I grew up with computers long before I had the vocabulary for
software. Windows 95 was the starting point, curiosity did the
rest. That early habit never disappeared, even while my career
moved through technical building services and planning work.
My formal path included studying Information Economics, then
deepened through years in TGA planning, CAD-heavy delivery, and
BIM-driven coordination. Today, that background shows up as a
practical advantage: I understand the operational reality, not
just the interface on top of it.
The result is a profile that can move between specialists,
consultants, product ideas, and implementation details without
flattening the problem. More recently, that also includes
hands-on work with LLMs to speed up research, sharpen thinking,
and improve technical workflows without losing critical
judgment. That is the role I want software teams to notice.