I'm a Product Manager at Lowe's, working on loyalty and home services experiences for millions of customers. On the side, I'm co-founding Omiro, an AI analytics layer for LMS platforms.
I started early. At 18, I founded Shadow Flowers in Doha, Qatar, redesigned its product packaging, and watched repeat orders climb. That taught me something I still believe: shipping beats theorizing. Every product I've worked on since, from enterprise LMS platforms to Thabit, a fasting tracker that hit 500+ users in its first week, comes back to that same instinct.
I sit at the intersection of product, design, and engineering. I write the PRD, sketch the flows, prototype with AI tools when I need to move faster than the org can, and then bring engineering in to scale what works.
I was raised in Qatar and speak Arabic, which shapes how I think about products built for people who don't always look like the team building them. The 2022 World Cup in Doha was one of the best weeks of my life, watching my home country host the world with my brother.
When I'm not at work, I'm usually at the gym, in the pool, traveling, or out on a hike with my Fujifilm X-T50. The Pacific Northwest, New York, anywhere with weather and texture. I take photos because I like noticing things most people walk past.
When I'm not doing any of that, I'm in Cursor or Claude Code building something nobody asked for. That's how Thabit got made. That's how Omiro started. A lot of how I think about building comes from watching Starter Story, Your Average Tech Bro, and Chris Raroque, founders and builders showing the unglamorous middle of how things actually get made.