I prevent million-dollar Excel disasters and upload Christmas songs
My job is making sure big companies don’t trip over their own data. Started at Dell in 2012 building dashboards, worked my way up to designing the frameworks that keep everything from falling apart.
After work I make gospel covers on YouTube. Old Zimbabwean songs, Christmas standards, the kind of vocal arrangements where everyone blends instead of competing. Been doing it for over a decade. The upload schedule is “whenever,” which YouTube’s algorithm hates, but I’ve accepted that we’re not going to be friends.
Recent uploads
Gospel covers, Christmas songs, stuff I grew up listening to. Been uploading for over a decade now, no schedule, just whenever it feels right. The four-part harmonies take forever to get clean, but that’s the whole reason to do it.
Transforming data complexity into strategic clarity, one insight at a time
Creating lasting impact
I blend analytical precision with creative thinking to solve complex challenges. Whether building data governance frameworks or performing music, I believe excellence comes from dedication, continuous learning, and attention to detail.
Data Governance
Implementing robust frameworks that ensure data quality, compliance, and strategic value for financial institutions.
Musical Expression
Finding harmony through piano performance and choral ensembles, bringing creativity and emotional depth to life.
Financial Empowerment
Sharing knowledge about wealth building, investment principles, and creating financial legacy through mentoring and education.
Thoughts on data, music, and financial empowerment
I write about things I’ve actually spent time thinking about. No hot takes on yesterday’s trends or listicles about “10 ways to optimize your [insert buzzword].” Just observations from working with data systems that handle millions of dollars, making music that YouTube’s copyright bot hates, and trying to build a life where money buys choices instead of stuff.
Most of it’s about data governance (making sure companies don’t trip over their own spreadsheets) and how it’s weirdly similar to arranging vocal harmonies (everyone needs to know their part). Sometimes I write about financial decisions that actually matter. Sometimes I just complain about SharePoint permissions. It varies.