About Me
I see life in stories. Or is it the other way around? Either way, stories are where I live, and getting them in front of the right people is what I do.
I'm a writer and communications professional whose background spans journalism, nonprofit communications, education, and publishing, across writing, digital production, and communications strategy. The connective thread through everything I've worked on — whether it's an investigative piece on the opioid crisis, a destination feature that tries to make you feel a place before you've booked the flight, or a live webinar reaching thousands of people — is that each one started with a question and ended with an audience I hoped to bring along for the ride.
I've reported and written features, built and deployed email campaigns, managed audience segmentation, produced end-to-end webinars, maintained website content through a CMS, and created everything from voiceovers and slide decks to strategic communications materials. I've also led an internship program from recruitment to offer letters to supervision. The throughline across all of it is the same: communication that doesn't just deliver information but initiates conversation, forges connection, and makes people feel seen.
Good communication requires more than clarity. It requires listening — really listening — and reading between the lines. That instinct was shaped as much by time spent in education as in newsrooms and communications offices. Teaching taught me to meet people where they are, find the right gateway in and out of complexity, and never assume that information alone is enough. People need context and they need to feel something before they act on anything.
That's my mission.
I bring curiosity, humor, collaboration, and genuine care to everything I work on. I value learning as much as I do creating and relish new challenges for the opportunities they afford me to grow. That's where the best work lies.
And finding the story hiding inside of it all— that's the fun part.
“We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing."
George Bernard Shaw