I grew up with math. Numbers, logic, structure—that's how I understood the world. Still do. But somewhere along the way, I realized that the most interesting problems aren't solved by math alone. They need intuition, empathy, curiosity about why people do what they do.

So I ended up in design. Specifically, the kind of design where you can't simplify your way out of complexity. Where the complexity is the problem you're solving. I work on products for people who are smart enough to want power over simplicity. Engineers, operators, traders—people who think in systems.

I've been at Ogury and Criteo scaling tools that thousands of people use every day. Now I'm at Metroscope designing platforms for industrial operators who make high-stakes decisions based on data. The work requires understanding both the math behind the system and the human behind the screen.

Outside of work, I run trails for hours. Not fitness. Just thinking, moving, being somewhere quiet. I play piano. I sing. I take photographs. These aren't hobbies separate from design. They're how I stay curious and remember that humans aren't logical. We're sensory, emotional, searching for meaning in patterns.

I'm the person you want on your team if you're tired of surface-level answers. I listen more than I talk. I care about the work, and I care about the people doing it.