My work has always moved between art and organization — between stories and systems.
My creative roots are in visual storytelling. I studied Art History and Visual Arts at Princeton University, where I deepened my video, photography, and documentary practice — a curiosity that began in childhood and continues to shape how I see the world.
Over the course of my career, I’ve led people and culture in law, media, finance, and healthcare, helping organizations and leaders navigate growth, change, and transformation. Across each chapter of my career, I’ve been guided by one question: how do we connect who we are with what we build?
Through Stories Work, I advise executives and organizations on leadership, purpose, and change. Through my fiction — including How to Raise an Art Star and How to Date a Black Girl — I explore the intersections of art, identity, and belonging.
Whether behind the camera, on the page, or in the boardroom, my work has always been about story — how it shapes understanding, creates connection, and makes room for becoming.
Before becoming an executive, I was a visual artist and documentarian. Those experiences taught me how observation, empathy, and storytelling are essential to leadership and culture building.
My work today continues to draw from those early lessons: seeing clearly, listening deeply, and building from what’s true.
Alongside my creative and executive work, I host the I’m Here Too podcast — a space where I explore art, culture, identity, and the stories that connect us. The podcast, like my writing, is an invitation to reflect on how we grow into ourselves and each other.
Whether through my novels, my coaching and advisory work, or creative collaborations, my goal remains the same: to help people and organizations use story as a tool for clarity, growth, and transformation.