So much can be said without words, and from the very beginning I've been fascinated by the different ways we do that as a people. Icons, colors, even motion and sound can convey so much information. Bad visuals, information architecture, and phrasing can tank an otherwise brilliant solution. I'm ready to take on my part of the challenge of designing the world we're going to live in.
I'm never afraid to give my opinion and explain the reasoning behind it. I believe the quietest voices can have the best ideas so IÂ ask for critique from everyone in the room, not just those who offer it initially. I actively solicit feedback from both my peers and my managers. I love solving problems and honing others' ideas to make them the best version of themselves. I'm a life-long learner with a passion for finding new, better ways to do things, and I'd love to do it at IBM.
I'm deeply immersed in the consumer tech world and I'm always looking for a new app, device, or service to try out. I pick up software very quickly, and I always love learning how to do something I couldn't do before. I believe — like Apple — that my job is in the intersection of technology and liberal arts, which is why I minored in Graphic Design.
Webflow is a tool that I, as a designer, find a delight to use and a pleasure to discover. I evangelize it to anyone who needs more than SquareSpace but doesn't want to code. Webflow has made web design accessible in a way that so many WYSIWYG platforms that came before it wished they could do.
I've always thought of the most noble pursuits is to make the tools designers use to design. As long as I've been designing, I've been marveling at the tools that were made by designers like me. Every industry has examples of this, from Figma to AutoCAD to Unity. It would be an honor to contribute to a tool like Webflow, and in doing so enable millions of designers and teams to make websites they never could before.
Seriously. If I wasn't hooked on the great product, the tutorials (and that impossibly dashing guy you have narrating them) would've got me even more. One of the things I talk about when I recommend Webflow to my colleagues is that the support is fantastic, Webflow University is incredibly well-done, and you all are hilarious.
If you prefer to reach out yourself, IÂ regularly monitor the following lines of communication: