I'm a builder. I spot the broken thing, connect the tools and people that aren't talking, and turn it into something that actually works.
I'm not a developer. I'm the guy who looks at a tangle of tools, processes, and people and figures out how to make them move in the same direction. Two examples from what I'm building right now:
Building a platform where customers can find the equipment and parts they need and submit purchase requests for approval — turning a slow, manual process into something self-service and trackable.
Pulling scattered ministry tools, communication channels, and member touchpoints into a single platform so people get clarity instead of confusion — and leaders can actually see what's happening.
Most of the time, the problem isn't the tool. It's that the tool isn't talking to the other tool, and nobody owns the gap in between. I like sitting in that gap.
I want to leave systems better than I found them — at work, at church, at home. Not because systems are the point, but because when they're built well, they free people up to do the things only they can do.
Faith is the foundation under all of it. Family is the reason. The work is how I show up.
Coffee equipment, church systems, a project you're trying to get off the ground, or just hello — send a message and I'll get back to you.
Thanks for reaching out. I'll get back to you soon.