The Eye I Bring
A Note to My Sellers
My mother had a luxury interior design business. Growing up in that world gave me a trained eye — one that knows the difference between what looks refined and what actually is.
When I walk through your home, I'm not looking for problems. I'm looking at what you built. The herringbone tile, the crown molding, the investments that never show up in listing photos but absolutely show up in how a home lives — and what it's worth. My job is to make sure buyers see those things too.
That means I'm at your home. I'm not leaving it to another agent to notice what makes your property worth more than the one down the street. I position it, I articulate it, and I show up to sell it.
The financial strategy is equally deliberate. If I recommend an improvement before listing, it's because the return justifies the investment — not because it would make the home more beautiful. Every recommendation is grounded in what the market will actually reward.
A Note to My Buyers
Most people can walk through a beautiful home and feel something. My job is to make sure you understand what you're feeling before you commit to it.
I want you to love the home you buy today. I want you to love it more the longer you're in it. Those two things aren't always the same house — and knowing the difference is where I earn your trust.
I'll walk you through the details that are easy to miss on a first visit. Not to find problems, but to make sure you have the full picture while your options are still open. The small things that seem minor in the excitement of a walk-through are the same things that become expensive surprises later. You deserve to know what you're buying.
The numbers matter too. Cap rates, renovation ROI, what this asset does over time — I speak that language. Emotion is how you find the right home. Data is how you make sure it was the right decision.
Every decision is deliberate.
I'd welcome a conversation →