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.
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.
We don’t oversell. We show up, figure it out, and deliver.
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