Why a Trial Attorney Is the Right Person to Fix Your Tech.
Our generation has lived through: the rise of the internet, cell phones, social media, smartphones, tapes to CDs to Napster to Spotify, Blockbuster to Netflix, 9/11, the Great Recession, COVID, and now AI (amongst other things).
If you’re tired of being told to “embrace disruption” by people who think they invented it — you’re in the right place.
Change doesn’t come with a manual. But it helps to walk with someone who’s been through it.
I spent 14 years as a federal trial attorney. Every case brought unfamiliar facts and novel legal questions. The expertise was never in static knowledge — it was in rapid learning and navigation.
I navigated multiple administrations, funding crises, COVID transformation, and massive organizational upheaval. The core skill that transfers: walking into complex, unfamiliar situations, getting up to speed fast, and helping others do the same.
The legal and tax background isn’t a constraint — it’s a proof point. It’s how I learned the skill I now bring to you.
How I Work With You
- Direct communication: clear tradeoffs, no performance theater.
- Evidence first: recommendations tied to your workflow, not trend cycles.
- Measured momentum: changes that compound without disrupting client service.
Nobody is an expert on “this” — because “this” is constantly evolving. Most consultants would never admit that.
But you can smell BS from a mile away. So here’s the truth: I’m not claiming to have all the answers. I’m claiming to be relentlessly committed to staying current, synthesizing what I learn, and translating it into action for your practice.
The value isn’t omniscience. It’s dedicated attention.
Why “Ibid.”
In legal and academic writing, ibid. means “the same source as before.” It’s a reference point — something you return to when you need to verify, to ground yourself, to pick up where you left off.
That’s the relationship we’re building.
Start with one conversation. Leave with a clearer next step.
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