20+ years in the server room.
Zero tolerance for bloated IT bills.

I'm an IT consultant who has spent over two decades building, breaking, and rebuilding IT environments for businesses of all sizes. I specialize in one thing — making your IT infrastructure leaner, more reliable, and dramatically less expensive to run.

Most of my clients come to me after years of watching their cloud costs climb with no clear explanation why. I help them understand exactly what they're paying for, what they actually need, and how to build an onsite infrastructure that gives them back control — of their data, their systems, and their budget.

FAQs

Isn't the cloud cheaper than running servers?

It was — in 2012. Today, AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud raise rates quietly and consistently. Most businesses we work with are paying 60-80% more than they were three years ago for the exact same workload. Onsite infrastructure has a higher upfront cost and a dramatically lower long-term one.

What happens to our data if the cloud provider goes down?

You wait. And hope. Cloud outages are more common than providers admit — and when they happen, you have zero control and zero recourse. With onsite infrastructure, your data is yours, your uptime is yours, and your recovery timeline is yours.

Is onsite infrastructure hard to manage?

Only if it isn't set up correctly. That's exactly what we do — design environments that are stable, documented, and manageable by your existing team without requiring a PhD in systems architecture.

How long does a transition away from the cloud take?

Most engagements run 6-16 weeks depending on complexity. We build a phased roadmap so your business never experiences downtime during the transition and your team isn't overwhelmed trying to absorb everything at once.

What if we only need occasional IT support, not a full overhaul?

That's what our hourly consulting option is for. No retainer, no long-term contract — just expert eyes on your specific problem when you need it. Some clients use us once, some call us quarterly. Either way works.