About Me
It all began in 2002 when I was 13 years old and was just getting to know the Internet. At that time, I was studying in high school.
I didn’t know much about IT, and I didn’t have the opportunity to attend a course.
I relied on Google to find tutorials and free training on websites I discovered along the way.
My passion for digital technology began with Web Design when I discovered Microsoft FrontPage 2002. I would spend hours exploring it, learning, and figuring out how to build my first website.
Whenever I had the opportunity, I dove deep into the software — reading tutorials, taking tests, and pushing myself to learn more. I wanted to be in front of the computer all day.
It was time to launch my first website. I built it for the high school where I was studying. It was my first real achievement, and I was proud of it — even if it was simple and far from perfect.
Over time, I learned to code in HTML and CSS, and kept expanding my skills.
It has lost images, Flash animations, and it’s in Spanish.
In March 2009, I started promoting my web design services in the local newspaper to get my first client. One month later, I got it. That moment gave me the confidence to keep going.
My first projects were a local gas station and a restaurant website. From there, more clients followed.
I continued learning — SEO, sales funnels, responsive web design, online payment processing, landing pages, technical support, and more.
Then in 2015, everything changed.
I joined the Global Love Institute as their backend operations person — and for the first time, I wasn’t just building things. I was inside a live online education business, watching how they turned a skill into a curriculum, and how they taught that curriculum to hundreds of students around the world.
That experience quietly changed how I saw myself.
Because somewhere along the way, I started asking: what am I, exactly?
Not an employee. Not an agency. A freelancer — someone who had spent years building real expertise, working with real clients, keeping real businesses running. And yet, like a lot of freelancers, I had figured most of it out the hard way.
That’s what I want to change for others.
I believe that if you have a skill — backend operations, web design, copywriting, whatever it is — you shouldn’t have to spend years guessing your way to your first client or your first win.
You should be able to turn that skill into a profession, on purpose, with a clear path.
That’s what I’m starting to teach: how to become a professional in the skill you already have (or are building), how to land clients, and how to make an actual living from it — not just keep it as a dream.
Let’s work together if you’re ready to stop figuring it out alone.
It all began in 2002 when I was 13 years old and was just getting to know the Internet. At that time, I was studying in high school.
I didn’t know much about IT, and I didn’t have the opportunity to attend a course.
I relied on Google to find tutorials and free training on websites I discovered along the way.
I looked like this at that time.
My passion for digital technology began with Web Design when I discovered Microsoft FrontPage 2002. I would spend hours exploring it, learning, and figuring out how to build my first website.
Whenever I had the opportunity, I dove deep into the software — reading tutorials, taking tests, and pushing myself to learn more. I wanted to be in front of the computer all day.
It was time to launch my first website. I built it for the high school where I was studying. It was my first real achievement, and I was proud of it — even if it was simple and far from perfect.
Over time, I learned to code in HTML and CSS, and kept expanding my skills.
It has lost images, Flash animations, and it’s in Spanish. Ups!
In March 2009, I started promoting my web design services in the local newspaper to get my first client. One month later, I got it. That moment gave me the confidence to keep going.
My first projects were a local gas station and a restaurant website. From there, more clients followed.
I continued learning — SEO, sales funnels, responsive web design, online payment processing, landing pages, technical support, and more.
Then in 2015, everything changed.
I joined the Global Love Institute as their backend operations person — and for the first time, I wasn’t just building things. I was inside a live online education business, watching how they turned a skill into a curriculum, and how they taught that curriculum to hundreds of students around the world.
That experience quietly changed how I saw myself.
Because somewhere along the way, I started asking: what am I, exactly?
Not an employee. Not an agency. A freelancer — someone who had spent years building real expertise, working with real clients, keeping real businesses running. And yet, like a lot of freelancers, I had figured most of it out the hard way.
That’s what I want to change for others.
I believe that if you have a skill — backend operations, web design, copywriting, whatever it is — you shouldn’t have to spend years guessing your way to your first client or your first win.
You should be able to turn that skill into a profession, on purpose, with a clear path.
That’s what I’m starting to teach: how to become a professional in the skill you already have (or are building), how to land clients, and how to make an actual living from it — not just keep it as a dream.
Let’s work together if you’re ready to stop figuring it out alone.
My Vision and Values

Promptness

Commitment

Flexibility

Results

Transparency

Team-oriented Personality

Honesty and Integrity

Empathy

Personalized Attention


