As a fourth generation pilot, aviation has significantly shaped my life and career, I never expected aviation to be such a big part of my own life. Growing up, my grandfather taught me to fly in his Stearman Biplane, but it was a way to spend time together more than anything. I wasn't the kid who was obsessed with airplanes or desperate to be an airline pilot. It took me a few years after high school to decide that flying was something that I was choosing for my own life, to be more than a hobby. Ten years later and I have become an airline pilot, and resigned from the airlines after starting an aviation business. Every day of my life is at an airport and I can't get enough of it. I credit the days when we were just having fun, flying in the traffic pattern with no goal except to make the next landing better than the last. When I consider that many people attempt to pass on their family business unsuccessfully to their children, I realize that what my grandfather did was the best method in the long run; he taught me to enjoy flying. Now I have a toddler of my own and my only goal with aviation is to teach him to enjoy flying. I could care less if he makes a career in aviation, but flying is a special experience and a special way to spend quality time with those you love.
Aviation has shaped my career most directly through aerial photography, which I have done for more than 50 years. Flying gave me access to angles and moments you simply cannot get from the ground, and it trained me to plan carefully while still being ready for quick changes in light and weather. As a commercial, instrument-rated pilot before I retired, I learned how much discipline and attention to detail it takes to operate safely and consistently. That experience also carried into my consulting work on high-altitude weather research using both unmanned and manned airplanes. The perspective it gave me is that the sky is not just a backdrop, it is an active environment that changes constantly and demands respect. When you work from the air, you see how connected landscapes, cities, and weather patterns really are. It is a view that stays with you, even after you land.
Aviation fundamentally shaped my career as a software company CEO by making global business relationships possible in a way that video calls never fully replicate. Running a software house that serves clients across multiple time zones means I spend a significant portion of my year in transit, and that constant movement between countries has given me a perspective on business culture that desk-bound executives simply do not develop. The specific impact came from flying regularly between Pakistan, Australia, and the Middle East during our company's growth phase. Those flights were not just transportation. They were compressed thinking environments where I made some of my best strategic decisions. Something about being physically disconnected from the office for twelve or fifteen hours at a time, with no meetings and no interruptions, created the mental space to think about the business at a level that daily operations never allowed. But the deeper perspective aviation gave me was about scale and accessibility. When you fly over the Karakoram mountains one week and land in Sydney the next, you internalize how connected and simultaneously how different markets really are. That awareness directly influenced how we designed our software products. We stopped building solutions that assumed a single market context and started architecting for cultural and regulatory differences from day one. The perspective others might not have is that aviation teaches patience and adaptability in ways that business schools cannot. Delays, cancellations, and unexpected reroutes happen constantly. You learn to plan rigorously but hold those plans loosely. That mindset transfers directly to running a business where market conditions shift without warning and the ability to adapt quickly determines survival.
Honestly, aviation doesn't directly touch my world in HVAC coordination -- but what it *has* done is shape how I think about systems that can't afford to fail. Pilots talk about "squawks" -- small logged defects that get flagged before they become catastrophic. I borrowed that mindset for service scheduling at Ohio Heating. When a technician flags a worn belt or a borderline igniter reading during a routine visit, I treat it like a squawk: documented, prioritized, and resolved before it becomes a no-heat emergency at 2 a.m. for a Columbus business. That perspective is rare in HVAC coordination. Most dispatchers react. I'd rather build a system where the data from a maintenance report -- combustion readings, static pressure, filter change logs -- tells us what's coming before the customer ever calls. Being a woman coordinating in a trade industry, you learn fast that credibility comes from the details others overlook. Aviation taught me that checklists aren't bureaucracy -- they're the difference between a reliable system and a expensive failure.
Aviation gave me a concrete mental model for systems reliability that I apply directly to how I build software. I got into reading about aviation safety after I became interested in how commercial flight achieved the reliability rates it has. The short version is through redundancy, clear checklists, blameless incident reporting, and a culture where any crew member can raise a concern without hierarchy getting in the way. These are not abstract principles. They are specific, carefully earned practices that came out of real accidents. That understanding changed how I think about running software infrastructure. When I was building GPUPerHour, which requires scrapers running against 30 different cloud providers continuously, I started treating failures the way aviation treats near misses. Document what happened, understand the failure mode, build redundancy around it. Not who caused it, but what caused it. The perspective aviation gave me that others often miss is that most catastrophic failures are not caused by one big mistake. They are caused by a sequence of small individually manageable problems that compound because each one was treated as minor. In aviation this is called the chain of events model. I see it constantly in software incidents. Reliability culture in aviation is also fundamentally humble in a way engineering culture often is not. The assumption is that humans will make errors, so the system is designed around that reality. That is a perspective worth borrowing in almost any technical field.
