Clear paths into consulting, teaching, facilitation, and strategic advisory - whether you need help with an immediate project or want to explore a longer collaboration.
Work With Me
Path 1 - I have an immediate need
You are planning a high-stakes session, program, workshop, hybrid experience, or strategic intervention and want to know quickly whether this is the right fit.
Best for: off-sites, simulation labs, keynote plus workshop, facilitation design, hybrid experience reviews, urgent concept development
Path 2 - I want to explore a fit
You see alignment in the methods and want to discuss a future collaboration, residency, teaching invitation, speaking engagement, or institutional partnership.
Best for: universities, cultural organizations, long-range institutional work, conferences, book talks, future residencies
Engagement types
Institutional consulting
Strategic Simulation Labs, Worldbuilding for Institutions, Spatial Narrative Diagnostics, and technology-as-meaning-layer advisory.
Strategic Simulation Labs - rehearse decisions inside designed scenario worlds
Worldbuilding for Institutions - align narrative, culture, incentives, and governance
Spatial Narrative Diagnostics - redesign environments that train better thinking
Technology as Meaning Layer - clarify how tools shape attention, agency, and trust
Teaching, residencies, and cohort labs
University intensives, custom institutional labs, public-facing residencies, faculty mentorship, and curriculum design.
• Visiting lectures and intensives
• Residencies (1-4 weeks) with public-facing outcomes
• Curriculum and program design
• Mentorship for faculty and practitioners building new labs or studios
Keynotes and strategic facilitation
Talks, workshops, and facilitation for conferences, leadership offsites, and cross-functional convenings.
Keynote: Simulation Theory for Future Strategy (rehearsal vs prediction)
Talk: Spatial Narrative (space as causality, invisible rules, designed attention)
Talk: Technology as Meaning Layer (AR/AI/game logic without fragmentation)
Facilitated workshop: Worldbuilding Unbound (five principles + applied exercises)
How engagement works
Intro conversation - goals, context, constraints, and fit.
Diagnostic - what the current system rewards, suppresses, or keeps invisible.
Design proposal - scope, outcomes, deliverables, and what success should look like.
Facilitate and translate - run the engagement, capture patterns, and convert insight into repeatable practice.
What to prepare before inquiry
What are you building or trying to change?
What is at stake if nothing changes?
Who will participate or be affected?
What timeframe are you working within?
What level of budget or resourcing is realistic right now?
Are you looking for a one-time intervention, a series, or an ongoing relationship?
FAQ
What kinds of organizations are the best fit?
Leaders, institutions, cultural organizations, universities, and cross-functional teams facing complexity, change, or the need for better shared language.
Do you work internationally?
Yes. International and cross-cultural work is a meaningful part of the practice, especially where participation, trust, and context need explicit design.
Can you tailor work for small teams as well as larger groups?
Yes. Some engagements are room-scale and others are cohort-scale. The method adapts to the size and stakes of the situation.
Do you offer standalone talks or workshops?
Yes. Talks, guest lectures, and short workshops can stand alone or open into a larger engagement.
What does a successful engagement usually produce?
A successful engagement produces more than insight: it leaves behind clearer language, decision rituals, rehearsal tools, scenario worlds, and more coherent operating practices.
Can you collaborate with an existing agency, internal team, or producer?
Yes. The work can be structured as lead facilitation, co-design, advisory, or a contribution inside a broader team.