I built Compound because I couldn’t find someone I’d trust with my own trips. I had hired a top travel advisor and got something trend-driven, generic, and not worth the time.
I came from VC and M&A at a Fortune 50, where the whole job is judgment: what’s real, what’s missing, and what will matter after the hype fades. I realized I wasn’t using that muscle on the part of my life I actually care about.
So I moved it to what I love: hotels and people. Compound is simple—smart questions, real opinions, and the right fit, so your trip feels like you not a template.
I’ve traveled the world with my husband, first as a couple, now as parents and I’ve seen what a perfect-fit stay does: you come home more connected, more well, with momentum to keep building.

The difference is the details
I know which properties are mid-renovation and worth avoiding this year. Which suite has the view and which one faces the parking. Why the villa that looks perfect online doesn't work with young kids and which one actually does.
But I don't stop at booking, I help plan your days.
I'll tell you which restaurant to book for night one, when to schedule the spa before it gets crowded, where to have a quiet morning, and what to skip despite the hype. By the time you land, your entire on-property experience is already mapped out.

"The more trips we work together on, the better your life gets. That's what compound means."

Most advisors measure success by the booking. I measure it by the relationship. Every trip I learn more, your pace, your preferences, what actually makes a trip feel right for you. By the second trip I'm already ahead of you. I know you want a quiet morning before a big day, that your kids do better in a villa than a hotel room, that you'd rather have a great room than a great pool. By the third trip, you've stopped explaining yourself entirely. You just say "we need a week in March" and trust that I'll get it right. That's the relationship I build with every client. And it only gets better.The first trip, I'm learning you how you travel, what you actually care about, what your rhythm is. By the second trip, I'm ahead of you. I already know you want a quiet morning before a big day, that your kids do better with a villa than a hotel room, that you'd rather have a great room than a great pool. By the third trip, you stop explaining yourself. You just say "we need a week in March" and trust that I'll get it right. That's the goal. That's what most advisors never reach because they never invested in knowing you in the first place. Every trip sharpens what I know. This isn't a transaction, it's a relationship that gets better over time.