Aviation shaped how I think about precision and preparation. Years ago I toured an airport operations center during a logistics meeting, and the discipline behind every flight schedule stayed with me. Every task had a checklist and clear accountability. I brought that mindset into operations at PuroClean. We introduced simple response checklists for emergency service calls. Within a few months our team reduced dispatch delays and improved client response times. Aviation taught me that systems protect performance. When preparation is consistent, pressure becomes manageable and outcomes improve.
Aviation shaped the way I think about systems and responsibility. Early in my career I spent time around aviation operations and what stayed with me was how seriously small details are treated. In aviation, a minor oversight can turn into a major problem, so people learn to respect process and preparation. That mindset carried into my career in marketing and digital work. For example, when managing large ad budgets or campaign launches, I approach it with the same discipline. I double check tracking, budgets, targeting, and reporting before anything goes live. It may sound simple, but that habit has saved campaigns from costly mistakes. It also gave me a different perspective on teamwork. Aviation runs on coordination. Pilots, engineers, ground staff, and control towers all rely on each other. Seeing that level of coordination made me appreciate how important clear communication is inside any organization. So the biggest impact aviation had on me is the way it taught me to value preparation, systems, and accountability. Those lessons apply far beyond the aviation world and shape how I approach work even today.
Aviation facilitated my career transition to North Carolina to work with Highwoods Properties near the Research Triangle Park. This proximity to RDU International Airport taught me that high-level Class A office demand is directly tethered to global flight connectivity. Traveling extensively through Europe and Asia via carriers like Delta Air Lines has given me a global perspective on infrastructure density and transit-oriented development. I see urban development through a macro lens that local-only advisors often overlook when evaluating site selection. This exposure allows me to advise my Pittsburgh clients on the long-term viability of tech corridors based on their international logistics and airport access. It ensures I am looking at their 10-year growth plan through a lens of global competitiveness, not just local convenience.
In my 18 years of investment and development experience, aviation has transitioned from a luxury into a critical logistical tool for rapid site-level underwriting. Managing a multi-billion-dollar family office requires extreme mobility to evaluate middle-market assets across the Southwest and Mountain West. Utilizing a NetJets fractional ownership allowed my team to perform physical due diligence on three separate multifamily developments in one afternoon. This speed was vital for Sahara Investment Group to finalize financing terms while competitors were still navigating commercial flight delays. This gives me a unique perspective on "transactional velocity" as a strategic multiplier. I view aviation as a tool for capital allocation efficiency and risk management, rather than just a travel expense.
Aviation changed the way I think about engineering tolerances and safety margins. In aviation, small mechanical details matter. A tiny fault can lead to serious consequences, so engineers design parts with strict tolerances and clear inspection schedules. That mindset has shaped how I approach engineering work in my own business. I run a small company that machines automotive components, and I try to apply the same thinking. Parts must fit correctly, materials must be traceable, and every dimension must match the design. Many people see engineering as simply making a part that "fits." Aviation shows a different standard. A part should fit perfectly, work consistently, and still perform correctly after years of use. That perspective stays with you once you have seen how aviation engineering works.
The rise of air travel compacted the gap between what I was trying to achieve and where my clients were. When I first started working in aviation, a long-haul flight allowed me to turn a shaky lead into a 10-year partnership by merely being present. Digital technology has led many people to believe there is no longer a need to travel-however, it has only increased the level of both urgency and value in choosing to meet face-to-face. My experiences have changed how I view geography as a strategy. After 20 years of navigating global cities, you begin to learn that although computer code is a universal language, the challenges the code solves have regional distinctions. You cannot download intuition; you have to be there in person. I began to consider the world as one talent pool; the only time barriers exist are created by time zones. The shift in my mentality occurred when I no longer thought of flights as downtime, but instead as connections across the world for a business operating globally. As a result, I built a company that not only operates remotely but also has synchronized connectivity throughout cultures. The International Air Transport Association (IATA) stated there was an increase of 11.8% in premium international travel for the year of 2024; this aligns with my own observations that the majority of complicated digital transformations cannot occur synchronously over a screen; they need to occur in a room where unspoken resignation occurs among a company's executives. We often forget about the human aspect of high-value software/customizations; every human aspect has an established relationship through aviation to reinforce the connection between them. Even with the advances of AI, the most valuable currency we have is the trust that we build on the ground level before a project launches.
Aviation shaped how I think about precision and risk. During a cross country flight experience, I watched pilots rely on checklists and layered systems before every decision. That discipline mirrors how we structure operational workflows connected to Advanced Professional Accounting Services. Small verification steps prevent large failures later. Observing that process changed how I design financial systems and automation routines. Preparation matters more than speed. Aviation reinforced a mindset of controlled execution. When processes are clear and repeatable, teams move faster with greater confidence.