My website is a showcase of my passion for design and a reflection of my expertise in crafting intuitive, user-centric digital experiences. From web and mobile app designs to in-depth user research, every project featured here is a testament to my dedication to excellence and innovation.
Early in my career, I thought accessibility was a checklist—contrast ratios, alt tags, keyboard navigation. Important, yes, but technical. Over time, I’ve come to see it for what it truly is: the foundation of seamless user experience.
Accessibility isn’t a feature. It’s a mindset. It’s the belief that everyone, regardless of ability, device, or circumstance, deserves an equitable and intuitive experience. And when we design with accessibility from the start, we don’t just meet guidelines—we build better products for everyone.
I’ve seen this play out firsthand.
While leading the redesign of a financial dashboard for a national bank, we included users with visual impairments in our research and testing sessions. One user, who relied on screen readers, struggled to complete tasks that our sighted users breezed through. Labels weren’t clear. ARIA landmarks were missing. And dynamic content wasn’t announced properly.
We could’ve stopped at retrofitting. But instead, we stepped back. We redesigned the flow with clarity and semantic structure in mind—improving navigation, reinforcing hierarchy, and writing UI copy that worked for humans and assistive tech. The result wasn’t just accessible—it was more seamless for all users. Drop-off rates decreased. Efficiency increased. Confidence rose.
That’s the point: accessible design is just good design.
“Accessibility is usability for people who interact with products differently..”
— Nielsen Norman Group
I’ve applied these lessons across enterprise systems, e-commerce platforms, and consumer apps. At Capital One, ensuring WCAG 2.1 compliance wasn’t just a legal requirement—it was a chance to raise the bar across the board. Every decision became more intentional. Every interaction was pressure-tested for inclusion.
And here’s what I tell teams who feel overwhelmed by accessibility requirements: it’s not about perfection—it’s about progress. Build accessibility into your process, not as an afterthought but as a design principle. Start by involving real users. Use accessibility testing tools early. Create inclusive personas. Make it part of your definition of done.
Inaccessible experiences exclude people—period. But accessible ones invite, empower, and perform. That’s the kind of design I believe in. Not just frictionless, but fair. Not just seamless, but inclusive.
Because the best user experiences aren’t just for some—they’re built for everyone.