How I Work

Every organization I’ve joined has been different: different size, different stage, different challenges. What doesn’t change is how I show up. The framework below reflects how I approach the first 90 days: with discipline, curiosity, and a clear view of what needs to happen before anything else can work.


How I Work

I ask questions before I act. Understanding the real problem — given the stakes, the context, and the time available — is the most important work I do. Good questions surface what’s actually true, cut through assumptions, and point toward answers that actually hold up.

How we treat colleagues, partners, and clients isn’t separate from the work — it is the work. Trust is built or broken in how we show up. I keep people at the center because organizations that don’t, fall apart when it matters most. This extends to every stakeholder, from frontline teams to the board.

I don’t measure success by hours logged or deliverables shipped. I measure it by what actually changed. Whether something takes longer or moves fast matters less than whether everyone is pointed at the same objective and making real progress toward it.

Not every decision deserves the same deliberation. Two-way doors should be opened, not studied. I make the best call available with the information I have, stay accountable, and adjust when needed. The goal isn’t certainty — it’s clarity enough to move. Ambiguity is part of the job.


My First 90 days

Every engagement begins here. Before changing anything, I need to understand the organization as it actually is, not as it appears on paper.

  • Conduct one-on-ones at the leadership level and one layer down
  • Map friction, dependencies, silos, and what’s thriving
  • Document everything — patterns, gaps, and early signals
  • Build trust through observation before intervention
  • Note where information lives and where it doesn’t flow

With enough signal collected, the work shifts to finding the patterns — and validating them before acting on them.

  • Identify patterns across teams and functions
  • Surface collaboration gaps, measurement needs, and where data lives
  • Build the operating cadence based on what the organization actually needs
  • Validate findings with each leader to ensure alignment and accuracy
  • Filter all priorities through the CEO’s agenda and organizational goals

Organizations in growth mode can’t wait a full quarter for results. This is where the foundation starts to take shape.

  • Start putting things in motion — the organization needs to feel momentum
  • Firm up assumptions and act on what we know
  • Make reversible moves quickly; apply more care to decisions that can’t be undone
  • Establish cadence, visibility, and cross-functional alignment
  • Begin building the infrastructure that drives P&L impact