Personal daily events

2024

Back to School

less than 1 minute read

Published:

Started the Master’s program in Project Management at Universidad de Vina del Mar. After years of leading projects mostly by instinct and whatever I picked up along the way, it felt like the right time to formalize those skills. The irony of a PhD going back for a professional master’s is not lost on me. After leading analytics teams, data science projects, and client engagements for years – mostly figuring it out as I went – I realized I needed the formal toolkit. Scope, risk, stakeholder management, all the things I’d been doing by gut feel. There’s something funny about sitting in a classroom again after defending a doctoral thesis, but honestly, the PhD taught me how to research, not how to manage a budget or a Gantt chart. The first classes were surprisingly practical. Less theory than I expected, more real-world frameworks. Balancing work at Accenture and classes again is going to be interesting, but I’ve done the work-study juggle before. Here we go again.

Consulting Life

less than 1 minute read

Published:

Started at Accenture Industry X. The corporate world is a different beast – more structured, more processes, more acronyms than I can keep track of. But there’s something exciting about working at the intersection of technology and strategy for mining companies. The problems are similar to what I’ve seen before, but the perspective is wider now. Instead of being inside one operation, I’m looking across multiple clients and industries. Different pace, but I think I’ll like it here.

One Month Solo

less than 1 minute read

Published:

For a brief window between leaving CODELCO and joining Accenture, I went solo. Independent consulting, just me and my laptop. The project was interesting – clay classification using hyperspectral drone imagery, which is exactly the kind of niche problem I love. The freedom of being your own boss is intoxicating: no meetings about meetings, no corporate overhead, just the work. But the uncertainty is real too. You’re one client away from having nothing. It gave me a new respect for people who do this full-time. A short chapter, but a useful one – sometimes you need to taste independence to appreciate what structure gives you.

Closing a Chapter at CODELCO

less than 1 minute read

Published:

Last days at CODELCO. More than two years here and it’s hard to summarize everything. The projects delivered, the processes optimized, but honestly what I’ll remember most are the people. Engineers, operators, geologists – everyone taught me something. I came in as a data scientist and I’m leaving as someone who actually understands how a mine works – the gap between what a model says and what an operator needs is enormous, and bridging that gap became my real job. I learned that the best algorithm in the world is useless if the guy running the plant at 3 AM doesn’t trust it. I learned how flotation actually works, why grind size matters, what metallurgists worry about. The people are what made it, though. The engineers who stayed late explaining processes, the operators who patiently showed me what the numbers actually meant on the ground. Grateful for the experience. Time to move on to new challenges, but this chapter will stay with me.