About Mark
Climb the corporate ladder and secure a leadership role in a globally, networked ad agency.
Find, marry and build a beautiful life together with your soul mate.
Start a customer experience business from scratch, scale and sell to one of the big four management consulting firms.
But what happens when the goal posts shift?
For me, home is sacred.
It was our sanctuary during illness.
It was my refuge through grief.
It is where life happens in its most intimate and defining ways.
And yet, home is also one of our most significant financial assets.
A change in home often coincides with major life changes - children leaving, relationships evolving, careers shifting. These moments are emotional, complex, and often time-pressured. They demand both heart and head.
In late 2019, my partner was diagnosed with brain cancer and everything that had been built crumbled. He died the following year. And while the rawness of early grief softens with time, the loss remains ever-present. I still miss him every single day.
Change is a constant in life - a truth made starkly clear by the finality of death.
So why am I telling you all of this?
Because that loss changed everything. It pushed me to reconsider how I wanted to spend my time and energy. I made a conscious decision to focus on work where the impact was immediate and personal—where I could bring together my business skills in analysis and negotiation with empathy, intuition, and care. I wanted to help people through moments of transition, just as I had navigated my own.
That’s where I come in.
Yes, I’ll help you identify value and growth potential. I’ll streamline the search, negotiate strategically, and manage the entire process with rigour and precision. But more than that, my role is to bring calm, confidence, and clarity during what is often a deeply uncertain time. I help you find the right balance between emotional instinct and rational analysis, and ensure the journey feels not just manageable, but supported.
If your kids have left home and it's time to start the next chapter.
If your marriage has ended and you’re learning to walk alone.
If you’re growing a family and need space to grow with it.
If you’re making a big decision and just want some guidance.
I see you.
Yes, you can do this on your own.
But doing it together—strategically, compassionately, confidently—will be markedly better.