Who I Am
Computer Science Student.
Studying Computer Science with a focus on Management and Information Systems at University American College Skopje. I approach problems by looking at the underlying systems and behavioral patterns behind them — not just the visible outcome.
Approach
Break complexity
into structure.
I'm naturally interested in cause-and-effect relationships — how people make decisions, how incentives shape behavior, and how small structural differences can completely change results. I break complexity into structure, identify leverage points, and improve systems through iteration and observation rather than relying on fixed formulas.
Motivation
Long-term
potential first.
I tend to be motivated more by long-term potential than by my current position. I'm comfortable putting myself in environments where expectations are high and where I'm not necessarily the most experienced person in the room, because I learn best through responsibility, pressure, and exposure to real problems.
Mindset
Systems over
symptoms.
A lot of my thinking has been influenced by philosophy and psychology — the idea that most visible problems are symptoms of deeper assumptions, motivations, or feedback loops. I try to understand not just what is happening, but why it is happening and what conditions are producing it.
Environment
Ambiguity is
where I work.
I'm most engaged where problems are ambiguous and require conceptual thinking combined with practical execution. Growth is mostly a function of how far someone is willing to think, adapt, and push themselves. I'm naturally drawn toward ambitious environments where people are expected to think independently and operate without constant direction.
Philosophy
Built to operate without direction.
I believe the best environments are ones where you are expected to think independently, improve quickly, and take ownership before being asked. That is the standard I hold myself to.