I design products and systems for people working under pressure.
I started in Nigeria as a photographer straight out of secondary school, while helping my aunt run her clothing shop. That mix of creativity and responsibility taught me to notice detail, work with limited resources, and stay close to how people actually move through the world.
I later studied Architecture, worked in a graphics studio while at university, and became an architectural designer. Over time, I found myself drawn not just to how things look, but to how ideas are structured, communicated, and experienced.
That interest led me into product and service design. On the Construction Artisans Awards, I designed brand assets, test pieces, and the event platform, which became my first real UI/UX experience. It also introduced me to a problem I've kept returning to: how to collect useful evidence from people using limited devices, in contexts where time and capacity are already stretched.
When I moved to London, I studied product design through Experience Haus and continued building in practical settings. I designed a website for an architectural charity, where I learned that design has to do more than look good, it also has to support trust, progress, and engagement.
I later moved into the care sector, where I started improving the systems around me. Working close to frontline staff showed me how much operational friction sits behind service delivery, and how often the real problem is not the policy, but the workflow.
That became even clearer in learning disability support, where I saw too few practitioners, heavy caseloads, and critical behaviour data being captured too late or in ways that weren't fit for purpose. I designed SwiftABC to make that evidence capture faster, safer, and closer to the moment it happens.
I work across product design, service design, and operational thinking. My focus is on complex, high-pressure environments where the work has to be both thoughtful and useful in practice.