I love learning new systems because I’ve built my own. I use that adaptability to master your stack fast, so I can focus on what actually matters: Building relationships and closing deals.
Sales first. Systems second.
I thrive on face-to-face conversations, reading people, and building trust. My priority is revenue, not rebuilding tech stacks.
Comfortable inside CRMs and internal systems. If there is ROI and I can build it, I will. If not, I focus on closing.
If a workflow breaks, I take responsibility, adapt quickly, and keep momentum moving forward.
I prioritize impact first and improvement second. Results come before optimization.
Building these tools taught me how to think like an engineer, but sell like a human. They are proof that I can learn any system you put in front of me.
I wanted to understand how leads flow through a pipeline. I built a system to organize 200+ leads, proving I can manage high-volume data without getting overwhelmed.
I experimented with transcription tech to help catch objections I might miss. It taught me that active listening is the most important skill in sales.
Built an interactive calculator for farmers to audit chemical spend vs. drone efficiency per acre. I don't just sell technology; I prove the business case for it.
Sales is an endurance sport. Whether it's skiing, biking, or camping, I stay active outdoors to keep my energy high for the last call of the day.
Songwriting teaches flow and empathy. I apply that same creativity to connecting with prospects.
From gaming to automation to sales. I don't fear the learning curve; I attack it.
"I don't want to be cooped up in a building behind a screen. I want to be in the field, meeting people, closing deals, and building the technology that makes it all possible."