I believe real estate is personal.
I grew up in a small Ohio town where you could tell the season by what was growing in the fields. Winter wheat, soybeans, and corn weren’t just crops — they marked time. By the Fourth of July, we’d measure the corn, hoping it was knee-high. Saturdays in the fall were sacred, spent watching the men of scarlet and gray. And no meal compared to Lake Erie perch — what we called “Lake Erie gold” — best served fried on a bun.
Life was simple, but it was real. I watched my parents leave early for work and still make it back to coach our ball teams. We said please and thank you. We went to church on Sundays. We respected those who served because someone in every family did. And in the long Ohio winters, when the sun disappeared until April, you learned to appreciate the little things that carried you through.
Football opened the door for me to attend Ohio Wesleyan University — a rigorous liberal arts school where I double-majored in Politics & Government and French. At OWU, I learned more than academics. I learned discipline. I learned how to take complicated ideas, break them down, and get to the heart of what really mattered. That training shaped the way I work today.
In real estate, clients often face situations that feel overwhelming — contracts, financing, inspections, legal details. My job is to cut through the noise, identify the key issues, and connect you with the right experts in my network when needed. It’s the same skill I developed in college: take what’s complex, make it simple, and guide people toward the best decision.
Before real estate, I worked in public service and politics, where the stakes were high and the details mattered. I’ve managed campaigns, negotiated policy, and worked on one of the top-ranked real estate teams in the country. I’ve trained agents, taught contracts, and led brokerages. But none of that matters more than this: when you hire me, you’ll never have to wonder what’s happening next. I’ll keep you informed, anticipate challenges, and protect your interests every step of the way.
Today I live in Dublin with my wife and our two daughters. I coach softball, spend summer weekends on the lake, and feel grateful to raise my family in the same kind of community that shaped me. If you’re thinking about a move, I’d be honored to guide you through it with the same clarity, hard work, and care I was raised on.
