 squares by 48 and numbered in the margin, where I laid out the component shapes that I needed - at any angle if the surface grain direction was not important.
Apart from the initial effort laying it out in Excel, it was cheap - just the cost of paper and ink.
Effective when used with a numbered cutting list...... and for the times when I no longer have Excel, it works in PDF.
I still use this grid occasionally for working out cutting lists to get the most effective cuts out of straight planks. It really does minimize waste in the form of unusable off-cuts.