I started at P&V Insurance as a data steward. For two
years, my job was the cases the company's AI systems
couldn't resolve — records that wouldn't merge, fields
that disagreed across systems, edge cases the model
handed back as uncertain. The work was unglamorous and
slow. It was also the most useful education in data I
could have asked for.
I learned that data quality isn't a problem you fix
once. It's a continuous translation between what the
business says it wants, what the systems actually
capture, and what humans actually do. AI handles the
patterns. What stays on a human desk is the texture —
the cases that don't fit. That texture is where most
real decisions live.
For the past two years I've worked as an analyst on the
same data I once stewarded. The unexpected lesson:
once you adapt to any role, the work starts to take
on the same shape. Different domain, same pattern.
Which is why I want the next thing to be different on
purpose.
I want to choose what I do — not what I can do, not what
I'm assigned. The work I want sits closer to building
futures than predicting them.
Outside work I build two products that already serve
real users.
ARBITORIA covers
Belgium and France — the financial decisions a household
actually runs into, across salary, housing, utilities,
insurance, loans, and investing, all on official data.
About 300 people use it daily.
Salaire-Plus is
a focused salary transparency tool spanning six countries
and six languages, built for people whose careers cross
borders. On peak days it serves 3,000 visitors. Both
exist because most financial decisions ordinary people
make happen under information asymmetry that doesn't
need to exist.
I work between three languages and two cultural
contexts — Korean, French, English; Asian and European
business norms. In Brussels, this combination
is rare. It's the right shape for a specific
kind of work: cross-border products in fintech and
insurance, where regulatory nuance and language depth
both matter — Korean companies coming into Europe,
European companies looking at Asia, or anything in
between.