I work in product leadership and I’m increasingly interested in what changes when AI becomes part of the way we build and go about our day-to-day tasks.

Product leaders do not need to pretend to be engineers, but I do think we need to understand more of the systems, workflows and constraints that sit underneath the products we shape. For me, exploring AI is not about replacing product judgement, strategy or team collaboration. It is about adding to them through expanding our knowledge outside our current boundaries to work more effectively.

This site is part profile, part working notebook and part proof in how I want to get closer to the mechanics of the build. I’m using it to experiment, learn in public and build the foundations to ask better questions, make clearer trade-offs and lead with more credibility in an increasingly AI-enabled world.


How I tend to work

I tend to be at my best where product direction, team clarity and big customer or business problems come together.

I like shaping the story around a problem, making it easy for people to understand why it matters, then turning that into a plan the team can act on. I also like staying close enough to delivery to see what is working, what is not and where the real impact is showing up.

More recently, AI has made that closeness to delivery much easier to develop and maintain. It is now realistic to prototype ideas, debug issues, publish content and stand up working experiences without waiting for every step to move through a perfect handoff. That has changed the pace of learning as much as the pace of execution.It’s also a change I’ve absolutely loved stepping into.

When you add in what AI can do for insight, research and exploration, it becomes a powerful shift in how product work gets done. It has already changed how I work and will only continue to do so.


What this section is for

Over time, this area will grow into separate sections covering my career history, leadership approach, AI-assisted workflows, achievements and the projects shaping how I think.

Some of those projects will be work related. Others will be more personal. The common thread is that each one is a way to try something new, capture what I learn and apply it back into my day-to-day work.

Because the site is managed in Sanity, each section can be expanded, edited or retired as things evolve. That makes this feel less like a static CV page and more like a living profile.