From the Lakefront Trail to the Martian regolith—reducing variance in systems that matter.
In jazz, improvisation isn't chaos—it's a conversation over a shared harmonic structure. Same truth in operations: adaptability requires a baseline of statistical control. My work maps that structure for galactic-scale ventures.
Every morning on the Lakefront Trail, I measure pace, heart rate, stride variance. That data doesn't just track fitness—it trains the mind for Six Sigma rigor. The wind off Lake Michigan teaches tolerance limits.
A roux demands temperature control within ±2°F. A gumbo's viscosity follows rheological laws. These aren't recipes—they're process specifications. I apply that same fidelity to supply chains crossing light-years.
Fresh deployment: interactive model that decomposes yield loss into transport lag, atmospheric drift, nutrient variance, equipment degradation, and operator error. Returns sigma level and DPMO. Grounded in Q236908.