
My career started in commercial real estate and AEC — not on the finance side, but in the operational reality of how deals get done, how projects get staffed, and how relationships drive everything. I’ve worked with some of the most sophisticated real estate organizations in the country, including Amazon and CBRE, and I’ve seen firsthand how capital structure decisions are made — and where they break down.
Several years ago, I started paying attention to tokenization. I realized there would be a structural shift that changes the math on CRE ownership, liquidity, and capital formation. I got certified in FinTech at the University of Washington, went deep on the platforms, the protocols, and the regulatory frameworks — and eventually built a practice around it. That practice is Decentralized Everything.
What I Actually Do
I help commercial real estate owners and developers evaluate whether tokenization is the right path for their asset — and if it is, I guide them through it.
That means helping you understand the capital structure options, identifying the right platform and legal framework, and connecting you with the people and infrastructure needed to execute. I work with an SEC-regulated digital securities platform and a legal team that specializes in tokenization structuring.
I’m not here to sell you on a technology. I’m here to help you figure out whether it solves your specific problem — and to be direct with you if it doesn’t.
The owners and developers I work with are usually facing one of a few situations:
- Traditional financing has pulled back and the conventional path isn’t available
- The asset has equity trapped in it that a clean sale won’t unlock
- They’re building something that needs a new class of capital to get done
- They’re curious about digital assets and want someone who speaks both languages
Not every asset is a candidate. Not every timeline is right. The first conversation is always about figuring out if there’s a real fit.