For 25+ years I've helped organizations build products, lead design, and navigate change. Over the last 18 months I've been conducting a structured exploration across AI, product development, emerging technology, and organizational capability — building 50+ experiments to understand what leaders need to know before the future arrives.
I help organizations understand what changes when AI becomes part of how products are built, decisions are made, and teams operate. My work sits at the intersection of product strategy, design leadership, organizational change, and AI-native ways of working.
The Central Question
"AI didn't make me smarter. It made me faster. I had to bring the smart. That changes everything about what human expertise is worth."
Most organizations approach AI as a technology problem. They buy tools, run pilots, and wait for transformation to happen. It doesn't. The bottleneck is almost never the software. It's the thinking, the process, and the people who know how to direct it.
Building was the method. 52+ products across FinTech, EdTech, PropTech, AI Agents, computer vision, spatial computing, and hardware — structured as research, not portfolio building. Every product was a hypothesis. Every outcome was a data point worth examining.
The question was never "what can AI do?" The question was: what does AI change about how organizations create value, develop capability, and make decisions? Here's what the experiments revealed.
Why This Matters Now
They're struggling because nobody knows which changes actually matter.
The technology is changing quickly. The harder challenge is deciding how people, teams, and organizations evolve around it — and that is not a technology decision. It is a leadership one.
Key Observations
Research Through Building
Not a portfolio. Not hobby projects. Not startup ideas. A structured research program conducted through execution — because the only way to understand how AI changes product creation is to build things with it, repeatedly, across domains, and pay attention to what breaks and what holds.
"The organizations that will lead the next decade are not the ones with the most AI budget. They're the ones that learn fastest from doing — and have someone who can design what they're learning toward."
Organizational Implications
Not "which AI tools should we buy?" The more important questions are about people, capability, and organizational design.
How I Work With Organizations
The work sits at the intersection of executive AI strategy and product execution — translating AI capability into organizational decisions, capabilities, and products. Not another vendor. The person who helps leadership think clearly before they act.
The Foundation
The question isn't whether AI will change your organization. It already has.
The question is whether that change is happening with intention or by accident.
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